I spy, with my little eye...

peckhs

Well-Known Member
this was in yahoo.sg news earlier, and the next moment gone... why ah??

Singapore, South Korea revealed as Five Eyes spying partners

Singapore and South Korea are playing key roles helping the United States and Australia tap undersea telecommunications links across Asia, according to top secret documents leaked by former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden. New details have also been revealed about the involvement of Australia and New Zealand in the interception of global satellite communications.

A top secret United States National Security Agency map shows that the US and its “Five Eyes” intelligence partners tap high speed fibre optic cables at 20 locations worldwide. The interception operation involves cooperation with local governments and telecommunications companies or else through “covert, clandestine” operations.

The undersea cable interception operations are part of a global web that in the words of another leaked NSA planning document enables the “Five Eyes” partners – the US, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada and New Zealand - to trace “anyone, anywhere, anytime” in what is described as “the golden age” signals intelligence.

The NSA map, published by Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad overnight, shows that the United States maintains a stranglehold on trans-Pacific communications channels with interception facilities on the West coast of the United States and at Hawaii and Guam, tapping all cable traffic across the Pacific Ocean as well as links between Australia and Japan.


The map confirms that Singapore, one of the world's most significant telecommunications hubs, is a key “third party” working with the “Five Eyes” intelligence partners.

In August Fairfax Media reported that Australia's electronic espionage agency, the Defence Signals Directorate, is in a partnership with Singaporean intelligence to tap the SEA-ME-WE-3 cable that runs from Japan, via Singapore, Djibouti, Suez and the Straits of Gibraltar to Northern Germany.

Australian intelligence sources told Fairfax that the highly secretive Security and Intelligence Division of Singapore's Ministry of Defence co-operates with DSD in accessing and sharing communications carried by the SEA-ME-WE-3 cable as well as the SEA-ME-WE-4 cable that runs from Singapore to the south of France.

Access to this major international telecommunications channel, facilitated by Singapore's government-owned operator SingTel, has been a key element in an expansion of Australian-Singaporean intelligence and defence ties over the past 15 years.

Majority owned by Temask Holdings, the investment arm of the Singapore Government, SingTel has close relations with Singapore's intelligence agencies. The Singapore Government is represented on the company's board by the head of Singapore's civil service, Peter Ong, who was previously responsible for national security and intelligence co-ordination in the Singapore Prime Minister's office.

Australian intelligence expert, Australian National University Professor Des Ball has described Singapore's signal's intelligence capability as “probably the most advanced” in South East Asia, having first been developed in cooperation with Australia in the mid-1970s and subsequently leveraging Singapore's position as a regional telecommunications hub.

Indonesia and Malaysia have been key targets for Australian and Singaporean intelligence collaboration since the 1970s. Much of Indonesia's telecommunications and Internet traffic is routed through Singapore.

The leaked NSA map also shows South Korea is another key interception point with cable landings at Pusan providing access to the external communications of China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.

South Korea's National Intelligence Service has long been a close collaborator with the US Central Intelligence Agency and the NSA, as well as the Australian intelligence agencies. The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation recently engaged in legal action in an unsuccessful effort to prevent publication of details of South Korean espionage in Australia. ASIO Director-General David Irvine told the Federal Court that Australian and South Korean intelligence agencies had been cooperating for “over 30 years” and that any public disclose of NIS activities would be “detrimental” to Australia's national security.

The NSA map and other documents leaked by Mr Snowden and published by the Brazilian O Globo newspaper also reveal new detail on the integration of Australian and New Zealand signals intelligence facilities in the interception of satellite communications traffic by the “Five Eyes” partners.

For the first time it is revealed that the DSD satellite interception facility at Kojarena near Geraldton in Western Australia is codenamed “STELLAR”. The New Zealand Government Communications Security Bureau facility at Waihopai on New Zealand's South Island is codenamed “IRONSAND”. The codename for DSD's facility at Shoal Bay near Darwin is not identified. However all three facilities are listed by the NSA as “primary FORNSAT (foreign satellite communications) collection operations”.

Coverage of satellite communications across Asia and the Middle East is also supported by NSA facilities at the United States Air Force base at Misawa in Japan, US diplomatic premises in Thailand and India, and British Government Communications Headquarters facilities in Oman, Nairobi in Kenya and at the British military base in Cyprus.

The leaked NSA map also shows that undersea cables are accessed by the NSA and the British GCHQ through military facilities in Djibouti and Oman, thereby ensuring maximum coverage of Middle East and South Asian communications.


Read more: Singapore, South Korea revealed as Five Eyes spying partners
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

I wanna see your avatar's spy with my little eye but avatar very small......
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

whats the big deal? information is king in war. if im USA now. I go n shoot snowden.
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

no big deal to us, but our friendly neighbours can make a big deal of this... no?

everyone's doing it, but when it is in the news, it is another matter entirely. face value in question le...
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

kenntona;1051529 said:
I wanna see your avatar's spy with my little eye but avatar very small......

you don't have customers like that meh?? ah kong xiaos ... you no.1 leh, sure have one.... :yummie:
 
I spy, with my little eye...

peckhs;1051548 said:
no big deal to us, but our friendly neighbours can make a big deal of this... no?

Don't worry, our 1.1mth + 13th mth + xxx mth super scholars can handle anything.





Cheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeerssssss....
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

I'm not the least worried about it.
was just wondering why the news was taken down from the yahoo.sg site...
big brother's intervention??
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

Nov 20th - Minister for Communications and Information Yaacob Ibrahim on Facebook, "many Singaporeans have taken a stand against those who threatened our country's computer systems and websites". Nov 23rd - Law Minister K. Shanmugam, "Hacking is "nothing short of terrorism" if lives are endangered, say, when air-traffic control systems are breached."

Nov 25th news reported that Singapore is a key partner of the “5-Eyes” intelligence group which was revealed to have tapped telephones and monitored communications networks in Kuala Lumpur, according to more top secret documents leaked by intelligence whistleblower Edward Snowden.

Damn.....
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

Singapore tio samman!
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

Singapore an advanced surveillance state, but citizens don’t mind

Singapore an advanced surveillance state, but citizens don

However, the news, which suggests that the state has the resources to spy on its own citizens, got little traction within the country. Revealed in August, the pageviews only snowballed recently, and even so, it garnered a weaker reaction than the entrance of extra-marital dating site Ashley Madison into Singapore, a move which sparked an outcry among conservative Singaporeans.
:lol:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

to those who ccb the government here, have you been denied your rights and privileges???

It’s possible to gauge your political preferences – despite the fact that voting is secret in Singapore – and criminal tendency by getting data from social media posts, email, location-based services, and bank transactions. The data can then be compiled into a profile of an individual, and used to deny you certain rights and privileges.
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

kenntona;1052150 said:
BERNAMA - Singapore Must Furnish Proof It's Not Involved In Alleged Spying On Malaysia

"If Singapore says that this is not true, then it must provide us with information to refute the allegation and the proof that it is not true," he told reporters after closing the Practical Training on National Cyber Crisis 2013 (X-Maya 5), here Tuesday.

Guilty first, until proven innocent.

More keris rattling from the rent seekers!!
 
Re: I spy, with my little eye...

peckhs;1051818 said:
to those who ccb the government here, have you been denied your rights and privileges???

You have no idea of the extent of information they know about you and the power they have in legislation to act without discretion.......
 

Latest posts

Staff online

Members online

Forum statistics

Threads
82,734
Messages
1,019,262
Members
73,785
Latest member
88zalv

Latest posts

Ad | 📈Learn Trading Strategies, Lessons and Setups
Back
Top