Google encrypts data against NSA spying
Google is reportedly encrypting the huge amount of data that flows through its data centers around the world following the National Security Agency secret surveillance revelations.
As revealed by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the US agency along with its UK counterpart is known to be intercepting every form of data flowing through global internet channels for government consumption through Prism programme.
The move by Google is among the most concrete signs yet that recent revelations about the National Security Agency’s sweeping surveillance efforts have provoked significant backlash within an American technology industry that U.S. government officials long courted as a potential partner in spying programs.
Google’s encryption initiative, initially approved last year, was accelerated in June as the tech giant struggled to guard its reputation as a reliable steward of user information amid controversy about the NSA’s PRISM program, first reported in The Washington Post and the Guardian that month. PRISM obtains data from American technology companies, including Google, under various legal authorities.
Encrypting information flowing among data centers will not make it impossible for intelligence agencies to snoop on individual users of Google services, nor will it have any effect on legal requirements that the company comply with court orders or valid national security requests for data. But company officials and independent security experts said that increasingly widespread use of encryption technology makes mass surveillance more difficult — whether conducted by governments or other sophisticated hackers.
Google encrypts data against NSA spying
Reviewed by Ankit Kumar Titoriya
on
06:29
Rating:
Reviewed by Ankit Kumar Titoriya
on
06:29
Rating:


No comments: