The National Security Agency and its British counterpart, GCHQ,
gained secret access to the German telecom companies’ internal
networks, including Deutsche Telekom and Netcologne, in an effort to “map the entire Internet — any device, anywhere, all the time.”
As reported by German news publication Der Spiegel, citing the new set
of leaked documents provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden,
the five major intelligence agencies including NSA and GCHQ have been
collaborating to get near-real-time visualization of the global internet
as a part of NSA’s ‘Treasure Map’ surveillance program, also dubbed as "the Google Earth of the Internet."
TREASURE MAP TRACKS YOU 'ANYWHERE AND ALL THE TIME'
The data collected by the intelligence agencies doesn’t just include
information from large traffic channels, such as telecommunications
cables. Rather, it also include information from every single device
that is connected to the internet somewhere in the world — every
smartphone, tablet, and computer — "anywhere, all the time," according to NSA documents.
"[The program aims] to map the Internet, and not just the large traffic channels, such as telecommunications cables. It also seeks to identify the devices across which our data flows, so-called routers. [The program] allows for the creation of an ‘interactive map of the global Internet’ in ‘near real-time,'" the report said.
The Treasure Map program was described by Snowden as "a 300,000 foot
view of the internet," as it allows agencies to collect Wi-Fi network
and geolocation data from around the world, along with 30 million to 50
million unique internet provider addresses. The program was first made
public by the New York Times report late last year, along with other documents by Snowden.
But at the time, the US intelligence officials apparently claimed that program was not used for surveillance purposes, but only for mapping foreign and US Defence Department networks, "limited by the amount of data available to the agency," according to the NY Times report.
FIVE EYES AGENCIES
Der Spiegel reported that the Treasure Map PowerPoint presentation
highlighted the agents which carriers and internal company networks Five Eyes agencies — those in the US, Australia, the UK, Canada, and New Zealand — claim to have already accessed.
German parliamentary investigators plan to question executives of
telecommunications operators about the program under which the agencies
have been breaking into service providers' networks to monitor them.
However, Deutsche Telekom reportedly said it had found no evidence of
manipulation or external access to its networks.
DEUTSCHE TELEKOM - 'NO EVIDENCE OF SURVEILLANCE'
"We are looking into every indication of possible manipulations, but have not yet found any hint of that in our investigations so far," a Telekom spokesperson told Reuters in a statement. "We're working closely with IT specialists and have also contacted German security authorities. It would be completely unacceptable if a foreign intelligence agency were to gain access to our network."
The NSA is yet to comment on the latest round of allegations involving
Treasure Map. Whereas, GCHQ said that its work "is carried out in
accordance with a strict legal and policy framework, which ensures that
our activities are authorized, necessary and proportionate, and that
there is rigorous oversight" by other government agencies, Bloomberg
news reported.
RELATIONS BETWEEN US AND GERMANY
Germany's NSA Inquiry Committee was established in March to investigate allegations by Global surveillance whistleblower Edward Snowden
that the US government has been eavesdropping German citizens and even
bugged Chancellor Angela Merkel’s personal cell phone, an issue that has
strained relationships and raised trust issues between old allies,
Berlin and Washington.
The relations between the two became even more worse when two months back, Germany arrested a German intelligence officer
who worked as a double agent and passed information to the CIA about
the parliament’s NSA investigation, which shows that the US snooping is
ongoing.