Oh Look, It Was Trivial To Buy Troop And Intelligence Officer Location Data From Dodgy, Unregulated Data Brokers

from the what's-a-few-dead-soldiers-when-there's-money-to-be-made dept

There are two major reasons that the U.S. doesn’t pass an internet-era privacy law or regulate data brokers despite a parade of dangerous scandals. One, lobbied by a vast web of interconnected industries with unlimited budgets, Congress is too corrupt to do its job. Two, the U.S. government is disincentivized to do anything because it exploits this privacy dysfunction to dodge domestic surveillance warrants.

If we imposed safeguards on consumer data, everybody from app makers to telecoms would make billions less per quarter. So our corrupt lawmakers pretend the vast human harms of our greed are a distant and unavoidable externality. Unless the privacy issues involve some kid tracking rich people on their planes, of course, in which case Congress moves with a haste that would break the sound barrier.

So as a result, we get a steady stream of scandals related to the over-collection and monetization of wireless location data, posing no limit of public safety, market trust, or national security issues. Including, for example, stalkers using location data to track and harm women. Or radical right wing extremists using it to target vulnerable abortion clinic visitors with health care disinformation.

Even when U.S. troop safety is involved U.S. officials have proven too corrupt and incompetent to act. Just the latest case in point: Wired this week released an excellent new report documenting how it was relatively trivial to buy the sensitive and detailed movement data of U.S. military and intelligence workers as they moved around Germany:

“A collaborative analysis of billions of location coordinates obtained from a US-based data broker provides extraordinary insight into the daily routines of US service members. The findings also provide a vivid example of the significant risks the unregulated sale of mobile location data poses to the integrity of the US military and the safety of its service members and their families overseas.”

The data purchased by Wired doesn’t just track troops as they head out for a weekend at the bars. It provides granular, second-by-second detail of their movements around extremely sensitive facilities:

“We tracked hundreds of thousands of signals from devices inside sensitive US installations in Germany. That includes scores of devices within suspected NSA monitoring or signals-analysis facilities, more than a thousand devices at a sprawling US compound where Ukrainian troops were being being trained in 2023, and nearly 2,000 others at an air force base that has crucially supported American drone operations.”

Wired does note that the FTC is poised to file several lawsuits recognizing these kinds of facilities as protected sites, though it’s unclear those suits will survive Lina Khan’s inevitable ouster under a Trump administration looking to dismantle the federal regulatory state for shits and giggles.

When our underfunded and undermined regulators have tried to hold wireless companies or app makers accountable, they’re routinely derailed by either a Republican Congress (like when the GOP in 2017 killed FCC broadband privacy rules before they could even take effect), or more recently by a Trump Supreme Court keen to declare all federal consumer protection effectively illegal.

Even the most basic of FCC efforts to impose a long overdue fine against AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile have run aground thanks to the Trump-stocked 5th, 6th, and Supreme Court efforts to block anything even vaguely resembling corporate oversight. I’m told by the nation’s deepest thinkers that this corruption and greed is, somehow, “populism.”

Time and time and time again the U.S. has prioritized making money over protecting consumer privacy, market health, or national security. And it’s certain to only get worse during a second Trump term stocked with folks like new FCC boss Brendan Carr, dedicated to ensuring his friends at AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile never face anything close to accountability for anything, ever.

At some point there will be a privacy scandal involving location data that’s so horrific, Congress will be forced to act. I’m just not particularly excited to see what that scandal looks like. To dislodge our corrupt apathy, it will most assuredly have to involve the data of the rich and powerful, and it most likely will involve the loss of life.

At which point, policymakers will stand around with an idiotic look on their faces pretending to not know exactly how things got to this point. And even then their solution will probably be a loophole-filled law, ghost written by AT&T and Facebook, that doesn’t get close to fixing the actual problem.

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Comments on “Oh Look, It Was Trivial To Buy Troop And Intelligence Officer Location Data From Dodgy, Unregulated Data Brokers”

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harryjohen (profile) says:

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

That is not a solution.

Also, sensitive installations should not allow cell phones or any personal electronics within their boundaries. But with the present idiot brigade in charge, who knows what will be allowed.

The story goes that Russian troops were using their cell phones to look up hot women in Ukraine. They would divulge their location and subsequently were blown up. Not many Russians are volunteering to serve, no wonder as to why.

Christopher M. Vanderwall-Brown (profile) says:

Re: "The same way we've been doing it for years, Pinky."

The same way societies have been doing this for decades—through the creation of permanent underclasses whose only effective ways out of poverty are through criminal activities or military service.

Does anyone seriously think that (with maybe some meaningful statistical variance for cowardice and seeing value in your society created through actual meaningful community) BIPOC Americans register for military personnel positions (i.e. “enlist” for “military service”) because allntue claimed “other options” just don’t “give them the same meaning”, or whatever tye curremt running tagline of bullshit the propagandists at the Department of War to maximize troop enlistment numbers to back imperialism?

Rome privatized the Legions for similar, fucked up reasons. It’s why Reagan’s goons privatized military service. They couldn’t get another “draft”, so in order to keep endless war as a thing, they helped crush BIPOC communities and make it such that Poor folks have only ONE viable option to “get out of ghettos”, “military service”.

So, to these oligarchic fucks, it genuinely doesn’t matter “how bad” a tour of duty is.

Do people honestly think military service today is better than when my father & his friends in USMC Force Reconn during the Vietnam War (particularly, 1968–1970) used to respond to threats by military personnel that if they didn’t mind, they’d be “Court Marshalled”, by laughing, while mockingly retort, “WHAT ARE THEY GONNA DO‽ SEND ME TO THE NAM‽ 🤣 THREE SQUARE MEALS A DAY AND NOBODY IS SHOOTING AT ME‽ WHERE DO I SIGN‽”

When that’s the attitude of your military regulars, is it any wonder military personnel created the idea of “fragging” superiors? If your current situation may well get you killed, and “prison sounds like a cakewalk”, then what’s 20-years in Leavenworth when compared with your life or the lives of your fellow soldiers?

For everyone’s academic interest, this is one of the primary reasons why military service in some ways have gotten even worse than they were in the past. At least, when the military was more “socialist”, everyone was generally miserable together, and one was likely to actually get paid. Nowadays, soldiers have (for over a decade) been screwed out of correct pay. In days past, if the War Department tried this crap, like trying to cut your pay because THEY made a fuck up, the unit of the person in question might well mutiny. And that’s just if it was one or two people. Wars have been lost or fought over soldiers getting paid on time. Just look at all those times the legion marched on Rome over pay.

This problem isn’t new, and unless soldiers are planning on “unionizing” even when doing so is considered illegal, don’t expect Congress to fix it anytime soon.

Anonymous Coward says:

It is an utter embarassment that intelligence workers showed up in this data. Like WTF are they doing when they train these people? You would think compromise by smartphone would be worth a day of training for people doing…checks notes… signals intelligence.

Also, for the amount the US spends on the military, you’d think they could order up some tactical Faraday bags, and order people to use them. Or just order people on base to leave phones at home. Sure it doesn’t solve the problem in the way comprehensive data privacy regulation would, but it would cut down on some of the nonsense highlighted by this article.

Heart of Dawn (profile) says:

Re: Re:

The GOP has made it abundantly clear when they backed someone who stole classified documents and hid them in a resort bathroom, and is buddy-buddy with authoritian dictators that they don’t care about national security or the well-being of the troops.

They want an oligarchy where they get richer regardless of he badly the country goes to hell.

Anonymous Coward says:

At some point there will be a privacy scandal involving location data that’s so horrific, Congress will be forced to act

You keep saying that. And most of us might even believe it. But. the ability of congresspeople to stick their heads in the sand is so vast, that we may never actually get there.

We can keep hoping, I suppose. But, I sure hope that somebody comes up with a better suggestion sometime soon.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Congress will be forced to act … why? They do not care.

It is apparent that some within maga are aware of the cell phone tracking capability, due to the insurrectionists who were identified as participating in the coup attempt via their cell phone location data … and the many photos they took of themselves committing crimes.

Maga seemingly does not care and has tossed their pawns under the buss. If anything, they will make it worse – that is what they do.

Anonymous Coward says:

Well, the incoming administration of Doanld MAGA has specifically stated their dislike for our service members, their families and deceased soldiers. I’m thinking they will do nothing to correct this problem because they see it as a plus in their effort to destroy the us military. That is their mission, as given to them by Vladolf Putler.

There will be many resignation of commission in the near future.

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