ICREACH
ICREACH is an alleged top-secret surveillance-related search engine created by the United States National Security Agency after the terrorist attacks in New York on September 11, 2001.[1]
The existence of ICREACH became public through documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.[2]
Classified documents published by news site The Intercept state that ICREACH is accessible to 23 government agencies, including the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration, and the CIA, and was designed to store more than 850 billion records about phone calls, emails, cellphone locations, and text messages. [3][4][5]
According to Ryan Gallagher, the reporter for The Intercept who revealed the ICREACH program, the data accessed through the system is "swept up and stored on this database en masse using this Reagan-era presidential order, which is called Executive Order 12333. And this thing is subject to no court oversight from the secret foreign intelligence court and minimal congressional scrutiny." [6]
References
- ↑ Gallagher, Ryan (Aug 25, 2014). "The Surveillance Engine: How the NSA Built Its Own Secret Google". The Intercept.
- ↑ Winter, Michael (Aug 25, 2014). "NSA built 'Google-like' search engine to share data". USA Today.
- ↑ "CIA colleagues enthusiastically welcome NSA training". The Intercept. Aug 25, 2014.
- ↑ "Sharing communications metadata across the U.S. Intelligence Community". The Intercept. Aug 25, 2014.
- ↑ Pullam-Moore, Charles (Aug 25, 2014). "Google-like NSA search engine implemented to learn about civilians". PBS.
- ↑ Goodman, Amy (Aug 27, 2014). "NSA Creates Google-Like Search Engine to Help Other Agencies Access Collected Phone, Email Records". Democracy Now.