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845 points the-anarchist | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.327s | source
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boramalper ◴[] No.44334361[source]
I suspect a strong link between mass surveillance (by corporations for advertising or by states for intelligence purposes) and the very recent targeting of the senior Iranian nuclear scientist and military officers at their homes in Iran.

Wherever you are from or whatever side of the conflict you are on, I think we can all agree that it’s never been easier to infer so much about a person from “semi-public” sources such as companies selling customer data and built-in apps that spy on their users and call home. It allows intelligence agencies to outsource intelligence gathering to the market, which is probably cheaper and a lot more convenient than traditional methods.

“Privacy is a human right” landed on deaf ears but hopefully politicians will soon realise that it’s a matter of national security too.

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1. VagabundoP ◴[] No.44344811[source]
What always shocks me is how much negligence is shown by politicians and cyber inteligence wrt to standard mobiles.

Anyone who runs a country, especially senior politicians, just shouldn't have a standard mobile.

It should be a built from the ground up phone by your own countries government services. Running GrapheneOS or something.

And you shouldn't have a second phone to have your affairs either.