Saturday, June 22, 2013

Skype's secret Project Chess reportedly helped NSA access customers' data...

Skype, the web-based communications company, reportedly set up a secret programme to make it easier for US surveillance agencies to access customers' information.

The programme, called Project Chess and first revealed by the New York Times on Thursday, was said to have been established before Skype was bought by Microsoft in 2011. Microsoft's links with US security are under intense scrutiny following the Guardian's revelation of Prism, a surveillance program run by the National Security Agency (NSA), that claimed "direct" access to its servers and those of rivals including Apple, Facebook and Google.

Project Chess was set up to explore the legal and technical issues involved in making Skype's communications more readily available to law enforcement and security officials, according to the Times. Only a handful of executives were aware of the plan. The company did not immediately return a call for comment.

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According to the Prism documents, Skype had been co-operating with the NSA's scheme since February 2011, eight months before the software giant took it over. The document gives little detail on the technical nature of that cooperation. Microsoft declined to comment.

The news comes as the tech firms are attempting to distance themselves from the Prism revelations. All the firm's listed as participating in the Prism scheme have denied that they give the NSA "direct" access to their servers, as claimed by the slide presentation, and said that they only comply with legal requests made through the courts. Full story...

Related posts:
  1. NSA leaks hint Microsoft may have lied about Skype security...
  2. Microsoft details global police data requests...
  3. Skype makes chats and user data more available to police...
  4. Skype is spying on Chinese citizens...
  5. Does Google spy on you for the NSA?
  6. Yahoo, Google, Facebook and more face fight to salvage reputations...
  7. Technology giants struggle to maintain credibility over NSA Prism surveillance...

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