The Counterrevolution
Page 15
Following the revelations by the AP, the ACLU filed suit in June 2013 on behalf of plaintiffs challenging the surveillance of mosques. The litigation captured well the historical trajectory of the domestication of counterinsurgency practices. The 2013 case, Raza v. City of New York, was folded back into an earlier federal case known as the Handschu litigation. The Handschu case had been filed in 1971 and challenged NYPD surveillance of the Black Panthers, antiwar protesters, the ACLU, NAACP, and others.11 Handschu addressed precisely the first domestic uses of counterinsurgency strategies—the early antecedents to today’s more coordinated and systemic counterinsurgency. It would serve as the framework to assess the new more systematic surveillance programs targeting mosques, Muslims, and Islamic-related businesses and student groups.
NYPD surveillance report on mosque and Islamic businesses in Newark, New Jersey (redacted here to protect privacy). (NYPD Intelligence Division, Demographics Unit, “Newark, New Jersey, Demographics Report,” September 25, 2007, pp. 31, 46.)
Federal judge Charles S. Haight Jr. of the Southern District of New York oversaw the Handschu litigation from its inception, including a settlement agreement in 1985 that led to the famous Handschu guidelines for oversight of the NYPD’s investigations of political activity. For years, the police department was under an agreement that prevented its intelligence unit from instigating investigations of political activity, and required that any such investigations be based on evidence of a crime. That original agreement was modified shortly after 9/11 to allow the NYPD more flexibility in its investigations of political activity. But even under those more relaxed standards, the NYPD surveillance of mosques and student groups pushed the boundaries of legality, resulting in new modifications of the Handschu guidelines.
In various interviews during the 2016 presidential campaign, President Donald Trump endorsed the continued surveillance of mosques and Muslim groups. President Trump indicated that he favored increased surveillance of American Muslims, possible registration of American Muslims in a government database, and even issuing special identifications for Muslims noting their religious faith.12 “You’re going to have to watch and study the mosques, because a lot of talk is going on in the mosques,” Trump told MSNBC’s Morning Joe in November 2015. Referring specifically to the NYPD intelligence programs that monitored New York’s Muslims, Trump said that “from what I heard, in the old days—meaning a while ago—we had a great surveillance going on in and around the mosques of New York City.”13
While the NYPD was ramping up a dragnet surveillance program of Muslims with the aid of the CIA, the FBI and federal prosecutors launched a massive nationwide information gathering campaign targeting Middle Eastern men from predominantly Muslim countries living in the United States on nonimmigrant visas. About two months after 9/11, US attorney general John Ashcroft announced a national campaign to interview as many as five thousand of these men. Federal authorities in Michigan rapidly responded and started the initiative, sending out over 560 letters to the targeted minority, identified as men being between the ages of eighteen and thirty-three from Middle Eastern Muslim countries. Here too, the authorities had no evidence or any reason to believe that any one of them was connected to terrorism or wrongdoing; in fact, the federal officials emphasized as much in those letters, saying, “We have no reason to believe that you are, in any way, associated with terrorist activities.”14 But despite the complete absence of suspicion, the federal authorities pressured the men to meet and talk to federal agents and local police. In order to conduct all these interviews, Ashcroft had asked local police enforcement to pitch in, further domesticating the strategies.
“Please contact my office to set up an interview at a location, date, and time that is convenient for you,” the letter stated. “While this interview is voluntary, it is crucial that the investigation be broad-based and thorough, and the interview is important to achieve that goal. We need to hear from you as soon as possible—by December 4. Please call my office between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. any day, including Saturday and Sunday. We will work with you to accommodate your schedule.” Signed by the US attorney for the eastern district of Michigan, these letters couched voluntariness in terms of “needing” to hear back within a week. And given that the targeted men were on nonimmigrant visas, these invitations in truth read as commands.
In addition to these local and domestic national surveillance programs, foreign-style intelligence collection was turned on the American masses. The Bush administration put in place an infamous NSA eavesdropping program inside the United States without prior court approval or any court orders. Congress passed the Section 215 program that collected data from American telecommunications companies. The NSA put in place a number of signal intelligence programs that captured and monitored all telecommunications data including that of American citizens. Through private sector cooperation with Microsoft, AT&T, and social media, the FBI and NSA increasingly get backdoor access to e-mail services and cloud storage facilities, and direct access to the servers of Yahoo, Google, Facebook, etc.
The NSA’s core programs worked in tandem and piggy-backed off the collection and mining of all our personal data by social media and retailers. Since the advent of free e-mail, storage, and social-media services, such as Gmail by Google, Outlook and SkyDrive by Microsoft, or Facebook, these digital giants began collecting all our personal data that crossed their servers. Their business models depended on it, insofar as the only source of income related to these free services was digital advertising. Other digital merchants, such as Amazon, Netflix, and other online retailers, also began capturing all their customers’ personal information as well, for purposes of advertising and pushing targeted products on consumers. All of these private giants of the digital age began collecting everyone’s data for their own commercial interests. The NSA, who figured this out quickly, soon received access to this data through licit and illicit means. Through programs like PRISM and UPSTREAM, the NSA gained total access to their servers and to the cables through which all of this data streamed.
The PRISM program, discussed earlier in the context of foreign intelligence collection, allowed the NSA to directly access the servers of most of the American digital giants, meaning that agents at the NSA and delegated consultants could directly access the servers of these companies to field inquiries and searches on foreigners as well as Americans. The agency gained direct access to the content of e-mails, attachments, VoIP calls, and all digital communications, allowing access to the personal data of foreigners as well as the information of American citizens. The UPSTREAM program provided the NSA with a copy of all the digital traffic going through undersea cables. And other NSA programs for the collection and mining of our personal digital data proliferated, resulting in a stunning level of access to the private information of Americans.
The invasiveness of today’s digital surveillance is truly breathtaking. The creation of these programs coincided with the explosive growth of digital technologies, all of which are rooted in and enable invasive surveillance of those who use them. Our network service providers, search engines, and social-media companies monitor our every digital trace to recommend products, sell advertisements, and fuel consumption. Google collects and mines our Gmail e-mails, attachments, contacts, and calendars. Netflix and Amazon use our data to recommend films, and Twitter tracks our Internet activity on all the websites that carry its little icon. Facebook’s smartphone app collects information from our other phone apps and pushes advertisements onto them. Instagram verifies ad impressions, measures their success, and provides feedback to the advertisers as to which are most effective. Neighbors use packet sniffers or free Mac software, like Eavesdrop, to tap into our unsecured networks. Google’s street-view cars captured and recorded our usernames, passwords, and personal e-mails on unencrypted Wi-Fi traffic.
And as Edward Snowden’s revelations demonstrated, the NSA has practically free access to all of this information through multiple means. A quick look at the top-s
ecret PRISM slides reminds us of the reach into our personal lives: Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, Paltalk, YouTube, Skype, AOL, Apple, etc. All of these companies gave the NSA access to communications conducted through them under the PRISM program, and they did so for a trifling sum. According to the Snowden revelations, the entire PRISM program cost the NSA a mere $20 million per year. For that tiny amount, the NSA had direct access to their servers—over and above the cutting and splicing into telecom cables that gave the NSA direct access to all digital communications.
As a result, in the United States today, ordinary citizens face a multifaceted web of surveillance. Social media, retailers, smartphone applications, Internet providers, and web browsers are all collecting our private data, and making them available to the intelligence agencies. Most new technology and apps—even games, like Pokémon GO—thrive on accessing our contacts, our GPS location, our calendar, our webcam, and all our private information. We are surrounded by a Lernaean Hydra of telecoms, social media, Google platforms, Facebook apps, Microsoft products, retailers, data brokers, multinational corporations, hackers—including foreign government hackers—and our own intelligence agencies, each of which is trying to outdo the other to collect and mine our personal information, each of them pursuing total information awareness with unparalleled vigor.
NSA PowerPoint slide on PRISM program history (2013). (“NSA Slides Explain the PRISM Data-Collection Program,” Washington Post, June 6, 2013.)
NSA PowerPoint slide on PRISM and UPSTREAM programs (2013). (“NSA Slides Explain the PRISM Data-Collection Program,” Washington Post, June 6, 2013.)
In Exposed, I proposed a new way to understand how power circulates in the digital age and, especially, a new way to comprehend our willingness to expose ourselves to private corporations and the government alike. The metaphors commonly used to describe our digital condition, such as the “surveillance state,” Michel Foucault’s panopticon prison, or even George Orwell’s Big Brother, are inadequate, I argued there. In the new digital age we are not forcibly imprisoned in panoptic cells. There is no “telescreen” anchored to the wall of our apartments by the state. No one is trying to crush our passions, or wear us down into submission with the smell of boiled cabbage and old rag mats, coarse soap, and blunt razors. The goal is not to displace our pleasures with hatred—with “hate” sessions, “hate songs,” “hate weeks.” Today, instead, we interact by means of “likes,” “shares,” “favorites,” “friending,” and “following.” We gleefully hang smart TVs on the wall that record everything we say and all our preferences. The drab uniforms and grim grayness of Orwell’s 1984 have been replaced by the iPhone 5c in its radiant pink, yellow, blue, and green. “Colorful through and through,” its marketing slogan promises, and the desire for color-filled objects—for the sensual swoosh of a sent e-mail, the seductive click of the iPhone camera “shutter,” and the “likes,” clicks, and hearts that can be earned by sharing—seduce us into delivering ourselves to the surveillance technologies.
And as the monitoring and marketing of our private lives changes who we are, power circulates in a new way. Orwell depicted the perfect totalitarian society. Guy Debord described ours rather as a society of the spectacle, in which the image makers shape how we understand the world and ourselves. Michel Foucault spoke instead of “the punitive society” or what he called “panopticism,” drawing on Jeremy Bentham’s design of the panoptic prison. Gilles Deleuze went somewhat further and described what he called “societies of control.” But in our digital age, total surveillance has become inextricably linked with pleasure. We live in a society of exposure and exhibition, an expository society.
It is precisely the pleasure and attractions, the seductions of the digital age that make us expose ourselves so willingly. And even those of us who do not partake in the rich world of social media, or hesitate to leave traces, end up sharing our intimate lives and political views digitally. It is practically impossible to have a social or family life without at least text messages, cell phones, and/or e-mail. It is almost impossible to live in today’s world without searching the web, buying online, swiping an access card, retrieving money from an ATM. It is virtually impossible to have a professional life without filling out Doodles and SurveyMonkeys, or responding to Paperless Post.
Confronting the expository society requires looking both at and beyond the state to social media, corporate and retail interests, Silicon Valley, AT&T, and beyond these to ourselves, with our apparently insatiable and irresistible impulses, urges, and jouissance to exhibit ourselves. The problem today is not only the state; it is also all of us, we who give ourselves away to total surveillance. And not only us, but our gadgets as well: our smartphones that emit GPS data and allow Facebook to cull data from all other apps, or from virtual reality games like Pokémon GO. These devices have become powerful entry points into a treasure trove of personal information and interconnected geo-located data.
In August 2015, leaked documents revealed that the American telecommunications giant, AT&T, had willingly worked with the NSA as recently as 2013 to provide access “to billions of e-mails as they have flowed across its domestic networks.” AT&T voluntarily installed cable-splicing equipment at its communications hubs in the United States. AT&T was particularly solicitous, the New York Times noted. “AT&T was the first partner to turn on a new collection capability that the NSA said amounted to a ‘live’ presence on the global net.”15
Early on, AT&T’s partnership fueled an intelligence program that, in a single month, captured and sent to the NSA four hundred billion Internet metadata records. On a daily basis, more than a million e-mails were processed through the keyword selection system at NSA’s headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland. According to the NSA’s internal documents, which cover periods ranging from 2003 to 2013, AT&T’s “corporate relationships provide unique accesses to other telecoms and I.S.P.s” as well. As the New York Times added, with a twist of irony, “One document reminds NSA officials to be polite when visiting AT&T facilities, noting, ‘This is a partnership, not a contractual relationship.’”
These new revelations were a fitting capstone to the passage of the USA FREEDOM Act by the US Congress two months earlier in June 2015. The FREEDOM Act was Congress’s attempt to redress the balance between privacy and security in the wake of the Edward Snowden leaks two years earlier. It targeted one and only one of the NSA’s surveillance platforms, the Section 215 program of the USA PATRIOT Act, a provision that authorized the domestic bulk collection of telephony metadata in the United States.
President Obama heralded the FREEDOM Act as an important measure that would “strengthen civil liberty safeguards and provide greater public confidence in these programs.”16 The Guardian reported that “privacy and reform activists hailed the bill as a ‘milestone’ achievement, the first reform of surveillance programs in more than a decade.”17 In its most significant provision, the FREEDOM Act modified the Section 215 program so that, from now on, it would be the telecom companies, companies like AT&T, that will hold and maintain Americans’ telephony metadata.
It is hard to miss the irony. It is now AT&T who protects us. The same telecom company that had gone out of its way to collaborate, often in illicit ways, for years if not decades, with US signal intelligence services to provide access to private telecommunications and personal data. The same company that, according to the newly leaked documents, enthusiastically and voluntarily cooperated with the NSA and “installed surveillance equipment in at least 17 of its Internet hubs on American soil.”
And as if that were not enough, in the fine print of the landmark legislation, it turns out that we, American taxpayers, will compensate AT&T for holding their data. As Reuters reported, “The FREEDOM Act does contain a provision to compensate companies for costs they incur holding and turning over such data, which is something the carriers made clear they wanted in return for agreeing to store the data.”18 That arrangement was baked into the compromise early on. President
Obama’s advisers—a committee composed of an eclectic range of former officials and academics—had originally recommended this remunerative arrangement. In their report, Liberty and Security in a Changing World, Obama’s advisers wrote that “it would be in the interests of the providers and the government to agree on a voluntary system that meets the needs of both”; but, they added, if such a mutually agreeable deal could not be worked out, “the government should reimburse the providers for the cost of retaining the data.”19
And that’s what happened: taxpayers would pay the telecoms to hold the data for the government. So, before, AT&T surreptitiously provided our private personal digital data to the intelligence services free of charge. Now, American taxpayers will pay them to collect and hold on to the data for when the intelligence services need them. A neoliberal win-win solution for everyone—except, of course, the ordinary, tax-paying citizen who wants a modicum of privacy or protection from the counterinsurgency.
We live in a new digital age that has fundamentally transformed every aspect of society and politics as we know it—and that will continue to. It is estimated that digital technologies and artificial intelligence will eliminate 40 to 50 percent of all jobs and employment over the next decades. These technologies have already radically transformed our leisure and punishment practices, and exposed us and our every whim to the watchful eyes of marketers, advertisers, social media, and intelligence services. The monitoring and marketing of our private lives here, on American soil, not only by the NSA, but also by Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Apple, etc., is stunning. The digital age has effectively inserted the surveillance capability into practically every daily routine.