19 Jan 2015

UK Press Rebellion - British Media Launches Protest Against Spying, As GCHQ Places Investigative Journalism In Same Category As Terrorism

Emails from the BBC, Reuters, the Guardian, the New York Times, Le Monde, the Sun, NBC and the Washington Post were saved by GCHQ and shared on the agency’s intranet as part of a test exercise by the signals intelligence agency.
The journalists’ communications were among 70,000 emails harvested in the space of less than 10 minutes on one day in November 2008 by one of GCHQ’s numerous taps on the fibre-optic cables that make up the backbone of the internet.
New evidence from other UK intelligence documents revealed by Snowden also shows that a GCHQ information security assessment listed “investigative journalists” as a threat in a hierarchy alongside terrorists or hackers.

– From the Guardian article: GCHQ Captured Emails of Journalists from Top International Media
By Michael Krieger: Government Communications Headquarters, or GCHQ, is the United Kingdom’s equivalent to the NSA. As you might expect, it is no less immoral or shady than its domestic counterpart. While most of the surveillance related posts here at Liberty Blitzkrieg have focused on the NSA, GCHQ has been front and center from time to time. For example, see the following from 2014:


How British Spies “Seed the Internet with False Info, Control YouTube Pageviews and Manipulate Online Polls”
In the most recent blockbuster article from the Guardian, we get an inside look at how the British spy agency sees investigate journalists. In two words: The Enemy.

From the Guardian:
GCHQ’s bulk surveillance of electronic communications has scooped up emails to and from journalists working for some of the US and UK’s largest media organizations, analysis of documents released by whistleblower Edward Snowden reveals.
Emails from the BBC, Reuters, the Guardian, the New York Times, Le Monde, the Sun, NBC and the Washington Post were saved by GCHQ and shared on the agency’s intranet as part of a test exercise by the signals intelligence agency.
The journalists’ communications were among 70,000 emails harvested in the space of less than 10 minutes on one day in November 2008 by one of GCHQ’s numerous taps on the fibre-optic cables that make up the backbone of the internet.
New evidence from other UK intelligence documents revealed by Snowden also shows that a GCHQ information security assessment listed “investigative journalists” as a threat in a hierarchy alongside terrorists or hackers.
More than 100 editors, including those from all the national newspapers, have signed a letter, coordinated by the Society of Editors and Press Gazette, to the UK prime minister, David Cameron, protesting at snooping on journalists’ communications.
Ripa has been used to access journalists’ communications without a warrrant, with recent cases including police accessing the phone records of Tom Newton-Dunn, the Sun’s political editor, over the Plebgate investigation. The call records of Mail on Sunday reporters involved in the paper’s coverage of Chris Huhne’s speeding row were also accessed in this fashion.
The GCHQ document goes on to warn that the fact that billing records “kept under Ripa are not limited to warranted targets” must be kept as one of the agency’s most tightly guarded secrets, at a classification known as “Top secret strap 2”.
That is two levels higher than a normal top secret classification – as it refers to “HMG [Her Majesty’s government] relationships with industry that have areas of extreme sensitivity”.
One restricted document intended for those in army intelligence warned that “journalists and reporters representing all types of news media represent a potential threat to security”.
It continued: “Of specific concern are ‘investigative journalists’ who specialize in defence-related exposés either for profit or what they deem to be of the public interest.
GCHQ information security assessments, meanwhile, routinely list journalists between “terrorism” and “hackers” as “influencing threat sources”, with one matrix scoring journalists as having a “capability” score of two out of five, and a “priority” of three out of five, scoring an overall “low” information security risk.
Terrorists, listed immediately above investigative journalists on the document, were given a much higher “capability” score of four out of five, but a lower “priority” of two. The matrix concluded terrorists were therefore a “moderate” information security risk.
Go ahead and read that last paragraph again. In some respects, terrorists are viewed as a lower priority than investigative journalists by the GCHQ. More proof that the “war on terror” is a total sham, and that governments around the world see transparency, truth and their own citizenry as the real enemies.
This is precisely why UK Prime Minister David Cameron wasted no time in exploiting the tragic attacks in Paris in order to call for a banning of encryption, i.e., private communications. In case you need to get up to speed:
Britain’s “War on Terror” Insanity Continues – David Cameron Declares War on Encryption
Manufactured Terrorism – U.S. Officials Claim Credit for Stopping Another Terror Attack Created by the FBI
Fortunately, it appears GCHQ tyranny has finally slapped journalists squarely and unapologetically in the face enough times local media is starting to notice. Specifically, more than 100 editors have signed a letter co-ordinated by Press Gazette and the Society of Editors calling for an end this fascist behavior.
The Press Gazette reports the following:
Every national newspaper editor has backed the Press Gazette Save Our Sources campaign and signed a joint letter of protest to Prime Minister David Cameron over police spying on journalists’ phone records.
More than 100 editors have signed a letter co-ordinated by Press Gazette and the Society of Editors to warn that the draft code of practice on use of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act puts journalists’ sources at risk.
Politicians promised new controls in the code, but instead the new draft guidance states that police can continue to secretly view journalists’ phone records provided they give “special consideration” to the “proportionality” of doing so.
The draft code appears to encourage police to access journalists’ phone records by stating that they are not “privileged information”.
Society of Editors executive director Bob Satchell said: “Politicians say that terrorism laws should be used where relevant and proportionate. The police have used RIPA when it was neither. Journalism is not terrorism nor criminal.
“A powerful group of senior national, regional and local editors and broadcasters who frequently have different opinions are united in their concerns about RIPA.
 “This is not about terrorism it is about the police using a law for purposes Parliament never intended.
“Ministers should take note.”
Press Gazette editor Dominic Ponsford said: “It is unprecedented in my experience for every national newspaper editor to agree on anything. So it is highly significant that here they have said with once voice that RIPA needs tougher controls to protect journalists’ sources.
“Giving police the ability to secretly view the phone records of law-abiding journalists is not compatible with an open democratic society.”
A further 1,649 individuals, mostly journalists, have signed the Press Gazette Save Our Sources petition which is also to be submitted today as part of the RIPA consultation. 
The consultation on the Acquisition and Disclosure of Communications Data Code of Practice closes tomorrow (20 January).
Now here are the signatories:
  • Stig Abell, Managing Editor, The Sun
  • Perry Austin-Clarke, Group Editor, Newsquest Yorkshire
  • Lionel Barber, Editor, Financial Times
  • Sam Barcroft, Owner, Barcroft Media
  • Neil Benson, Editorial Director Regionals, Trinity Mirror
  • Bob Bounds, Editor, Medway Messenger
  • David Bourn, Editorial Director, Scottish Provincial Press
  • Martin Breen, Editor, Sunday Life
  • Christine Buckley, Editor, The Journalist
  • Simon Bucks, Associate Editor, Sky News
  • Tony Carlin, Editor, Evening Times
  • Ian Carter, Editorial Director, the KM Group
  • Denis Cassidy, President, National Association of Press Agencies
  • Martin Clarke, Publisher, Mail Online
  • Pete Clifton, Editor-in-Chief, Press Association
  • Paul Connolly, Readers Editor, Belfast Telegraph
  • Nick Constable, Director, West Coast News
  • Jason Cowley, Editor, New Statesman
  • Allan Crow, Editor, Fife Free Press
  • Paul Dacre, Editor, Daily Mail and Associated Group Editor in Chief
  • Bart Dickson, Editor, Pressteam Scotland
  • David Dinsmore, Editor, The Sun
  • Ted Ditchburn, Managing Director, North News and Pictures
  • Noel Doran, Editor, The Irish News
  • Oliver Duff, Editor, The i Paper
  • Denise Eaton, Editor, Kent Messenger
  • Chris Elliott, Readers Editor, The Guardian
  • Lloyd Embley, Editor-in-Chief, Trinity Mirror
  • Robin Esser, Executive Managing Editor, Daily Mail
  • Chris Evans, Director of Content and Editor, The Daily Telegraph
  • Kate Farrington, Director, West Coast News
  • Lynne Fernquest, Editor, Bath News & Media
  • Charles Garside, Assistant Editor, Daily Mail
  • Liz Gerard, Editor, SubScribe
  • Mike Gilson, Editor, Belfast Telegraph
  • Sarah Goldthorpe, Editor, Soldier magazine
  • Alison Gow, Digital Innovations Editor, Trinity Mirror Regionals
  • Toby Granville, Group Editor, Daily Echo & Dorset Echo
  • Geordie Greig, Editor, The Mail On Sunday
  • Jonathan Grun, Emeritus Editor, Press Association
  • David Helliwell, Editor, News & Star/The Cumberland News
  • Ian Hislop, Editor, Private Eye
  • Neil Hodgkinson, Editor, Hull Daily Mail
  • David Holdsworth, Controller, BBC English Regions
  • Michael Jermey, Director of News and Current Affairs, ITV
  • Peter John, Group Editor, Newsquest Worcester/Stourbridge
  • Rachael Jolley, Editor, Index on Censorship
  • Mark Jones, Editor, Gazette Newspapers
  • David Jordan, Director of Editorial Policy and Standards, BBC
  • Gary Lawrence, Group Editor, Swindon Advertiser
  • Mark Leech, Offside Sports Photography
  • Michael Leidig, Editor, Central European News
  • Luke Lewis, Editor, Buzzfeed UK
  • Lisa Markwell, Editor, Independent on Sunday
  • Leigh Marles, Editor, Wirral Globe
  • Donald Martin, Editor-in-Chief, DC Thomson Newspapers
  • John Mulholland, Editor, The Observer
  • Ian Murray, Editor-in-Chief, Southern Daily Echo
  • Dawn Neesom, Editor, Daily Star
  • Victoria Newton, Editor, The Sun on Sunday
  • Rachel Oldroyd, Managing Editor, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism
  • Barrie Phillips-Jones, Editorial Director, NWN Media
  • Dominic Ponsford, Editor, Press Gazette
  • Amol Rajan, Editor, The Independent
  • Alan Rusbridger, Editor-in-Chief, Guardian News & Media
  • John Ryley, Head of Sky News
  • Gerry Sammon, Editor, Rochdale Observer, Middleton Guardian, Heywood Advertiser
  • Sarah Sands, Editor, Evening Standard
  • Mike Sassi, Editor, Nottingham Post
  • Bob Satchwell, Executive Director, Society of Editors
  • Jason Seiken, Editor-in-Chief, Telegraph Media Group
  • Moira Sleight, Editor, Methodist Recorder
  • Chris Smith, UK Editor, Digiday
  • Shailesh Solanki, Editor, Eastern Eye
  • Paul Staines, Editor, Guido Fawkes’ Blog
  • Jon Steafel, Deputy Editor, Daily Mail
  • Ian Stewart, Editor, The Scotsman and Scotland on Sunday
  • Beverly Thomas, Managing Editor, Cambrian News Ltd
  • Darren Thwaites, Editor-in-Chief, Trinity Mirror North East
  • Martin Townsend, Editor, Sunday Express
  • Richard Trinder, Managing Editor, The Yorkshire Times
  • Catherine Turnbull, Editor, Haverhill Echo
  • Nick Turner, Head of digital content development, Cumbrian Newspapers
  • Fran Unsworth, Director, BBC World Service Group
  • Kevin Ward, Editor, South Wales Argus
  • John Wellington, Managing Editor, Mail on Sunday
  • Neil White, Editor in Chief, Local World Derbyshire & East Staffordshire
  • Hugh Whittow, Editor, Daily Express
  • Doug Wills, Managing Editor, Evening Standard and Independent titles
  • Giles Winn, Editor, The Murnaghan Programme, Sky News
  • Richard Wintle, Editor, Calyx News Agency
  • John Witherow, Editor, The Times
  • Peter Wright, Editor Emeritus, Associated Newspapers
  • Ted Young, Editor, Metro
To read the entire letter, go here.

In Liberty,
Michael Krieger

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