"Angry Birds" become "stool pigeons" as NSA monitors phone apps

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"Angry Birds" become "stool
pigeons" as NSA monitors phone
apps
By Associated Press, adapted by Newsela staff on 01.28.14
Word Count 734

"Angry Birds" plushies are displayed at a GameStop Kids in White Marsh, Md. Spy agencies are monitoring
smartphone apps like "Angry Birds" throughout the world. Photo: Lloyd Fox/Baltimore Sun/MCT

LONDON — When people use their phones to play a game, find the location of
something on Google Maps, or post a photo, they may be watched. Documents
leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden suggest that spy agencies
can collect personal information from apps on smartphones across the globe.

The documents were published Monday by The New York Times, the Guardian,
and ProPublica. Mapping, gaming, and social networking apps are a common
feature of the world's estimated 1 billion smartphones. The documents suggest
that these apps can feed America's National Security Agency (NSA) and
Britain's GCHQ spy agency with huge amounts of personal data. Location
information and details, such as a person's political interest or sexual
preferences, can all be discovered.

The size of the program isn't known. Yet, the reports suggest that U.S. and
British intelligence easily get routine access to data generated by apps such as
the "Angry Birds" game or the Google Maps navigation service.
A 2008 document from the GCHQ describes its joint spying program with the
NSA. It's quoted as saying that the program "effectively means that anyone
using Google Maps on a smartphone is working in support of a GCHQ system."

Monitoring Mobile Phones

The NSA did not directly comment on the reports. But in a statement Monday it
claimed that the communications of those who were not "valid foreign
intelligence targets" were of no interest to the spy agency.

The agency says that it monitors phones because they are often used in
planning terror strikes.

"Any implication that NSA's foreign intelligence collection is focused on the
smartphone or social media communications of everyday Americans is not true,"
the statement said. "We collect only those communications that we are
authorized by law to collect for valid foreign intelligence and counterintelligence
purposes."

GCHQ said it did not comment on intelligence matters. It insisted, however, that
all of its activity was "authorized, necessary and proportionate."

Intelligence agencies' interest in mobile phones and the networks they run on
has been documented in several of Snowden's previous leaks. The focus on
apps, however, is new. It shows how everyday, harmless-looking pieces of
software can be turned into tools for spying.

"Angry Birds" was one of the most eye-catching examples. The addictive birds-
versus-pigs game has been downloaded more than 1.7 billion times worldwide.
The Times and ProPublica said a 2012 British intelligence report laid out how to
extract "Angry Birds" users' information from phones.

Another document, a 14-page-long NSA slideshow published to the Web, listed
a host of other mobile apps. Ones made by social networking giant Facebook,
photo sharing site Flickr, and the film-oriented Flixster were being monitored.

Golden Nuggets Of Data

It wasn't clear precisely what information can be extracted from which apps.
One of the slides gave the example of a user who uploaded a photo using a
social media app. Under the words "Golden Nugget!" it said that the data
generated by the app could be examined to determine a phone's settings,
where it connected to, which websites it had visited, which documents it had
downloaded, and who its users' friends were. One of the documents said that
apps could even be mined for information about users' political interests or
sexual preferences.
Google and Rovio Entertainment, the maker of "Angry Birds," did not
immediately return messages seeking comment on the reports.

On Monday, the Times briefly posted a censored U.S. document on the
smartphone spying. It contained material that appeared to publish the name of
an NSA employee. Computer experts said they were able to extract the name of
the employee. They also discovered the name of a Middle Eastern terror group
the program was targeting, and details about the types of computer files the
NSA found useful.

Snowden began leaking documents in June. Since then, his supporters have
maintained they have been careful not to release any intelligence official's
name. They claim to have kept quiet any operational details that could
compromise ongoing spying.

The employee did not return phone or email messages from The Associated
Press.

Michael Birmingham is a spokesman for the Director of National Intelligence.
The DNI is in charge of all U.S. spy agencies — including the NSA, CIA and FBI
— and reports to the president. Birmingham said the agency requested the
Times not publish the information. A Times spokeswoman said the information
had been posted by error. The material has since been removed.
Quiz

 1     Which central idea below emerges first in the article?

       (A)     The leaks mentioned in the article are not Snowden's first.

       (B)     The GCHQ and the NSA can both obtain data from the apps.

       (C)     There are approximately 1 billion smartphones in the world.

       (D)     Spy agencies say they are uninterested in information on ordinary
               people.

 2     The author refines the central idea that spy agencies are uninterested in everyday
       people by doing all of the following EXCEPT:

       (A)     Reporting that the focus on using apps for spying is new.

       (B)     Quoting the NSA as saying they are uninterested in information
               unrelated to "valid foreign intelligence targets."

       (C)     Reporting on the NSA's claim that phones are monitored because
               they are used for terrorist planning.

       (D)     Quoting the GCHQ as saying their activity was, "authorized,
               necessary, and proportionate."

 3     Select that paragraph from the section labeled, "Monitoring Mobile Phones," which
       introduces the idea that the NSA is not going to explain the details of how it extracts
       information from apps.

 4     Select the paragraph that suggests the newspapers are not just blindly reporting
       Snowden's information.
Answer Key

 1    Which central idea below emerges first in the article?

      (A)     The leaks mentioned in the article are not Snowden's first.

      (B)     The GCHQ and the NSA can both obtain data from the apps.

      (C)     There are approximately 1 billion smartphones in the world.

      (D)     Spy agencies say they are uninterested in information on ordinary
              people.

 2    The author refines the central idea that spy agencies are uninterested in everyday
      people by doing all of the following EXCEPT:

      (A)     Reporting that the focus on using apps for spying is new.

      (B)     Quoting the NSA as saying they are uninterested in information
              unrelated to "valid foreign intelligence targets."

      (C)     Reporting on the NSA's claim that phones are monitored because
              they are used for terrorist planning.

      (D)     Quoting the GCHQ as saying their activity was, "authorized,
              necessary, and proportionate."

 3    Select that paragraph from the section labeled, "Monitoring Mobile Phones," which
      introduces the idea that the NSA is not going to explain the details of how it extracts
      information from apps.

      Paragraph 4:
      The NSA did not directly comment on the reports. But in a statement
      Monday it claimed that the communications of those who were not
      "valid foreign intelligence targets" were of no interest to the spy
      agency.

 4    Select the paragraph that suggests the newspapers are not just blindly reporting
      Snowden's information.

      Paragraph 16:
      Michael Birmingham is a spokesman for the Director of National
      Intelligence. The DNI is in charge of all U.S. spy agencies — including
      the NSA, CIA and FBI — and reports to the president. Birmingham said
      the agency requested the Times not publish the information. A Times
      spokeswoman said the information had been posted by error. The
      material has since been removed.
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