• Police raids across Europe after encrypted phone network shut down
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/mar/10/police-raids-across-europe-after-encrypted-phone-network-shut-down

    Belgian, Dutch and French police ‘looked over shoulders’ of gangs after hacking Sky ECC network Police in Belgium and the Netherlands have arrested at least 80 people and carried out hundreds of raids after shutting down an encrypted phone network used by organised crime groups. Belgian, Dutch and French police said they had hacked into the Sky ECC network, allowing them to look “over the shoulders” of suspects as they communicated with customised devices to plot drug deals and murders. (...)

    #algorithme #smartphone #géolocalisation #criminalité #écoutes

    ##criminalité
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/9e4531fc095fec8d65281bb174a46b8102f20407/0_278_699_419/master/699.jpg

  • En Belgique, le réseau de communication Sky ECC infiltré par la police
    https://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2021/03/10/en-belgique-le-reseau-de-communication-sky-ecc-infiltre-par-la-police_607256

    L’opération, menée par quelque 1 600 agents, qui ciblait les utilisateurs de ce logiciel réputé inviolable, a permis la saisie de 17 tonnes de cocaïne, d’armes, de voitures de luxe, d’uniformes de police ou encore d’1,2 million d’euros. La police belge a mené, mardi 9 mars, ce qu’elle présente comme la plus grande opération de son histoire en ciblant un milieu criminel « tentaculaire » qui utilisait des téléphones cryptés, équipés du logiciel de la société Sky ECC, qui opère à partir du Canada et des (...)

    #cryptage #smartphone #police #criminalité #écoutes #surveillance

    ##criminalité

  • Officials in Baltimore and St. Louis Put the Brakes on Persistent Surveillance Systems Spy Planes
    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2021/03/officials-baltimore-and-st-louis-put-brakes-persistent-surveillance-systems-spy

    Baltimore, MD and St. Louis, MO, have a lot in common. Both cities suffer from declining populations and high crime rates. In recent years, the predominantly Black population in each city has engaged in collective action opposing police violence. In recent weeks, officials in both cities voted unanimously to spare their respective residents from further invasions on their privacy and essential liberties by a panoptic aerial surveillance system designed to protect soldiers on the (...)

    #CCTV #criminalité #vidéo-surveillance #aérien #panopticon #surveillance #ACLU #EFF

    ##criminalité

  • Drogue, criminalité financière, corruption : les criminels trahis par leurs téléphones, réputés impénétrables
    https://www.rtbf.be/info/societe/detail_operation-de-police-sans-precedent-en-belgique-les-criminels-trahis-par-

    La police fédérale a mené ce matin environ 200 perquisitions, dont une vingtaine renforcée avec les unités spéciales, visant le crime organisé lors d’une intervention coordonnée au plus haut niveau policier et judiciaire, selon les informations recueillies par la RTBF. L’opération est le fruit d’une intense coopération internationale. En Belgique, les forces de l’ordre ont été mobilisées sur tout le territoire avec un déploiement particulièrement important autour d’Anvers où le port fait figure de plaque (...)

    #cryptage #smartphone #criminalité #écoutes #surveillance #PGP #hacking

    ##criminalité

    • Les cryptophones sont des téléphones mobiles réputés impénétrables et impossibles à placer sur écoute. La protection des communications procurée par l’emploi d’une application de messagerie cryptée est renforcée par la désactivation des caméras, micros, système GPS ou connectivité USB de l’appareil. Il est aussi possible d’effacer toutes les données du téléphone à distance si celui-ci est saisi par les autorités.

      Ces dernières années, la police a régulièrement été confrontée à cette technologie très répandue dans le milieu criminel et constituant un obstacle majeur aux enquêtes. Pour déjouer le système, les enquêteurs de la police judiciaire ont dû déployer des moyens techniques de pointe et mobiliser une importante capacité d’analyse de données.

      #police

  • Et si tous les clients d’un géant européen de l’assurance étaient victimes d’un « rançongiciel » ?
    https://usbeketrica.com/fr/et-si-tous-les-clients-d-un-geant-europeen-de-l-assurance-etaient-victi

    Quels sont les « futurs chocs » qui nous attendent ? Usbek & Rica a demandé à Guy-Philippe Goldstein, auteur de romans d’anticipation, enseignant et chercheur sur les questions de cybersécurité et de cyberpuissance, d’explorer cette question à travers une série de micro-fictions. Dans ce nouvel épisode, l’auteur met en scène un géant de l’assurance victime d’un « rançongiciel ». Jeudi 5 mai, 15h – Bureau de Paul Schuller, CEO & Chairman, Axalliance C’est lundi, dans la soirée, que tout a commencé. (...)

    #ransomware #criminalité #données #art

    ##criminalité

  • ‘They track every move’ : how US parole apps created digital prisoners
    https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/mar/04/they-track-every-move-how-us-parole-apps-created-digital-prisoners

    Is smartphone tracking a less intrusive reward for good behaviour or just a way to enrich the incarceration industry ? In 2018, William Frederick Keck III pleaded guilty in a court in Manassas, Virginia, to possession with intent to distribute cannabis. He served three months in prison, then began a three-year probation. He was required to wear a GPS ankle monitor before his trial and then to report for random drug tests after his release. Eventually, the state reduced his level of (...)

    #algorithme #bracelet #montre #smartphone #GPS #criminalité #prison #surveillance #reconnaissance #voix #géolocalisation #ICE (...)

    ##criminalité ##migration
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/55433b7708719e9cb15d3486b15f9922ae51e157/2224_902_3921_2352/master/3921.jpg

  • Police Drones Are Starting to Think for Themselves
    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/05/technology/police-drones.html?action=click&module=RelatedLinks&pgtype=Article

    In one Southern California city, flying drones with artificial intelligence are aiding investigations while presenting new civil rights questions. CHULA VISTA, Calif. — When the Chula Vista police receive a 911 call, they can dispatch a flying drone with the press of a button. On a recent afternoon, from a launchpad on the roof of the Chula Vista Police Department, they sent a drone across the city to a crowded parking lot where a young man was asleep in the front seat of a stolen car with (...)

    #algorithme #drone #criminalité #aérien #vidéo-surveillance #discrimination #surveillance (...)

    ##criminalité ##ACLU

  • Handelsware Kind - Reportage & Dokumentation - ARD | Das Erste
    https://www.daserste.de/information/reportage-dokumentation/dokus/sendung/handelsware-kind-100.html

    In Deutschland verschwinden seit Jahren vietnamesische Kinder und Jugendliche. Dahinter stecken skrupellose Menschenhändler. Ihre Netzwerke erstrecken sich über Kontinente. Die jungen Vietnamesen werden über Russland und Osteuropa in die Bundesrepublik eingeschleust. Viele enden in der Illegalität als Arbeitssklaven für die vietnamesische Mafia. Der Film erzählt ihre Geschichte.
    Versprechen auf ein besseres Leben

    „Moderne Sklaverei“ – so bezeichnet ein hochrangiger Ermittler vor der Kamera dieses Phänomen. Zusammengepfercht in Kleintransportern, verladen in Kühllastern, monatelang unterwegs, zwischendurch festgehalten in verlassenen Lagerhallen oder Wohnungen. Geschlagen, vergewaltigt, ausgebeutet, in Todesangst. Angelockt mit dem Versprechen auf ein besseres Leben, gegeben von den Kriminellen an die Familien in Vietnam – so schildert es ein junger Vietnamese den Autoren. So werden viele Kinder und Jugendliche aus Vietnam nach Deutschland gebracht.

    Opfer sind den Menschenhändlern ausgeliefert

    Berlin ist eine der wichtigsten Drehscheiben für den vietnamesischen Menschenhandel. 15.000 bis 20.000 Dollar kostet der Weg ins vermeintliche Glück. In Nagelstudios, als Zigarettenverkäufer, Drogenkuriere oder als Gärtner in illegalen Cannabisplantagen müssen die Opfer dann ihre Schulden abarbeiten. Wann abbezahlt ist, bestimmen die Menschenhändler. Ihre Opfer sind ihnen ausgeliefert. Auf Jahre. Ein Millionengeschäft.

    „Menschenhandel und Drogen; das sind alles die gleichen Leute“, sagt ein Schwerkrimineller, der im Auftrag der vietnamesischen Mafia hunderte Vietnamesen aus Litauen über Warschau nach Berlin brachte. Die mehrfach für ihre Recherchen ausgezeichneten Journalisten Adrian Bartocha und Jan Wiese verfolgen in diesem investigativen Roadmovie die Spur der vietnamesischen Mafia über mehrere europäische Länder bis nach Großbritannien. Ihre Protagonisten sind hochrangige Ermittler, Zeugen, Opfer und Täter.

    „Handelsware Kind“ zeigt dabei eingehend, wie dieser Menschenhandel in Europa funktioniert. Und warum dieses Verbrechen in Deutschland überhaupt möglich und weiterhin fast unbemerkt bleibt.

    Ein Film von Adrian Bartocha und Jan Wiese

    #enfants #criminalité #trafic_d_enfants #Europe #Vietnam #auf_deutsch

  • ’Straks zijn we allemaal verdacht : Hof van Cassatie zet deur open voor privacy-misbruiken’
    https://www.knack.be/nieuws/belgie/straks-zijn-we-allemaal-verdacht-hof-van-cassatie-zet-deur-open-voor-privacy-misbruiken/article-opinion-1561609.html?cookie_check=1613475467

    ’We mogen nooit toegeven - uit angst of efficiëntie - om basisrechten van verdachten in de vuilbak te kieperen. Ooit zijn we misschien allemaal verdacht’, schrijft Matthias Dobbelaere-Welvaert. Het Hof van Cassatie oordeelde deze week dat een onderzoeksrechter een verdachte mag dwingen om de toegangscode van zijn smartphone te geven. Een verrassende uitspraak bereikte ons dinsdagavond, ditmaal uit de pen van het Hof van Cassatie. Een ander zou durven tweeten over wereldvreemde rechters (...)

    #smartphone #criminalité #données #surveillance

    ##criminalité

  • Amazon’s Ring now has partnerships with over 2,000 police and fire departments
    https://www.techspot.com/news/88472-amazon-ring-now-has-partnerships-over-2000-police.html

    A hot potato : Amazon Ring’s partnerships with police and fire departments that allow them to request users’ security camera footage has brought plenty of controversies. But the company isn’t slowing down the program—quite the opposite. A new report reveals that 1,189 departments joined last year, bringing the total to 2,014. The Financial Times reports that the number of local police and fire departments added to Ring’s Neighbors Portal program in 2020 was more than double the 703 new (...)

    #Ring #Amazon #CCTV #Neighbor #sonnette #police #criminalité #vidéo-surveillance #voisinage (...)

    ##criminalité ##surveillance

  • Les experts de l’inspection de documents de la région Asie-Pacifique réaffirment leur engagement dans la lutte contre la criminalité transnationale organisée | Organisation internationale pour les migrations
    https://www.iom.int/fr/news/les-experts-de-linspection-de-documents-de-la-region-asie-pacifique-reaffirment
    https://www.iom.int/sites/default/files/styles/highlights/public/press_release/media/andex.jpg?itok=93Y3xH3Z

    Les nouvelles technologies émergentes et la COVID-19 ont déclenché un comportement opportuniste et prédateur de la part des réseaux de criminalité organisée, qui utilisent souvent des documents de voyage frauduleux et/ou des passeports volés ou perdus pour faciliter le trafic illicite de migrants, la traite des personnes et la migration irrégulière.
    La fermeture des frontières mondiales a marqué une baisse du nombre de voyages clandestins, ce qui a entraîné une perte de profit importante pour les réseaux de criminalité organisée. Les analystes ont observé qu’avec l’assouplissement des restrictions de voyage et de circulation dans certaines régions du monde, les réseaux de criminalité organisée ont commencé à passer d’une position réactive - profitant des vulnérabilités des migrants - à un rôle plus proactif, en faisant activement la promotion de leurs services illégaux, et en mettant la vie des migrants en danger en leur faisant emprunter des itinéraires plus dangereux.
    À mesure que les activités de trafic illicite de migrants sont devenues plus difficiles, les coûts déjà exorbitants de la migration irrégulière ont augmenté, tout comme le risque de coercition dans divers systèmes de paiement pour les différents facilitateurs du voyage, tels que le trafic forcé de drogue, le transport d’autres migrants irréguliers à travers la frontière et l’exploitation sexuelle ou l’exploitation du travail. C’est dans ce contexte que s’est tenue la 6ème réunion annuelle du Réseau asiatique pour l’inspection des documents (ANDEX) en début de semaine (du 1er au 3 février), à laquelle ont participé plus de 80 experts de l’inspection des documents originaires de 18 pays d’Asie et du Pacifique, qui ont démontré leur engagement dans la lutte contre la criminalité transnationale organisée. La réunion virtuelle a été organisée par le gouvernement de la République des Maldives. Sous l’égide du Centre d’appui à l’inspection des documents (DESC) de l’OIM, et avec le soutien du gouvernement du Canada, ANDEX a été officiellement créé en 2013 en tant que plateforme régionale permettant aux fonctionnaires expérimentés de l’immigration et du maintien de l’ordre de partager des informations et des bonnes pratiques en matière d’inspection des documents de voyage, de procédures de vérification d’identité et de schémas de fraude. L’OIM et la présidence tournante du Réseau organisent des réunions annuelles pour faciliter l’échange d’informations entre les États membres et coordonner les réponses opérationnelles pour faire face à la migration irrégulière.

    #Covid-19#migrant #migration#IOM#traite#trafic#criminalité#droit#migrationirreguliere#sante#exploitation#vulneralibilite

  • Un cadre de Cdiscount suspecté d’avoir dérobé les données de 33 millions de clients
    https://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2021/02/08/un-cadre-de-cdiscount-suspecte-d-avoir-derobe-les-donnees-de-33-millions-de-

    Au moins une partie des données dérobées, qui ne comportent pas d’informations bancaires, semblent avoir été proposées au téléchargement sur des sites spécialisés. Le haut responsable suspecté a été mis en examen. Un haut responsable de Cdiscount, travaillant sur le site de Cestas (Gironde), a été mis en examen lundi 1er février à Bordeaux. Il est soupçonné du vol de données personnelles de potentiellement 33 millions de clients, dont au moins une partie ont ensuite été proposées à la vente sur des sites (...)

    #criminalité #données

    ##criminalité

  • Comment de petits escrocs font fermer des comptes Instagram
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/010221/comment-de-petits-escrocs-font-fermer-des-comptes-instagram

    Dans le monde entier, de petits escrocs se livrent à un trafic de comptes Instagram grâce aux faiblesses de la fonction « signaler cet utilisateur ». La Commission européenne prévoit d’y remédier, sans grand espoir de changement du côté des victimes. Emma* est une ado néerlandaise d’une petite ville au bord de la mer du Nord. Ces dernières années, elle a soigné son compte Instagram au point d’avoir, en novembre 2020, plus de 20 000 abonné·e·s. Puis, vers le 18 novembre 2020, son compte a été supprimé. (...)

    #Facebook #Instagram #féminisme #criminalité #fraude #religion #harcèlement #LGBT

    ##criminalité

  • The Insta-mafia : How crooks mass-report users for profit
    https://algorithmwatch.org/en/story/facebook-instagram-mass-report

    Groups of teenagers use weaknesses in the notification systems of Facebook and Instagram to take over accounts and harass users. The upcoming DSA regulation addresses the issue but is likely to fall short. Emma* is a Dutch teenager from a small town on the North Sea shore. Over the past two years, she built an Instagram presence that brought her, as of November 2020, over 20,000 followers. Then, around 18 November, it was gone. We contacted Emma on Instagram to learn about her experience (...)

    #Facebook #Instagram #criminalité #féminisme #fraude #religion #discrimination #harcèlement (...)

    ##criminalité ##LGBT

  • Decree bans new Syrian refugees from settling in #Chlorakas

    The interior ministry quietly issued a decree disallowing any more Syrian refugees from settling in the coastal village of Chlorakas in Paphos, as numbers were causing a huge shift in demographics and creating ‘ghettos’, according to the local community leader.

    “The minister of the interior stopped the settlement of Syrian refugees in Chlorakas a number of weeks ago, but it has only been reported in the media now. This is an important move as we can’t cope with the large number of refugees and we had a number of ghettos which is not acceptable,” Nikolas Liasides, the community leader of Chlorakas said, speaking to the Cyprus Mail on Friday.

    The demographic of the area changed to quickly and the authorities were unable to keep up, he stressed, adding that around 20 per cent of the population is now Syrian.

    Close to 7,000 people reside in Chlorakas, made up of 4,300 Cypriots and other Europeans and around 1,400 Syrian refugees, many from the same area in Syria. He said this number is too large and was mushrooming out of control.

    “We should have around 4 per cent of refugees here and not 20 per cent. We had many problems last summer with criminality and the residents and the community board wanted to do something to stop this from getting worse and so we appealed to the authorities to help,” he added.

    However, on Friday main opposition Akel issued a statement decrying the move as an ‘unprecedented action,’ requesting the government revoke it immediately.

    They said that the decree,” violates the European Directive on the basis of which our national legislation guarantees the right of free movement, establishment and residence of asylum seekers.”

    They also noted that the decree is against the spirit of the Charter of Fundamental Rights, which notes that we must first and foremost respect and safeguard.

    “Akel calls on the government to immediately withdraw this decree and to manage the refugee issue through a human-centered approach, by taking measures in the framework of international and European law and with respect for human rights.”

    But it appears that the move may be constitutionally sound, prominent human rights lawyer Achilleas Demetriades said on Twitter.

    “Article 9Ea, unfortunately, grants the right to the minister to issue such a decree IF it is directed towards the public good. The question is whether such a demographic change is within the public good and to what extent it is against A14 of the constitution,” Demetriades said on Friday.

    Liasides said that the decree was necessary as the large numbers of refugees in the area was causing a number of different issues.

    “There were problems with the old houses they were staying in and also the schools were encountering issues; teachers were finding it almost impossible to teach classes due to the different languages. In a class of 20 kids, 8 would be from Syria, 6 Europeans and 5 Cypriots, it was a difficult situation.”

    Liasides noted that companies can no longer draw up a contract to rent to a property in Chlorakas to a Syrian refugee: “It’s not allowed, and it is also illegal for owners to rent to Syrian refugees. If they did, they would be in trouble,” he said.

    The controversial decree has meant that the number of refugees has stayed the same without increasing, which is helping to make the situation better, he said.

    The community leader also noted that help is being given to Chlorakas by the ministry of education, in the form of special programme for school and social practices “We are very happy about that,” he said.

    “This includes lessons for refugees to learn the Greek language to prepare them to go to class, they also learn music and other things, it’s to help them to more easily integrate into the school. We don’t want them not to go to school,” he said.

    Last year, a growing crime rate and the murder of a Syrian man in Chlorakas spread fear among residents and forced Liasides to appeal for state help over groups of young, armed, single men, Liasides said. The situation spread serious concerns in the wider community, including among long-term Syrian residents who were in fear of the newer arrivals.

    “Things are getting better. We do still have problems with criminality, but now there is a police unit that was placed here last year because of the dire situation, we are going the right way.”

    He also stressed: “We are not racists. We love Syrians in Chlorakas and we want to be in a position to help them. We have had refugees here since the 1990’s and they are good people and a good, hard working nation and they are family people too. But we can’t handle the big numbers, it just isn’t viable.”

    https://cyprus-mail.com/2021/01/15/decree-bans-new-syrian-refugees-from-settling-in-chlorakas

    #Chypre #réfugiés #réfugiés_syriens #asile #migrations #réfugiés #decret #Paphos #ghetto #liberté_d'établissement #liberté_de_mouvement #liberté_de_circulation #loi #bien_public #démographie #constitution #constitutionnalité #écoles #logement #criminalité

  • 312 suspects belges identifiés après un échange de données ADN avec le Royaume-Uni
    https://www.lesoir.be/349494/article/2021-01-18/312-suspects-belges-identifies-apres-un-echange-de-donnees-adn-avec-le-royaum

    Depuis le 21 décembre dernier, la Belgique échange de façon automatique ses données ADN avec le Royaume-Uni, en matière de recherche judiciaire. Depuis lors, 312 suspects belges identifiés outre-Manche, rapportent les titres Sudpresse lundi. Depuis la mise en connexion des deux banques de données, ce sont très exactement 2.180 correspondances qui ont été obtenues. « Dans environ 16 % des 2.180 correspondances obtenues, soit 312, un profil génétique de traces non identifié a pu être associé à une (...)

    #criminalité #génétique #données

    ##criminalité

    • Je n’ai pas confiance... A mon avis le rapport erreurs d’analyse/affaires résolues ne peut être que très mauvais. Sans compter qu’il ne faudra pas longtemps pour que les pros de la criminalité ne commencent à ensemencer leurs scènes de crime avec des « mix » d’ADN... SI on cible pas très précisément les cas d’usage, des humain-e-s vont morfler injustement (convocations, interrogatoires,...)

      #surveillance #société

  • The dark side of open source intelligence
    https://www.codastory.com/authoritarian-tech/negatives-open-source-intelligence

    Internet sleuths have used publicly available data to help track down last week’s Washington D.C. rioters. But what happens when the wrong people are identified ? In May, a video of a woman flouting a national Covid-19 mask mandate went viral on social media in Singapore. In the clip, the bare-faced woman argues with passersby outside of a grocery store, defending herself as “a sovereign” and therefore exempt from the law. Following her arrest later that day, internet detectives took matters (...)

    #FBI #algorithme #CCTV #biométrie #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #délation #extrême-droite #surveillance #criminalité #bug #racisme #biais #discrimination (...)

    ##criminalité ##Clearview

  • Internet-Anzeigen nicht bezahlt Berliner „Sperrmüllmafia“ betrügt Google um eine halbe Million Euro
    https://m.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/polizei-justiz/internet-anzeigen-nicht-bezahlt-berliner-sperrmuellmafia-betruegt-google-um-eine-halbe-million-euro/26822284.html

    15.01.2021, von Ingo Salmen - Die Werbung sah fast so aus wie von der BSR: Eine Bande hat Internet-Anzeigen für Müllentsorgung geschaltet, ohne zu zahlen. Ein Verdächtiger sitzt nun in Haft.

    Mit nicht bezahlten Internet-Anzeigen soll eine Bande in Berlin eine halbe Million Euro vom Internetriesen Google ergaunert haben. Wie Staatsanwaltschaft und Polizei am Freitag mitteilten, sitzt ein 40-Jähriger Tatverdächtiger nun in Untersuchungshaft.

    Am Donnerstag hatte 28 Einsatzkräfte der Polizei vier Durchsuchungsbeschlüsse und den Haftbefehl vollstreckt. Der Vorwurf lautet auf gewerbsmäßigen Bandenbetrug und Urkundenfälschung. Diverse Beweismittel sowie Geld und Wertgegenstände seien sichergestellt worden, hieß es in der Mitteilung.

    Die mutmaßliche „Sperrmüllmafia“ soll nach Darstellung der Staatsanwaltschaft zwischen Sommer 2017 und 2018 regelmäßig „über eine Internetsuchmaschine mit dem Vorsatz aufgegeben haben, diese Anzeigen beim Internetdienstleister nicht zu bezahlen“. Nach Tagesspiegel-Informationen handelte es sich bei dem geschädigten Unternehmen um Google.

    Mit umfangreichen Kampagnen sollen die Verdächtigen für ein illegales Unternehmen zur Sperrmüllentsorgung geworben haben. Dabei sollen die Anzeigen so ausgesehen haben, als könnten sie von der Berliner Stadtreinigung (BSR) stammen, erklärte der Sprecher der Staatsanwaltschaft, Martin Steltner, dem Tagesspiegel.

    Strohleute hätten „Fake“-Konten eingerichtet, um die Anzeigen per Lastschriftverfahren zu bezahlen. Nach einer Weile hätten sie die Einwilligung aber widerrufen und das Geld zurückgebucht - um es schließlich an die Bande zu transferieren, teils auch durch Abheben von Bargeld.
    Google hatte kein Interesse an einer Strafverfolgung

    Die Sperrmüllfirma sei dadurch an kostenlose Werbung im Wert von rund 500.000 Euro gekommen, erklärte der Sprecher der Staatsanwaltschaft. Aufgeflogen sei das erst, als verschiedene Banken im Mai einen Verdacht auf Geldwäsche meldeten - der sich später nicht erhärten ließ. Die Ermittlungen seien „ausschließlich“ auf die Meldungen der Banken zurückzuführen, hieß es in der Mitteilung vom Freitag. Auf Nachfrage wurde Steltner deutlicher: Der Suchmaschinen-Anbieter habe offenbar kein Interesse an einer Strafverfolgung gehabt und sich „null kooperativ“ gezeigt.

    Die Ermittlungen richten sich gegen insgesamt mehrere Hauptverdächtige unterschiedlicher Nationalität und teils mit erheblichen Vorstrafen sowie gegen fünf mutmaßliche Strohleute. Ein 44-jähriger mutmaßlicher Mittäter wurde zwischenzeitlich vom Vollzug der Untersuchungshaft verschont. Die Auswertung der Beweismittel dauere noch an, hieß es.

    Die Masche mit Sperrmüll-Anzeigen ist auch für die Ermittler ungewöhnlich. Bisher habe es eher Betrugsfälle gegeben, bei denen Leute geschädigt wurden, die Sperrmüll entsorgen wollten, erklärte Steltner. Kriminelle hätten den Auftraggebern deutlich überhöhte Rechnungen ausgestellt, die Opfer seien in ihrer Notsituation oft darauf eingegangen. Darauf gibt es im aktuellen Fall keine Hinweise: „Wir wissen nicht, was mit dem Sperrmüll passiert ist.“

    https://m.tagesspiegel.de/berlin/berlin-soll-sauberer-werden-so-will-der-senat-das-muell-problem-in-den-griff-bekommen/26205946.html

    #Berlin #fraude #criminalité #Google

  • Insecure wheels : Police turn to car data to destroy suspects’ alibis
    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/snitches-wheels-police-turn-car-data-destroy-suspects-alibis-n1251939

    Looser privacy standards for vehicle data are a treasure chest of data for law enforcement. On June 26, 2017, the lifeless body of Ronald French, a bearded auto mechanic with once-twinkling eyes, was mysteriously found in a cornfield in Kalamazoo County, Michigan. French, a grandfather of eight who always tried to help people “down on their luck,” his daughter Ronda Hamilton told NBC affiliate WOOD of Kalamazoo, had disappeared three weeks before. According to the police report, a cord (...)

    #Cellebrite #Bluetooth #capteur #smartphone #voiture #GPS #USBKey #géolocalisation #criminalité #données #écoutes #surveillance (...)

    ##criminalité ##FTC

  • La voiture connectée, nouveau lieu du crime et de l’enquête
    https://korii.slate.fr/tech/voiture-connectee-nouveau-lieu-crime-enquete-indices-donnees-police

    Position GPS, vitesse, enregistrements audio… La voiture est une véritable mine d’indices pour la police. Le 26 juin 2017, le corps de Ronald French, un mécanicien automobile, a été retrouvé dans un champ de maïs du comté de Kalamazoo, dans le Michigan. Durant deux ans, l’enquête a piétiné sans aboutir à la moindre piste. Jusqu’à ce que la police se tourne vers une nouvelle source d’indices : la voiture de la victime. En examinant les données enregistrées dans la Chevy Silverado, le pick-up de Ronald (...)

    #Bluetooth #smartphone #voiture #SIM #USBKey #criminalité #géolocalisation #données (...)

    ##criminalité ##écoutes

  • Singapore Police Force can obtain TraceTogether data for criminal investigations : Desmond Tan
    https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/singapore-police-force-can-obtain-tracetogether-data-covid-19-13889

    SINGAPORE : The Singapore Police Force (SPF) can obtain TraceTogether data for criminal investigations, said Minister of State for Home Affairs Desmond Tan in Parliament on Monday (Jan 4). The SPF is empowered under the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC) to obtain any data, and that includes the TraceTogether data, said Mr Tan. “The Government is the custodian of the TT (TraceTogether) data submitted by the individuals and stringent measures are put in place to safeguard this personal data,” (...)

    #algorithme #TraceTogether #contactTracing #criminalité #police #COVID-19 #santé #données

    ##criminalité ##santé

  • Singapore police can access COVID-19 contact tracing data for criminal investigations
    https://www.zdnet.com/article/singapore-police-can-access-covid-19-contact-tracing-data-for-criminal-invest

    Under the country’s Criminal Procedure Code, the Singapore Police Force can obtain any data — including information gathered by the contact tracing TraceTogether app and wearable token — to facilitate criminal probes, confirms cabinet minister. Singapore has confirmed its law enforcers will be able to access the country’s COVID-19 contact tracing data to aid in their criminal investigations. To date, more than 4.2 million residents or 78% of the local population have adopted the TraceTogether (...)

    #algorithme #TraceTogether #contactTracing #criminalité #police #données #COVID-19 (...)

    ##criminalité ##santé

  • All I want for 2021 is to see Mark Zuckerberg up in court
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jan/02/all-i-want-for-2021-is-to-see-mark-zuckerberg-up-in-court

    The tech giants’ law-free bonanza is coming to an end on both sides of the Atlantic, but let’s speed up the process It’s always risky making predictions about the tech industry, but this year looks like being different, at least in the sense that there are two safe bets. One is that the attempts to regulate the tech giants that began last year will intensify ; the second that we will be increasingly deluged by sanctimonious cant from Facebook & co as they seek to avoid democratic curbing (...)

    #Alphabet #Apple #Google #Amazon #Facebook #procès #criminalité #domination #fraude (...)

    ##criminalité ##bénéfices
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/dd3bdd381f1340402fc8024d39e0e846c116faea/0_143_4281_2569/master/4281.jpg

  • Inside China’s unexpected quest to protect data privacy
    https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/08/19/1006441/china-data-privacy-hong-yanqing-gdpr

    A new privacy law would look a lot like Europe’s GDPR—but will it restrict state surveillance?

    Late in the summer of 2016, Xu Yuyu received a call that promised to change her life. Her college entrance examination scores, she was told, had won her admission to the English department of the Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications. Xu lived in the city of Linyi in Shandong, a coastal province in China, southeast of Beijing. She came from a poor family, singularly reliant on her father’s meager income. But her parents had painstakingly saved for her tuition; very few of her relatives had ever been to college.

    A few days later, Xu received another call telling her she had also been awarded a scholarship. To collect the 2,600 yuan ($370), she needed to first deposit a 9,900 yuan “activation fee” into her university account. Having applied for financial aid only days before, she wired the money to the number the caller gave her. That night, the family rushed to the police to report that they had been defrauded. Xu’s father later said his greatest regret was asking the officer whether they might still get their money back. The answer—“Likely not”—only exacerbated Xu’s devastation. On the way home she suffered a heart attack. She died in a hospital two days later.

    An investigation determined that while the first call had been genuine, the second had come from scammers who’d paid a hacker for Xu’s number, admissions status, and request for financial aid.

    For Chinese consumers all too familiar with having their data stolen, Xu became an emblem. Her death sparked a national outcry for greater data privacy protections. Only months before, the European Union had adopted the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), an attempt to give European citizens control over how their personal data is used. Meanwhile, Donald Trump was about to win the American presidential election, fueled in part by a campaign that relied extensively on voter data. That data included details on 87 million Facebook accounts, illicitly obtained by the consulting firm Cambridge Analytica. Chinese regulators and legal scholars followed these events closely.

    In the West, it’s widely believed that neither the Chinese government nor Chinese people care about privacy. US tech giants wield this supposed indifference to argue that onerous privacy laws would put them at a competitive disadvantage to Chinese firms. In his 2018 Senate testimony after the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, urged regulators not to clamp down too hard on technologies like face recognition. “We still need to make it so that American companies can innovate in those areas,” he said, “or else we’re going to fall behind Chinese competitors and others around the world.”

    In reality, this picture of Chinese attitudes to privacy is out of date. Over the last few years the Chinese government, seeking to strengthen consumers’ trust and participation in the digital economy, has begun to implement privacy protections that in many respects resemble those in America and Europe today.

    Even as the government has strengthened consumer privacy, however, it has ramped up state surveillance. It uses DNA samples and other biometrics, like face and fingerprint recognition, to monitor citizens throughout the country. It has tightened internet censorship and developed a “social credit” system, which punishes behaviors the authorities say weaken social stability. During the pandemic, it deployed a system of “health code” apps to dictate who could travel, based on their risk of carrying the coronavirus. And it has used a slew of invasive surveillance technologies in its harsh repression of Muslim Uighurs in the northwestern region of Xinjiang.

    This paradox has become a defining feature of China’s emerging data privacy regime, says Samm Sacks, a leading China scholar at Yale and New America, a think tank in Washington, DC. It raises a question: Can a system endure with strong protections for consumer privacy, but almost none against government snooping? The answer doesn’t affect only China. Its technology companies have an increasingly global footprint, and regulators around the world are watching its policy decisions.

    November 2000 arguably marks the birth of the modern Chinese surveillance state. That month, the Ministry of Public Security, the government agency that oversees daily law enforcement, announced a new project at a trade show in Beijing. The agency envisioned a centralized national system that would integrate both physical and digital surveillance using the latest technology. It was named Golden Shield.

    Eager to cash in, Western companies including American conglomerate Cisco, Finnish telecom giant Nokia, and Canada’s Nortel Networks worked with the agency on different parts of the project. They helped construct a nationwide database for storing information on all Chinese adults, and developed a sophisticated system for controlling information flow on the internet—what would eventually become the Great Firewall. Much of the equipment involved had in fact already been standardized to make surveillance easier in the US—a consequence of the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act of 1994.

    Despite the standardized equipment, the Golden Shield project was hampered by data silos and turf wars within the Chinese government. Over time, the ministry’s pursuit of a singular, unified system devolved into two separate operations: a surveillance and database system, devoted to gathering and storing information, and the social-credit system, which some 40 government departments participate in. When people repeatedly do things that aren’t allowed—from jaywalking to engaging in business corruption—their social-credit score falls and they can be blocked from things like buying train and plane tickets or applying for a mortgage.

    In the same year the Ministry of Public Security announced Golden Shield, Hong Yanqing entered the ministry’s police university in Beijing. But after seven years of training, having received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees, Hong began to have second thoughts about becoming a policeman. He applied instead to study abroad. By the fall of 2007, he had moved to the Netherlands to begin a PhD in international human rights law, approved and subsidized by the Chinese government.

    Over the next four years, he familiarized himself with the Western practice of law through his PhD research and a series of internships at international organizations. He worked at the International Labor Organization on global workplace discrimination law and the World Health Organization on road safety in China. “It’s a very legalistic culture in the West—that really strikes me. People seem to go to court a lot,” he says. “For example, for human rights law, most of the textbooks are about the significant cases in court resolving human rights issues.”

    Hong found this to be strangely inefficient. He saw going to court as a final resort for patching up the law’s inadequacies, not a principal tool for establishing it in the first place. Legislation crafted more comprehensively and with greater forethought, he believed, would achieve better outcomes than a system patched together through a haphazard accumulation of case law, as in the US.

    After graduating, he carried these ideas back to Beijing in 2012, on the eve of Xi Jinping’s ascent to the presidency. Hong worked at the UN Development Program and then as a journalist for the People’s Daily, the largest newspaper in China, which is owned by the government.

    Xi began to rapidly expand the scope of government censorship. Influential commentators, or “Big Vs”—named for their verified accounts on social media—had grown comfortable criticizing and ridiculing the Chinese Communist Party. In the fall of 2013, the party arrested hundreds of microbloggers for what it described as “malicious rumor-mongering” and paraded a particularly influential one on national television to make an example of him.

    The moment marked the beginning of a new era of censorship. The following year, the Cyberspace Administration of China was founded. The new central agency was responsible for everything involved in internet regulation, including national security, media and speech censorship, and data protection. Hong left the People’s Daily and joined the agency’s department of international affairs. He represented it at the UN and other global bodies and worked on cybersecurity cooperation with other governments.

    By July 2015, the Cyberspace Administration had released a draft of its first law. The Cybersecurity Law, which entered into force in June of 2017, required that companies obtain consent from people to collect their personal information. At the same time, it tightened internet censorship by banning anonymous users—a provision enforced by regular government inspections of data from internet service providers.

    In the spring of 2016, Hong sought to return to academia, but the agency asked him to stay. The Cybersecurity Law had purposely left the regulation of personal data protection vague, but consumer data breaches and theft had reached unbearable levels. A 2016 study by the Internet Society of China found that 84% of those surveyed had suffered some leak of their data, including phone numbers, addresses, and bank account details. This was spurring a growing distrust of digital service providers that required access to personal information, such as ride-hailing, food-delivery, and financial apps. Xu Yuyu’s death poured oil on the flames.

    The government worried that such sentiments would weaken participation in the digital economy, which had become a central part of its strategy for shoring up the country’s slowing economic growth. The advent of GDPR also made the government realize that Chinese tech giants would need to meet global privacy norms in order to expand abroad.

    Hong was put in charge of a new task force that would write a Personal Information Protection Specification (PIPS) to help solve these challenges. The document, though nonbinding, would tell companies how regulators intended to implement the Cybersecurity Law. In the process, the government hoped, it would nudge them to adopt new norms for data protection by themselves.

    Hong’s task force set about translating every relevant document they could find into Chinese. They translated the privacy guidelines put out by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and by its counterpart, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation; they translated GDPR and the California Consumer Privacy Act. They even translated the 2012 White House Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights, introduced by the Obama administration but never made into law. All the while, Hong met regularly with European and American data protection regulators and scholars.

    Bit by bit, from the documents and consultations, a general choice emerged. “People were saying, in very simplistic terms, ‘We have a European model and the US model,’” Hong recalls. The two approaches diverged substantially in philosophy and implementation. Which one to follow became the task force’s first debate.

    At the core of the European model is the idea that people have a fundamental right to have their data protected. GDPR places the burden of proof on data collectors, such as companies, to demonstrate why they need the data. By contrast, the US model privileges industry over consumers. Businesses define for themselves what constitutes reasonable data collection; consumers only get to choose whether to use that business. The laws on data protection are also far more piecemeal than in Europe, divvied up among sectoral regulators and specific states.

    At the time, without a central law or single agency in charge of data protection, China’s model more closely resembled the American one. The task force, however, found the European approach compelling. “The European rule structure, the whole system, is more clear,” Hong says.

    But most of the task force members were representatives from Chinese tech giants, like Baidu, Alibaba, and Huawei, and they felt that GDPR was too restrictive. So they adopted its broad strokes—including its limits on data collection and its requirements on data storage and data deletion—and then loosened some of its language. GDPR’s principle of data minimization, for example, maintains that only necessary data should be collected in exchange for a service. PIPS allows room for other data collection relevant to the service provided.

    PIPS took effect in May 2018, the same month that GDPR finally took effect. But as Chinese officials watched the US upheaval over the Facebook and Cambridge Analytica scandal, they realized that a nonbinding agreement would not be enough. The Cybersecurity Law didn’t have a strong mechanism for enforcing data protection. Regulators could only fine violators up to 1,000,000 yuan ($140,000), an inconsequential amount for large companies. Soon after, the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislative body, voted to begin drafting a Personal Information Protection Law within its current five-year legislative period, which ends in 2023. It would strengthen data protection provisions, provide for tougher penalties, and potentially create a new enforcement agency.

    After Cambridge Analytica, says Hong, “the government agency understood, ‘Okay, if you don’t really implement or enforce those privacy rules, then you could have a major scandal, even affecting political things.’”

    The local police investigation of Xu Yuyu’s death eventually identified the scammers who had called her. It had been a gang of seven who’d cheated many other victims out of more than 560,000 yuan using illegally obtained personal information. The court ruled that Xu’s death had been a direct result of the stress of losing her family’s savings. Because of this, and his role in orchestrating tens of thousands of other calls, the ringleader, Chen Wenhui, 22, was sentenced to life in prison. The others received sentences between three and 15 years.Retour ligne automatique
    xu yuyu

    Emboldened, Chinese media and consumers began more openly criticizing privacy violations. In March 2018, internet search giant Baidu’s CEO, Robin Li, sparked social-media outrage after suggesting that Chinese consumers were willing to “exchange privacy for safety, convenience, or efficiency.” “Nonsense,” wrote a social-media user, later quoted by the People’s Daily. “It’s more accurate to say [it is] impossible to defend [our privacy] effectively.”

    In late October 2019, social-media users once again expressed anger after photos began circulating of a school’s students wearing brainwave-monitoring headbands, supposedly to improve their focus and learning. The local educational authority eventually stepped in and told the school to stop using the headbands because they violated students’ privacy. A week later, a Chinese law professor sued a Hangzhou wildlife zoo for replacing its fingerprint-based entry system with face recognition, saying the zoo had failed to obtain his consent for storing his image.

    But the public’s growing sensitivity to infringements of consumer privacy has not led to many limits on state surveillance, nor even much scrutiny of it. As Maya Wang, a researcher at Human Rights Watch, points out, this is in part because most Chinese citizens don’t know the scale or scope of the government’s operations. In China, as in the US and Europe, there are broad public and national security exemptions to data privacy laws. The Cybersecurity Law, for example, allows the government to demand data from private actors to assist in criminal legal investigations. The Ministry of Public Security also accumulates massive amounts of data on individuals directly. As a result, data privacy in industry can be strengthened without significantly limiting the state’s access to information.

    The onset of the pandemic, however, has disturbed this uneasy balance.

    On February 11, Ant Financial, a financial technology giant headquartered in Hangzhou, a city southwest of Shanghai, released an app-building platform called AliPay Health Code. The same day, the Hangzhou government released an app it had built using the platform. The Hangzhou app asked people to self-report their travel and health information, and then gave them a color code of red, yellow, or green. Suddenly Hangzhou’s 10 million residents were all required to show a green code to take the subway, shop for groceries, or enter a mall. Within a week, local governments in over 100 cities had used AliPay Health Code to develop their own apps. Rival tech giant Tencent quickly followed with its own platform for building them.

    The apps made visible a worrying level of state surveillance and sparked a new wave of public debate. In March, Hu Yong, a journalism professor at Beijing University and an influential blogger on Weibo, argued that the government’s pandemic data collection had crossed a line. Not only had it led to instances of information being stolen, he wrote, but it had also opened the door to such data being used beyond its original purpose. “Has history ever shown that once the government has surveillance tools, it will maintain modesty and caution when using them?” he asked.

    Indeed, in late May, leaked documents revealed plans from the Hangzhou government to make a more permanent health-code app that would score citizens on behaviors like exercising, smoking, and sleeping. After a public outcry, city officials canceled the project. That state-run media had also published stories criticizing the app likely helped.

    The debate quickly made its way to the central government. That month, the National People’s Congress announced it intended to fast-track the Personal Information Protection Law. The scale of the data collected during the pandemic had made strong enforcement more urgent, delegates said, and highlighted the need to clarify the scope of the government’s data collection and data deletion procedures during special emergencies. By July, the legislative body had proposed a new “strict approval” process for government authorities to undergo before collecting data from private-sector platforms. The language again remains vague, to be fleshed out later—perhaps through another nonbinding document—but this move “could mark a step toward limiting the broad scope” of existing government exemptions for national security, wrote Sacks and fellow China scholars at New America.

    Hong similarly believes the discrepancy between rules governing industry and government data collection won’t last, and the government will soon begin to limit its own scope. “We cannot simply address one actor while leaving the other out,” he says. “That wouldn’t be a very scientific approach.”

    Other observers disagree. The government could easily make superficial efforts to address public backlash against visible data collection without really touching the core of the Ministry of Public Security’s national operations, says Wang, of Human Rights Watch. She adds that any laws would likely be enforced unevenly: “In Xinjiang, Turkic Muslims have no say whatsoever in how they’re treated.”

    Still, Hong remains an optimist. In July, he started a job teaching law at Beijing University, and he now maintains a blog on cybersecurity and data issues. Monthly, he meets with a budding community of data protection officers in China, who carefully watch how data governance is evolving around the world.

    #criminalité #Nokia_Siemens #fraude #Huawei #payement #Cisco #CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata #Baidu #Alibaba #domination #bénéfices #BHATX #BigData #lutte #publicité (...)

    ##criminalité ##CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata ##publicité ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##Nortel_Networks ##Facebook ##biométrie ##consommation ##génétique ##consentement ##facial ##reconnaissance ##empreintes ##Islam ##SocialCreditSystem ##surveillance ##TheGreatFirewallofChina ##HumanRightsWatch

  • Police Want Your Smart Speaker—Here’s Why
    https://www.wired.com/story/star-witness-your-smart-speaker

    Requests are rising from law enforcement for information on the devices, which can include internet queries, food orders, and overheard conversations. In July 2019, police rushed to the home of 32-year-old Silvia Galva. Galva’s friend, also in the home, called 911, claiming she overheard a violent argument between Galva and her boyfriend, 43-year-old Adam Crespo. The two lived together in Hallandale Beach, Florida, about 20 miles from Miami. When officers arrived, Galva was dead, impaled (...)

    #Google #Nest #DHS #Amazon #Home #Alexa #domotique #Echo #smartphone #criminalité #écoutes (...)

    ##criminalité ##surveillance