He added, "For a company to secretly search all incoming emails of all its customers in response to a broad government directive would be a blow to privacy and a serious threat to freedom of expression." Separately, in a statement provided to Engadget, Amnesty International Head of Technology Sherif Elsayed-Ali said, "If true, this news will greatly undermine trust in the internet. ( Update: In a statement to New York Times reporter Mike Isaac, Twitter clearly stated the following: "We've never received a request like this, and were we to receive it we'd challenge it in court.") Update 2: In responses sent to The Information, Google said it has never received such a request and would respond "no way" if it did, while Microsoft's statement reads, "We have never engaged in the secret scanning of email traffic like what has been reported today about Yahoo." On the other hand, Twitter said that it was prohibited by federal law from answering. I wonder how the candidates feel about Yahoo spying on every single customer's emails for NSA/FBI. Meanwhile, Snowden's taken to Twitter to share his thoughts about the situation. Update: In a statement sent to Engadget, a Yahoo spokesperson said, "Yahoo is a law abiding company, and complies with the laws of the United States." Nothing else beyond that. We've reached out to Yahoo for comment and will update our story as soon as we hear back. The news comes only days after The New York Times published a story claiming that Yahoo downplayed security for years, hot on the heels of that massive 2014 breach the company took two years to make public.īy subscribing, you are agreeing to Engadget's Terms and Privacy Policy. Per today's report, the decision to adhere to this request falls on CEO Marissa Mayer, and was apparently the reason Chief Security Officer Alex Stamos left Yahoo in 2015. Since the Edward Snowden leaks, the relationship between tech companies and the US government has been rocky, with the likes of Apple, Google and Microsoft fighting hard to keep people's private information secure. As Reuters notes, based on comments from surveillance experts, this marks the first time that an American internet firm has agreed to meet the demands from a US spy agency en mass.Įven if it was handed a classified directive, Yahoo seems to have opened the floodgates to the NSA and FBI, rather than offer access to clear-cut materials - like stored messages or specific accounts. To do so, Yahoo secretly built a custom software that officials could use to search emails for specific information, although it's not known what exactly they were looking for. The publication's sources claim that the company had to comply with a classified request from the government, which allowed the National Security Agency and FBI to scan "hundreds of millions" of Yahoo Mail accounts. According to Reuters, Yahoo provided US intelligence officials access to all of its customers incoming emails last year.
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