Time to Act on Companies Selling Mass Spy Gear to Authoritarian Regimes

On Wednesday, EFF will give recommendations to the European Parliament for how to combat one of the most troubling problems facing democracy activists around the world: the fact that European and American companies are providing key surveillance technology to authoritarian governments that is then being used to aid repression.
Recent reports by the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg News have exposed the shadowy but growing industry that sells electronic spy gear to governments known for violating human rights.
The technology’s reach is very broad: governments can listen in on cell phone calls, use voice recognition to scan mobile networks, read emails and text messages, censor web pages, track one’s every movement using GPS, and can even change email contents while en route to a recipient.
Some tools are installed using the same type of malicious malware and spyware used by online criminals to steal credit card and banking information. They can secretly turn on webcams built into personal laptops and microphones in unused cell phones.
All of this information is filtered and organized on such a massive
scale that it can be used to spy on every person in an entire country.
Ordinary citizens, journalists, human rights campaigners and democracy
advocates have all been targeted, eviscerating privacy rights and
chilling free speech.
Ample evidence suggests information acquired through this spy gear appears has played a role in the harassment, threats, and even torture of journalists, human rights campaigners, and democracy activists.
Yet dozens of companies from the U.S. and E.U
continue to sell this technology, including to authoritarian regimes.
The market for surveillance equipment has grown to a staggering $5 billion a year.
Dutch member of the EU Parliament Marietje Schaake has been trying to
spearhead an effort to curb sales of this type of technology to
repressive regimes.
In September, the EU parliament passed a resolution proposed by Ms. Schaake which called on European countries to regulate sales of this dangerous surveillance tools if they can be used in human rights violations.
She has also asked the European Commission to investigate sales by these companies to the governments of Bahrain, Yemen, Syria, Tunisia and Egypt.
On Wednesday, EFF will be testifying at a workshop for
Committee of International Trade and Committee on Foreign Affairs,
co-chaired by Ms. Schaake. Here is part of what we will say:
Transparency
First, transparency is key. The mass surveillance industry as a whole
has been notoriously secretive and that has, in turn, allowed it to
proliferate without meaningful safeguards. We know that just having
this information in the public eye can, by itself, force change.
Companies have pulled out of countries and created official human rights policies thanks to news reports.
The world program director of I.S.S. Tatiana Lucas even complained
that shining a spotlight on these practices “makes U.S. manufacturers
gun shy about developing, and eventually exporting, anything that can
remotely be used to support government surveillance.” We want to turn up
the heat on these companies even more to be accountable for selling to
authoritarian regimes.
We encourage the EU commission to act on Ms. Schaake’s request for an
investigation into these companies and have them answer questions on the
record.
The EU Parliament should also consider disclosure requirements,
requiring companies to publicize which governments they are selling to
(either a full list or a limited list of based on troubling regimes or
portions of regimes) and descriptions of the capabilities of their
technologies, so an investigative body could follow the money trail to
find out exactly whose equipment ends up where and how it is being used.
“Know Your Customer”
But beyond transparency, there is also the question of limiting sales to
certain governments or parts of governments. Many have called for such
direct legislation of surveillance tools but EFF has not joined that
chorus, in part because we recognize how difficult it will be to create
rules that both reach the problem and do not create collateral harms.
First and foremost, we want to make sure we do not leave activists with fewer tools than they already have. Parliament must be mindful of legislation just based on types of technology because broadly written regulations could have a net negative affect on the availability of many general-purpose technologies and could easily harm very people that the regulations are trying to protect.
As EFF has highlighted before,
legal terms used to define harmful technology can often encompass basic
technology like web browsers and email servers. We can see this problem
in the U.S., where overbroad regulations keep Syrian
activists from accessing Google Chrome and Earth, Java, and or hosting
services like Rackspace or SuperGreenHosting. It can also harm network
security efforts.
So instead of focusing on the technology being sold, we recommend that
any formal or informal effort to address the problem of misuse of
surveillance technologies look at the government customers as the
ultimate chokepoint.
To that end, EFF has proposed
a “know your customer” framework, based on already existing legal
frameworks in the U.S. that can be implemented without significant
overhead cost to government or businesses.
Simply put, companies selling surveillance technologies to governments
or government providers need to affirmatively investigate and "know
their customer" before and during a sale. EFF has already detailed
extensive framework for such regulations including questions,
definitions, and procedures for how to accomplish it.
It would require companies to comprehensively review everything about a
sale of surveillance technology from the negotiations, discussions,
background of the buyer, contractual specifications, technical support
requests, to State Department and U.N human rights reports and the
capability for abuse.
Companies would refrain from participating in
transactions where their investigations reveal either objective evidence
or credible concerns that the technologies provided by the company will
be used to facilitate human rights violations. You can read EFF’s full,
detailed “know your customer” framework here.
This approach does three things:
First, it avoids the many problems with pre-defining technologies, and instead focuses on the uses of the technologies to facilitate human rights abuses.
Second it encompasses both government-like entities and sales to third-parties when the technology is likely to pass to repressive governments. This problem has been a frequent excuse from companies engaged in this business and their apologists.
Yet in the context of tracking bribes in the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and other export regulations, the U.S. government, like other governments around the world, have developed tools to help discover these sorts of transactions.
Third,
because it is based on current regulations that many of the companies
involved in selling surveillance equipment to government end users
already have to comply with, this approach should not add a heavy
regulatory burden.
We hope the EU moves quickly on this problem, as recent reports show it
is only getting worse. We also hope the U.S. Congress is listening
because with U.S companies sell the same equipment, they are not only
undermining own foreign policy in these countries, but destroying the
human rights the State Department claims it supports around the world.
When asked by the Guardian if he would be comfortable knowing that
regimes in North Korea and Zimbabwe were purchasing this technology from
the companies he does business with, Jerry Lucas, president of
Telestrategies Inc., said, “That’s just not my job to determine who’s a bad country and who’s a good country. That’s not our business.”
By instituting EFF’s "know our customer" standards, we can make it their business.
February 8, 2012 - posted at BlackListedNews
Source - EFF
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