Decrypted: DEA spying on protesters, DDoS attacks, Signal downloads spike

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This week saw protests spread across the world sparked by the murder of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, killed by a white police officer in Minneapolis last month.

The U.S. hasn’t seen protests like this in a generation, with millions taking to the streets each day to lend their voice and support. But they were met with heavily armored police,

drones

watching from above, and “covert” surveillance

by the federal government.

That’s exactly why cybersecurity and privacy is more important than ever, not least to protect law-abiding protesters demonstrating against police brutality and institutionalized, systemic racism. It’s also prompted those working in cybersecurity — many of which are former law enforcement themselves — to check their own privilege and

confront the racism

from within their ranks and lend their knowledge to their fellow citizens.


THE BIG PICTURE

DEA allowed ‘covert surveillance’ of protesters

The Justice Department has granted the Drug Enforcement Administration, typically tasked with enforcing federal drug-related laws, the authority to conduct “covert surveillance” on protesters across the U.S., effectively turning the civilian law enforcement division

into a domestic intelligence agency

.

The DEA is one of the most tech-savvy government agencies in the federal government, with access to

“stingray” cell site simulators

to track and locate phones, a secret program that allows the agency access to billions of domestic phone records

, and facial recognition technology.

Lawmakers decried the Justice Department’s move to allow the DEA to spy on protesters, calling on the government

to “immediately rescind” the order

, describing it as “antithetical” to Americans’ right to peacefully assembly.