Black Code: Inside the Battle for Cyberspace (6 page)

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Authors: Ronald J. Deibert

Tags: #Social Science, #True Crime, #Computers, #Nonfiction, #Cybercrime, #Security, #Retail

BOOK: Black Code: Inside the Battle for Cyberspace
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This kind of collateral impact of Internet controls has a long history. In 2005,
ONI found that when the Canadian ISP Telus blocked subscriber access to a website set up by a labour union intending to publicize its views about a dispute with Telus, it also unintentionally blocked access to over 750 unrelated websites.
In 2008, the Pakistan Ministry of Information ordered Pakistan Telecom to block access to YouTube because of films uploaded to the site that purportedly insulted the Prophet Muhammad. In carrying out this order, Pakistan Telecom mistakenly communicated these routing instructions to the entire Internet, shutting down YouTube for most of the world for nearly two hours.

•  •  •

Most of the filtering
described above takes place at the level of ISPs, the companies users contract with to get their basic connectivity. But
there is a deeper layer of control, one that stretches down into the bowels of cyberspace: Internet Exchange Points (IXPS). While most users are familiar with ISPs, few have ever heard of IXPS. There are several hundred IXPS around the world: usually heavily guarded facilities with the level of security one encounters at an airport or defence installation. If you’ve ever wondered how it is that your email reaches your friend’s email account with a completely different company, IXPS are the answer. It is here that traffic is passed between the networks of different companies – through border gateway protocols (BGP) exchanged between ISPS – and IXPS are the key strategic locations for the interception, monitoring, and control of large swathes of Internet communications. (In the early 2000s, I toured an IXP in downtown Toronto
and saw row upon row of high-tech equipment, endless servers stacked on several floors. Down one long hallway there were hundreds of what appeared to be randomly distributed red tags attached to the equipment. I asked the tour guide, “What are the red tags?” He replied nonchalantly, “Oh, those are the wiretaps,” and moved on.)

In 2002, Mark Klein, a twenty-year veteran technician with AT&T, was working at an IXP in San Francisco. He became suspicious after noticing some unusual activity in a “secure room” marked 641A. Klein was working in an adjacent area and had been instructed to connect fibre-optic cables to cables exiting from the secure room. He was not allowed to enter the room, and the people there were not the type of workers with whom Klein enjoyed lunch and coffee breaks. They kept to themselves and seemed to have special privileges. Later, Klein learned from his colleagues that similar operations were observed by engineers at other AT&T facilities across the United States.

Klein’s suspicions eventually led to a class action lawsuit by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) against AT&T, alleging that the company had colluded with the National Security Agency (NSA) outside of the rule of law. As it turned out, inside room 641A was a data-mining operation involving a piece of equipment called Narus STA 6400, known to be used by the NSA to sift through large streams of data. The choice of location was significant. Because of the complex routing arrangements that govern the flow of traffic through cyberspace, many smaller ISPs sublease their traffic through AT&T – a globe-spanning “Tier 1” telecommunications company – and a large proportion of global communications traffic flows through its pipes. The AT&T-operated IXP in San Francisco is one of the world’s most important chokepoints for Internet communications.

The IXP is a chokepoint for not only international traffic; it handles a large volume of domestic U.S. communications as well.
The NSA is prohibited from collecting communications from American citizens, and the data-mining operation at the AT&T facility strongly suggested that prohibition was being ignored. The EFF class action lawsuit took AT&T and another IXP operator, Verizon, to task for their complicity with what turned out to be a presidential directive instructing the NSA to install the equipment at key IXPS in order to monitor the communications of American citizens. In 2008, as the lawsuit dragged on, the Bush administration took pre-emptive action by introducing a controversial amendment to the Foreign Intelligence Services Act (FISA), giving telecommunications companies retroactive immunity from prosecution if the attorney general certified that surveillance did not occur, was legal, or was authorized by the president. This certification was filed in September of 2008 and shortly thereafter, the EFF’S case was dismissed by a federal judge citing the immunity amendment. (Presidential candidate Barack Obama surprised many of his supporters by backing the FISA Amendment Act, and his administration has vigorously blocked court challenges against it ever since.) Although the full scope of the NSA’S warrantless wiretapping program (code-named “Stellar Wind”) is classified, William Binney, a former NSA employee who left the agency in protest, estimates that up to 1.5 billion phone calls, as well as voluminous flows of email and other electronic data, are processed every day by the eavesdropping system stumbled upon by Klein.

IXmaps, a research project at the University of Toronto, raises awareness about the surveillance risks of IXPS, particularly for Canadians. The project uses trace-routing technology to determine the routes discrete bits of information (or “packets”) take to reach their destination over the Internet. In one example, IXmaps detailed the route of an email destined for the Hockey Hall of Fame in downtown Toronto and originating at the University of Toronto a few miles away. The email crossed into the United
States, was peered at an IXP in Chicago, and was probably exposed to one of the NSA’S warrantless surveillance systems rumoured to be located at the facility. Known as boomerang traffic, this type of cross-border routing is a function of the fact that there are eighty-five IXPS in the U.S., but only five in Canada. Routing arrangements made by Canadian ISPs and telecommunications companies will routinely pass traffic into the U.S. and back into Canada to save on peering costs, subjecting otherwise internal Canadian communications to extraterritorial monitoring.

•  •  •

One of the long-standing myths
about cyberspace is that it is highly resilient to disruption. For those of us who have laboured over Internet downtimes, email failures, or laptop crashes, this may seem like a fanciful idea. But the resiliency of cyberspace does have some basis in the original design principles of the Internet, whose architecture was constructed to route information along the most efficient available path and to avoid disruption in the event of a natural disaster (or nuclear attack). This resiliency was demonstrated in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in October 2012, which devastated the U.S. eastern seaboard and caused mass power outages, including the loss of local Internet and cellphone connectivity. The network-monitoring company Renesys showed that the storm had collateral impacts on traffic as far away as Chile, Sweden, and India – but mostly in a positive sense: traffic destined for New York City that would have failed as a consequence of the storm was manually rerouted along alternative paths by savvy network engineers.

However, there are also many characteristics of cyberspace that demonstrate fragility and a lack of resiliency; Hayastan Shakarian’s mistaken severing of an underground cable in Georgia to name
one. It may come as a surprise that the same type of cables that Shakarian accidentally unearthed traverse the world’s lakes and oceans, and bind cyberspace together in a very material sense. Undersea cables are one of the links that connect today’s cyberspace to the late Industrial Revolution. The first such cables were laid in the late nineteenth century to facilitate telegraph traffic over long distances. Early designs were prone to failure and barely allowed the clicks of a telegraph exchange to be discerned across small bodies of water like the English Channel, but over time innovations in electronics and protective cable sheathings allowed the undersea cable industry to flourish. (This growth led to a dramatic increase in international telephone calls, and a new market for the sap of gutta-percha trees, which was used to coat and protect the cables until the mid-twentieth century.) Although international telecommunications have been supplemented with microwave and satellite transmissions, a surprisingly large volume of data still traverses the world through cables crossing the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, and major bodies of water like the Mediterranean Sea.

Due to the staggering costs involved, companies often share the same undersea cable trenches and sometimes competing companies even share the same protective sheathing. This makes those trenches highly vulnerable to major disruption.
In a May 2012 article published on the website Gizmodo, provocatively titled “How to Destroy the Internet,” the author details the physical elements of the Internet that could be easily targeted. He provides a link to a document alphabetically listing every single cable in the world, and its landing stations. While there are hundreds of cables, the total is not astronomical – and probably a lot fewer than what most people might expect for a network as vast as the global Internet. Among them is ACS Alaska-Oregon Network (AKORN), with its landing points in Anchorage, Homer, and Nikiski, Alaska,
and Florence, Oregon; the Gulf Bridge International Cable System, with its landing points in Qatar, Iraq, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and India; and at the end of the long list, Yellow/Atlantic Crossing-2 (AC-2), which connects New York City to Bude in Cornwall, U.K. The author goes on to explain how many of the cables’ onshore landing stations are sometimes “lying out on the sand like an abandoned boogie board,” and how the cables could be severed with a few swings of an axe. Severing cables in this way at landing stations in only a few select locations – Singapore, Egypt, Tokyo, Hong Kong, South Florida, Marseilles, Mumbai, and others – could wreak havoc on most of the world’s Internet traffic.

The 2006 Hengchun earthquake, off the coast of Taiwan, affected Internet access throughout Asia, and in 2008 two major cable systems were severed in the Mediterranean Sea.
The cause of the severed cables is unknown, but some experts speculated that the dragging of a ship’s anchor did the job. But a review of video surveillance taken of the harbour during the outage period showed no ship traffic in the area of the severed cable. Others suggested it could have been a minor earthquake, causing a shift in the ocean floor, but seismic data didn’t support this conjecture. Whatever the cause, such cuts to cables are fairly routine: Even in their trenches, undersea cables are pushed to and fro by currents and constantly rub against a rough seafloor. In the case of the 2008 Mediterranean incident, the damage was severe: there were disruptions to 70 percent of Internet traffic in Egypt and 60 percent in India, and outages in Afghanistan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Kuwait, the Maldives, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. Nearly 2 million users were left without Internet access in the U.A.E. alone. Connections were not restored until a French submarine located the severed cables and brought them to the surface for repair.

Prior to the introduction of fibre optics, undersea cables were occasionally wiretapped by attaching instruments that collect radio frequency emitted outside the cables. During the Cold War, both the United States and the Soviet Union built special-purpose submarines that would descend on cables deep in the ocean and attach inductive coils to collect emissions. In his book
Body of Secrets
, historian James Bamford describes in detail Operation Ivy Bells in the early 1970s, in which the NSA deployed submarines in the Sea of Okhotsk to tap a cable connecting the Soviet Pacific Naval Fleet base in Petropavlovsk to its headquarters in Vladivostok. Specially trained divers from the USS
Halibut
left the submarine in frigid waters at a depth of 120 metres and wrapped tapping coil around the undersea cables at signal repeater points, where the emissions would be strongest. Tapes containing the recordings were delivered to NSA headquarters, and were found by analysts to contain extraordinarily valuable information on the Soviet Pacific Fleet. Several other submarines were later built for such missions, and deployed around the Soviet Union’s littoral coastline and next to important military bases. When fibre-optic technology (which does not emit radio frequencies outside of the cable) was gradually introduced, the utility of such risky operations diminished. However, some intelligence observers speculate that U.S. and other signals intelligence agencies have capabilities to tap undersea fibre-optic cables by cutting into them and collecting information through specifically designed splitters.

•  •  •

Like undersea cables
, satellites illustrate the fragile nature of cyberspace. In 2009,
a defunct and wayward Russian satellite collided with an Iridium low Earth orbit satellite at a speed of over 40,000 kilometres per hour. The collision caused a massive cloud of
space debris that still presents a major hazard. NASA’S Earth observation unit tracks as many as 8,000 space debris objects of ten centimetres or more that pose risks to operational satellites. (There are many smaller objects that present a hazard as well.) The Kessler Syndrome, put forward by NASA scientist Donald Kessler in 1976, theorizes that there will come a time when such debris clouds will make near-Earth orbital space unusable. Although undersea fibre-optic cables provide the bulk of transit for global communications, they cannot sustain the entire load. A scenario such as the Kessler Syndrome, were it to come true, would end global cyberspace as we know it. Scientists have very few realistic solutions for cleaning up space debris.

Space is also an arena within which state intelligence agencies exercise power over the Internet. Although the Apollo missions were publicly justified on the basis of advancing human curiosity and science, the first missions into space actually had specific military and intelligence purposes. Since the 1960s, the superpowers have been developing globe-spanning satellites that are used for optical, infrared, thermal, and radar reconnaissance purposes. The Americans built a fleet of specially designed satellites whose purpose is to collect signals intelligence (sigint). Some sigint satellites operate in geostationary orbit 36,000 kilometres from the Earth’s surface, and are used to zero in on radio frequencies of everything from microwave telephone signals to pagers and walkie-talkies. Such geostationary sigint satellites deploy huge parabolic antennas that are unfolded in space once the satellite is in position, with the signals being sent to NSA listening stations located in allied countries like Australia (Pine Gap), and Germany (Bad Aibling). Because the satellites operate in deep space, and radio signals travel in a straight line, radio frequencies can be collected efficiently and with little degradation. (Other sigint satellites take unusual orbits and can reportedly hover over regions of interest for longer periods and at lower altitudes.)
The NSA also operates sigint collection facilities at ground stations whose mission is to collect transmissions from civilian communications satellites. Typically, these enormous interception terminals, which look like giant angled birdbaths, are located in secure areas proximate enough to terrestrial transmission points to function properly. For example, one of the key signals intelligence stations in Canada is at the Canadian Forces Station Leitrim, just south of Ottawa, strategically positioned to intercept diplomatic communications moving in and out of the nation’s capital.

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