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Foreign Intelligence Surveillance ActCondé Nast
•72% Informative
In September , the Department of Homeland Security signed a two-million-dollar contract with an Israeli spyware company.
The company's spyware product Graphite focusses on breaching encrypted-messaging applications such as Telegram and Signal .
The technology is part of a booming multibillion-dollar market for intrusive phone-hacking software that is making government surveillance increasingly cheap and accessible.
ICE has called for private companies to submit plans for augmenting the agency’s surveillance infrastructure, including ankle monitors, and software and hardware used for tracking targets’ biometrics.
Immigration lawyers told me that such an expansion would create a frightening digital panopticon, not just for the 3.7 million people awaiting immigration hearings.
These comments target the populations that have been most vulnerable to overzealous spyware campaigns in other Western democracies. “When this happens in an authoritarian system, it is horrific but unsurprising,” Seaford , the technology executive who was hacked during Greece ’s spyware campaign, told me. “When it happens in a democracy, however, it creates a sense of disorientation: Could this happen to me? Here? Really?!’ And yet it can, and it does.”.
VR Score
74
Informative language
75
Neutral language
42
Article tone
semi-formal
Language
English
Language complexity
78
Offensive language
not offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
short-lived
External references
3
Source diversity
3
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