Trapwire

Devar

Jedi
Can't seem to find any existing posts here on Trapwire, so I've collected a few articles about it here.
Trapwire, it seems, is a surveillance system used to track people that "is given access to security camera networks and uses facial and body recognition combined with aggregated information provided by governments and social media [...] by recognising [...] patterns of activity".

Knowledge of the system was first leaked by Wikileaks in emails from Stratfor, who then had a large DDoS directed at them.

Wikipedia said:
The company has been named in recent (August 2012) Wikileaks releases as the source of software that facilitates intelligence-gathering on U.S. and global citizens, using surveillance technology, incident reports from citizens, and data correlation for local police and law enforcement agencies.

Details about the program emerged as emails from intelligence company Stratfor had been hacked at the end of 2011. According to a report of Russia Today,[2] a network of surveillance cameras is installed "in most major American cities at selected high value targets (HVTs) and has appeared abroad as well." A software program analyzes the images to detect "suspicious" behavior. The program is reported to be a joint effort of Stratfor and Abraxas Corp (VA). The report also refers to a 2006 article, in which then Abraxas Vice President R. Daniel Botsch outlined Trapwire's capabilities:[3]

Any patterns detected – links among individuals, vehicles or activities – will be reported back to each affected facility. This information can also be shared with law enforcement organizations, enabling them to begin investigations into the suspected surveillance cell.

In one leaked email, Stratfor vice president Fred Burton states that TrapWire is in place at every high-value target in New York City, Washington, D.C, and Los Angeles, as well as London and Ottawa.[4]

Abraxas also owns Anonymizer an Internet privacy company.[5][6]

It seems that articles about it are being scrubbed from online media? I also can't help but think the Assange show that heated up yesterday is somehow misdirecting attention from Trapwire.
 
http://www.infonews.co.nz/news.cfm?id=94751 said:
Australian Trapwire Articles Removed

Wednesday 15 August 2012, 3:51PM
By Barrett Brown
94 views

As of 6:40 CST here in U.S., these are the Australian articles on Trapwire that have been simply removed by their respective outlets with no explanation.

Note that there are rumors to the effect that they are down to inaccurately stating that Cubic Corporation owns Abraxas Apps - rumors that are false, as show here (http://privatepaste.com/6810d9914a) and as could have been verified for nearly a year on Project PM's Echelon2.org wiki entry for Cubic Corporation (http://wiki.echelon2.org/wiki/Cubic_Corporation) which itself links to the pertinent tax documents.

Incidentally, Cubic and Abraxas have long been our focus due to their known involvement in persona management software as provided to CENTCOM by the wholly owned subsidiary Ntrepid.



Here, the, are the articles that are down - not corrected, but entirely removed:

http://m.smh.com.au/technology/technology-news/revealed-trapwire-spy-cams-ticket-to-au stralia-20120813-2448z.html

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/technology/technology-news/revealed-trapwire-spy-cams-ticket-to-australia-20120813-2448z.html

http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/surveillance-system-linked-to-transport-defence-contractor-20120813-244yj.html

http://m.watoday.com.au/technology/technology-news/revealed-trapwire-spy-cams-ticket-to-australia-20120813-2448z.html

http://m.theage.com.au/technology/technology-news/revealed-trapwire-spy-cams-ticket-to-australia-20120813-2448z.html

http://www.katherinetimes.com.au/news/national/national/general/revealed-trapwire-spy-cams-ticket-to-australia/2648709.aspx

http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/nsw/surveillance-system-linked-to-transport-defence-contractor-20120813-244yj.html

http://m.canberratimes.com.au/nsw/surveillance-system-linked-to-transport-defence-contractor-20120813-244yj.html

God forbid that this unprecedented incident receive at least a cursory examination from those journalists who are paid to do what many of us in the activist community have long done for free.

As to the potential reason for such articles going down in Australia, and not elsewhere, this non-scrubbed article may hold a clue:

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/cubic-transportation-systems-offers-to-take-on-myki/story-e6frf7kx-1226015136624

As may this:

http://www.optuszoo.com.au/news/breaking/brisbane-times/surveillance-system-linked-to-transport-defence-contractor/752577

This, too, is quite understandably down:

http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/surveillance-system-linked-to-transport-defence-contractor-20120813-244yj.html

And to those who are claiming that Trapwire does not actually entail anything like facial recognition, please take a few minutes to read what ex-CIA agent and Abraxas head Richard Helms said about the intent of the software seven years ago: that it would “collect information about people and vehicles that is more accurate than facial recognition," among other things. This was noted at http://publicintelligence.net/unravelling-trapwire/ where anyone could read it, not just those of us who bothered to do so.

In conclusion, fuck the media, and fuck the dozens of state-linked firms that the media hasn't bothered to do a single fucking bit of research on despite this problem having quite demonstrably gotten out of hand years ago.

Barrett Brown
Project PM
barriticus@gmail.com



http://www.optuszoo.com.au/news/breaking/brisbane-times/surveillance-system-linked-to-transport-defence-contractor/752577 said:
Surveillance system linked to transport, defence contractor

Aug 14, 2012 12:45am

A CONTROVERSIAL surveillance system that synthesises high-tech security camera footage and online data to predict ''suspicious activity'' is owned by an international conglomerate awarded hundreds of millions of dollars in Australian government transport and defence contracts.

The TrapWire System, as the program is known, is owned by Cubic Corporation, which in 2010 signed a $370 million contract with the NSW government to provide Sydney's public transport ticketing system, based on London's Oyster card.

Cubic also runs a similar system in Brisbane and has a subsidiary of its defence business based in Queensland which has won about $32 million in contracts with the Australian Defence Force, mainly providing combat simulation and training systems.

But TrapWire has caused the company a storm of online criticism after its purported role was revealed last week.

And while there is no evidence to suggest it has yet been brought to Australia, the Australian Defence Department would issue only a cryptic statement on it yesterday.

''The Department of Defence is aware of the TrapWire System. However, it would be inappropriate to provide further comment on this system or its capabilities,'' a Defence spokesman said, noting that defence does not comment on ''intelligence or operational capabilities''.

TrapWire is given access to security camera networks and uses facial and body recognition combined with aggregated information provided by governments and social media to prevent terrorist attacks by recognising suspicious patterns of activity.

It forwards its reports to a wide array of US police departments, intelligence agencies and public departments. The detail about TrapWire was found in emails between executives at the private intelligence company Stratfor and released by WikiLeaks.

According to the emails, TrapWire is installed in some of the Western world's most sensitive locations, including the White House, 10 Downing Street, New Scotland Yard and the London Stock Exchange, as well as 500 locations in the New York subway system.

It is also the brainchild of a group of American businessmen who spent decades working as intelligence officers in the Central Intelligence Agency. That detail on various company websites revealing their past was taken down recently.

In late 2010, Cubic purchased the company that created TrapWire, Abraxas, for $US124 million.

On its website, TrapWire said it was founded in 2004 to build and deploy counterterrorism technologies ''in the wake of the September 11th terrorist attacks''. It seeks to prevent such attacks from occurring in the future and boasts on its website that its technology can ''detect patterns of behaviour indicative of pre-operational planning''.

US authorities were criticised after the al-Qaeda attacks of 2001 for failings in information sharing, and part of TrapWire's appeal appears to be that it is designed to make it easier to share information across a global surveillance network.

Despite the pervasiveness of its monitoring, it stated one of its advantages was that it does not share ''sensitive or personally identifiable information''.

The internal TrapWire emails were obtained by hackers when they broke into Stratfor Global Intelligence, which had a partnership deal with TrapWire that meant Stratfor earned an 8 per cent finder's fee for any clients that it referred to the Cubic company.
 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2187602/U-S-Government-secretly-spying-using-civilian-security-cameras-say-Wikileaks.html said:
U.S. government is secretly spying on EVERYONE using civilian security cameras, say Wikileaks

Cameras use facial recognition to log people's activity
Details released by Wikileaks which has now been hacked in cyber attack
Disturbing echoes of CIA officials in hit film The Bourne Identity

By Rick Dewsbury

PUBLISHED: 09:13 GMT, 13 August 2012 | UPDATED: 10:35 GMT, 14 August 2012

Anyone who takes a photograph at high-risk locations is logged as a suspected terrorist on a vast network of secret spy cameras linked to the U.S. Government, according to leaked emails.

People pointing cameras in New York are regarded as suspicious and the facial recognition images of them from the civilian CCTV are fed into a data centre run by U.S. firm Abraxas.

The system then connects with hundreds of other cameras in a bid to pinpoint potential terrorist activity, it is claimed.

Details of the system emerged from emails released by whistle-blowing website Wikileaks. The issue has caused outrage among privacy campaigners amid fears that it could be abused.

It has disturbing echoes of the film, The Bourne Identity starring Matt Damon, in which CIA officials use a network of spy cameras to track around the world someone they though they had assassinated.

According to the email released by Wikileaks, pictures of people's faces are encrypted and sent to a fortified data centre at a secret location.

The TrapWire system is linked to civilian CCTV cameras.

TrapWire is used by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in a bid to deter terrorist attacks - or catch those responsible once an incident has happened.

According to the company's own documents from 2007, TrapWire is 'a unique, predictive software system designed to detect patterns of per-attack surveillance.' This includes 'photographing, measuring and signaling'.

More than 500 cameras using the technology have been installed on the New York subway. There are estimated to be thousands more around various U.S. cities and in London at potential terrorist targets such as Downing Street.

The firm also operates in several other U.S. states, in Canada and in London. It is said to have cameras also placed at high rick targets in the UK, including Downing Street.

An email from an employee at Strator - a Texas-based intelligence firm linked to Trapwire - in 2010 said the cameras were focused on 'per-operational terrorist surveillance'.

It stated: 'This week, 500 surveillance cameras were activated on the NYC subway system to focus on per-operational terrorist surveillance. The surveillance technology is also operational on high-value targets (HVTs) in DC, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and London and is called TrapWire.

'TrapWire is one of the most innovative tools developed since 9-11 to help mitigate terrorist threats. From a protective intelligence perspective, TrapWire does have the ability to share information on suspicious events or suspects between cities.'

In another email, Stratfor president Don Kuykendall wrote: 'Their clients include Scotland Yard, #10 Downing, the White House and many [business].

'Our consideration is introducing them to companies like Walmart, Dell and others.'

In a separate email, vice president Fred Burton wrote: 'Salesforce HQs in San Fran is interested in TrapWire after I briefed them on their wonderful capabilities'.

The emails have caused uproar among activists who believe that the use of the cameras is an infringement on people's freedom.

After the emails were released, WikiLeaks said it has been the victim of a sustained denial-of-service attack which has left its website sluggish or inaccessible for more than a week.

In a statement released late Saturday the group said the assault intensified around the beginning of August and has since expanded to include attacks against affiliated sites.

Denial-of-service attacks work by overwhelming websites with requests for information. WikiLeaks has said it's been flooded with 10 gigabits per second of bogus traffic from thousands of different Internet addresses.

Josh Corman, with online content delivery company Akamai, characterized that as 'a bit larger' than attacks commonly seen in the past few years.

WikiLeaks, which has angered officials in Washington with its spectacular releases of classified U.S. documents, remained inaccessible Sunday.

WHAT IS TRAPWIRE AND WHO OWNS THE SECRETIVE SYSTEM?

Trapwire is a security system that uses CCTV cameras to relay encrypted images of people to a data centre. These are then compared with images from various other cameras to track suspicious activity.

The system was developed by security intelligence firm Abraxas Applications now known as Trapwire Inc.

The system is linked to a separate company Stratfor, which sent emails between staff discussing the system. When these emails became public through Wikileaks, they revealed details of the Trapwire spy network.

The people behind Trapwire are understood to be former high-ranking CIA and intelligence officials.

The Trapwire website describes it as a 'unique, predictive software system designed to detect patterns indicative of terrorist attacks or criminal operations'.
 
Another very good article here;

http://privacysos.org/node/785 said:
Trapwire and data mining: What we know
Submitted by sosadmin on Sat, 08/11/2012 - 18:21

These days every news cycle brings us more thoroughly disturbing reasons to be concerned about pervasive digital monitoring in the United States. This week things got extra interesting with the revelation of an enormous, shadowy surveillance company with deep ties to the CIA: Trapwire exploded on the surveillance scene like a bat out of hell. And people are justifiably freaked out about it.

But people are also publishing a lot of information that seems to have appeared out of the ether, grounded in no documentation whatsoever. There is no need to speculate or conjure surveillance bogeymen where they do not exist. The documented facts speak loudly enough.

Furthermore, we don’t even have to look to pre-crime, globally networked spook software like Trapwire to be concerned about where we stand vis a vis privacy rights and government powers. Take the following stories from just the past month as a small sample of our problems, serving to illustrate the seriousness of our current predicament:

On NSA dreams: “NSA Boss Wants More Control Over the Net: The Internet should be adapted to allow for oversight by the National Security Agency, the organization’s boss says” (Technology Review, MIT, July 27, 2012)

On NSA vacuum style digital surveillance: “HOPE 9: Whistleblower Binney says the NSA has dossiers on nearly every US citizen” (NetworkWorld, July 15, 2012)

On the feds using our cellphones as bugs: “Ninth Circuit OKs Feds Use of Cellphones as Roving Bugs” (The New American, July 28, 2012)

On impunity and secrecy in spying: “The Feds Violated the Constitution but the Administration Won’t Say How” (The Atlantic, July 24, 2012)

On the National Counter Terrorism Center (NCTC) collecting unimaginably large amounts of data about every single person and storing it for a very long time: “The Biggest New Spying Program You’ve Probably Never Heard Of” (ACLU, July 30, 2012)

On impunity for warrantless spying on a mass scale: “Appeals Court OKs Warrantless Wiretapping” (Wired, August 7, 2012)

On face recognition: “FBI’s Facial Recognition is Coming to a State Near You” (EFF, August 8, 2012)

On the Microsoft and NYPD attempt to recreate “Total Information Awareness”: “The NYPD’s Domain Awareness System Is Watching You” (New York Magazine, August 9, 2012)

And for those worried that the government will use its vast, unaccountable surveillance powers to intimidate and harass political activists or religious minorities, there’s some news for you, too:

On the targeting of political anarchists: “Political Convictions? Federal Prosecutors in Seattle Are Dragging Activists into Grand Juries, Citing Their Social Circles and Anarchist Reading Materials” (The Stranger, August 7, 2012)

On JTTF raids of activist homes: “FBI and JTTF Raid Multiple Homes, Grand Jury Subpoenas in Portland, Olympia, Seattle” (Green is the New Red, July 25, 2012)

On the NYPD’s relentless and remorseless targeting of Muslims: “Gov jabs at NYPD again over spying on Muslims” (Wall Street Journal, August 8, 2012)

In other words, we are in a rough spot, Trapwire or no Trapwire. Having established that, let's move on to what we can prove Trapwire is, and what we cannot.

Article continues at source...
 
FYI, more Bill Binney, on NSA: "The Ultimate Goal is Total Population Control"

_http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-07-11/nsa-whistleblower-speaks-ultimate-goal-total-population-control

One of several videos featuring interviews with Binney: _http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9-3K3rkPRE
 
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