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New GCHQ Chief Says Social Media Aids Terrorists 228

An anonymous reader sends this report from Sky News: The new head of GCHQ has accused social media websites of helping terror groups and called for closer ties with intelligence agencies. "'However much they [tech companies] may dislike it, they have become the command and control networks of choice for terrorists and criminals, who find their services as transformational as the rest of us." ... Mr. Hannigan said that smartphone and other mobile technologies increased the opportunities for terrorist activity to be concealed in the wake of the exposing of secret cables and documents collected by US and UK authorities by whistleblower Edward Snowden. Mr. Hannigan said that smartphone and other mobile technologies increased the opportunities for terrorist activity to be concealed in the wake of the exposing of secret cables and documents collected by US and UK authorities by whistleblower Edward Snowden.
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New GCHQ Chief Says Social Media Aids Terrorists

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  • Not a win (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Chrisq ( 894406 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:14AM (#48308769)
    If we start screaming, crying, and arresting people as soon as they express a view we don't like we have not defeated the Muslims. We have become like the Muslims.
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:20AM (#48308815)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        First off, being a Muslim has nothing to do with screaming, crying, and arresting as soon as they express a view we don't like.

        really [bbc.co.uk]?

        • by Jawnn ( 445279 )
          Yes. Really.

          Jeezuz, are you really that dim, or are you just trolling? I can't tell. The behaviors are so similar sometimes.
      • Re:Not a win (Score:5, Insightful)

        by javilon ( 99157 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:28AM (#48308859) Homepage

        Well, I guess he means muslim countries.

        Any country defined (by themselves) as "a muslim country" falls into the view: "screaming, crying, and arresting as soon as they express a view we don't like".

        As a test, try to go to a "muslim country" and tell them you are gay...

        There are also other countries where this happens, like Russia (recently on the news) but the point is it does happen in every muslim country.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            http://www.naharnet.com/storie... [naharnet.com] Islam is a dangerous, corrupt quasi-religious political system, founded on lies & murder. You are making the mistake of thinking in, I assume, a Christian world view. Yes a lot of Muslims wont' give a shit, many, many, many of them will .
        • Derp (Score:2, Informative)

          by s.petry ( 762400 )

          Russia does not have anti-gay laws, you can be gay in Russia all you want and nobody cares. In fact the Daily show went out with a camera crew during the Sochi games trying to find the alleged persecuted gay people (in both Sochi and Moscow) and could not find any. That report was not discussed on any major News station of course, but it's there for your review as are other people doing similar reporting trying to find the alleged persecuted gay people.

          What Russia does have is laws that prevent gays from

          • by Anonymous Coward

            "In my opinion, this is not discriminating or oppressive."

            That's because you're discriminating and oppressive so your opinion is based on an abnormal starting point. Assad, Gaddafi, Putin, Stalin, and the Kim Jong dynasty probably don't think anything they do is oppressive either, but it doesn't change the fact that it is.

            "It would be discriminating and oppressive if they had competing "Hetero Pride" and "Gay Pride" parades, or "Hetero Lifestyle" and "Gay Lifestyle" public debates and only one side received

          • LOL, there are no anti-gay laws in Russia ... except when they are cited explicitly by government officials as a reason for removing a statue of Steve Jobs because Tim Cook announced that he is gay. Let me guess, Russia didn't invade and illegaly annex the Crimea either?

            I guess it's time for you to turn off your reality distortion field.

            • by s.petry ( 762400 )

              A political decision to remove a statue because of public pressure is now a "law"? Did we pass new laws in Iraq when we pulled down statues of Saddam Hussein, or did we remove the statues because they celebrated something that the populace saw as wrong? Did the Ukraine pull down statues of Stalin and Lenin because of "Laws", or because public opinion of those people changed?

              I'm pretty sure that the answer to both of those questions would match the answers to removing the statue of Steve Jobs. Hint: It's

            • by s.petry ( 762400 )

              Russia didn't invade and illegaly annex the Crimea either?

              I should have also pulled this little gem out, because it demonstrates your absolute ignorance. Crimea voted with almost 90% margin to annex to Russia. Crimea leases numerous ports and bases to Russia for profit, so this magical invasion that CNN claimed never happened. Ships that were already there remained there, troops that were on bases remained in bases. You can't even keep the difference between Donesk and Crimea in your dialogue.

              When a vote does not move the way the US wants the vote to move, the

      • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

        Considering that every time someone says something like wanting no religious accommodation in schools. Muslim groups start screaming "islamophobia or islamophobe" some other type of crap, it does seem to be particular to them.

        But sure, there's fanatical people. What's the difference between Muslims and Christians? Two things, first Christians don't believe that all people are Christian or born as such. Islam dictates that all people are. Second, Christianity has had a reformation(several actually), Isl

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

            The problem is that "rational muslims" are considered "not muslims" by a very large segment of the population. And even if you take the most conservative guess based on previous studies you're looking at 25%(that's in western countries) that openly support terrorism, death of apostates, and so on. You look for the same views in other countries, and it varies between 40-70% of support, especially in muslim countries. So while you say evil isn't born, it's created you've got a large swath of people out th

            • Comment removed based on user account deletion
              • You put you finger on what concerns me- that a smaller number can control the larger population. In that sense, even the moderate muslims could be considered "sleepers"; because if their community goes radical, they either aren't likely to buck the trend, or have much of an option. Many, due to their intense religious upbringing, might be shamed, bullied, or guilted into believing they aren't truly faithful muslims unless they follow the words of their cleric or imam, and judging by the numbers of psycho
        • What's the difference between Muslims and Christians? Two things, first Christians don't believe that all people are Christian or born as such. Islam dictates that all people are.

          Islam wants all people to be Muslims, and considers Muslims superior. But then, Christianity wants all people to be Christians, and considers Christians superior. Neither religion believes all people are born as such, neither religion dictates that all people are. The mainstream religion, that is. If you search long enough you can find loons that believe anything, including that the earth is flat or the sky is green. It is not so hard to find loons that want to shoot all those dangerous lefty atheists.

          Second, Christianity has had a reformation(several actually), Islam has had none.

          Islam

          • The Spanish inquisition has probably killed less people than were killed at the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. And if I remember correctly, they were, in fact, less cruel than the usual legal practices back then.

        • But sure, there's fanatical people. What's the difference between Muslims and Christians?

          Basically the difference is the name. Put an extreme Muslim next to an extreme Christian and it's hard to tell the difference, same with your everyday Joe Muslim and Johnny Christian. All religions have the potential to have the extremists, even none religious do (only they have to look harder for justification). It just so happens to be the Muslims turn in the spotlight to be 'the baddies' before that the Russians, before that the Germans, before that the Germans again etc etc etc.

        • Second, Christianity has had a reformation(several actually), Islam has had none. Also, your "dangerous holy crusades" were in response to Muslims. More so the out-right slaughter, rape, murder, and forced conversion of Christians in Spain...that had been on-going for nearly 100 years by that time.

          Glad to see someone else pointing this out, instead of listening to the apologist historical revisionists who cherry pick their history, and act as though nothing lead up to the Crusades except for "christian greed" (okay, that might have been *a* factor, but far from the only or main one); or that somehow 90% of middle east region had willingly, peacefully, converted to Islam, when the area was already the original home of Judaism and Christianity, as well as older pagan religions. Anyone who even read a

        • Christianity has had a reformation(several actually), Islam has had none.

          Which isn't true at all. Islam has gone through many twists and turns and in fact, there are a number of competing 'versions' of Islam duking it out at present. Can't look it up at the moment, but there is an article in The Atlantic online that speaks to that. Plenty of other references as well.

          Personally, I think they're all insane, but I;m obviously a minority.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Muslim is a religious choice

        How is it a religious choice? You are born into it, and if you try to leave you are publicly executed. Where is the choice in that? It is fuckin cancer.

      • Re:Not a win (Score:5, Insightful)

        by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:52AM (#48309059)

        Islam may indeed be another religious choice. But in it's present-day form, it's MUCH more radical than most others. Very few other modern religions still seek to impose their religious beliefs by force in entire COUNTRIES (and exclude the practice of other religions). Even radical Zionists in Israel and Mormons in Utah would draw the line at banning other religions in their countries outright, or in overriding secular civil law entirely with their batshit beliefs. There are an *increasing* number of Muslim countries (and, make no mistake, it IS increasing), where the general populace is all-too-ready to vote in Sharia Law and start burning churches the second they get the chance. And this is not a movement that is weakening in the modern world, it's actually STRENGTHENING.

        There are still voices of moderation in Islam. But I'm no longer convinced that they are the majority, and they are CERTAINLY on the wane.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

          There are an *increasing* number of Muslim countries (and, make no mistake, it IS increasing), where the general populace is all-too-ready to vote in Sharia Law and start burning churches the second they get the chance. And this is not a movement that is weakening in the modern world, it's actually STRENGTHENING.

          That's not true. Most Muslim countries are becoming less radicalised over time. Even in fairly hardcore places like Iran and Saudi Arabia there is quite a bit of movement, for example with women driving in defiance of the law and agitating for change. There are actually quite a lot of Christians living happily in Iran and Saudi Arabia too, without having their churches burned down.

          Like Christianity before it, Islam is slowly dying as people become more educated. There are sporadic attempts in some places to

        • " overriding secular civil law entirely with their batshit beliefs."

          Post offices in the US are required to be closed on Sundays because people would gather to talk at the post office instead of the church.

          Trains in Israel are prohibited form running from sundown on Friday until sundown on Saturday (though you can get a Muslim taxi driver any day of the week).

          "general populace is all-too-ready to vote in Sharia Law and start burning churches"
          As opposed to places where they *already* burn mosques, or restrict

      • One's choice (when it's a choice at all, rather than just going along with what you were raised with or what everyone else is doing) of religion is pretty much orthogonal to one's fanaticism and dangerousness(excluding the ones so marginal that they get essentially zero 'default' members and are built exclusively on recruitment, suicide cults and such).

        That said, there are some historical differences (largely unrelated to the actual theology of the religions involved) that have an impact:

        Most notably,
      • First off, being a Muslim has nothing to do with screaming, crying, and arresting as soon as they express a view we don't like.

        Muslim is a religious choice, and just like Christians or any other religion, there are those who are fanatical about it. They are dangerous, remember the holy crusades?

        There are people who are fanatical who have nothing to do with religion at all, what group do you insult for them?
        There's plenty of Muslims who live in Canada who are perfectly reasonable respectable people who are not violent who appreciate that you have your own way you live your life, and aren't coming to you to force you to change it, and just want to be respected for their way of life like any other religion.

        For many many people being Muslim is NOT a choice; they are born into it. When they reach an age where they are rational enough to be able to decide whether they really want to be Muslim or not they are faced with the option of leaving Islam and being an apostate. The Koran specifies the death sentence for this 'crime'.

        So no, unless you are a convert theres no real choice there.

    • Re:Not a win (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Lunix Nutcase ( 1092239 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:26AM (#48308847)

      You've only just now realized that Al Qaeda and Osama Bin Laden won beyond their wildest imaginations? We can fist bump about killing him and shouting "MURICA!! FUCK YEEEEAAH!" but even with Bush in front of his "Mission Accomplished" banner, we've still lost this fight big time by succumbing to the terrorist boogeyman to allow Big Brother to tuck us in at night.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • From what I understand about Osama Bin Laden, he knew this is exactly what would happen. He knew all of the players involved and what they desired (he was trained and worked for them for years, after all) and all he had to do was give a catalyst to scare all of us to allow our own wolves to devour us. He may have been a monster but, he was a very intelligent man.

        As far as what another post said, yes, we were already heading this way but, this sped up the clock by a few decades to bring this all here no

    • Re:Not a win (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jafiwam ( 310805 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:30AM (#48308877) Homepage Journal

      If we start screaming, crying, and arresting people as soon as they express a view we don't like we have not defeated the Muslims. We have become like the Muslims.

      This sums it up right there. We are well on our way already.

      The GCHQ head is clueless. They'll just do what they think is effective and safe. When they figured out we were using voice prints and cell phones to target air strikes, they stopped using cell phones.

      The same thing will happen with Facebook, Myspace, Twitter, Snapchat, or whatever else.

      Another point, the ones using those things now are the dumb ones that are all talk, and not going to do much if anything effective. Worry about the ones that have hidden their messages that we aren't finding, or the ones that just meet in person or send coded snail mail letters. They don't need instructions, they need MONEY and TIME to get their goals done.

      This is nothing more than yet another ploy to hook more surveillance into stuff that will be basically used to make the IRS more effective at targeting mild political opposites for harassment. The guys they need to bust in on with guns plot in mosques and living rooms in person.

    • Don't tar everyone with the brush of extremism. I work/worked with people who are about as Muslim as Jon Stewart is Jewish - they know their heritage and some key words, they celebrate some holidays (especially if older generations are around), and mostly it doesn't matter. On the other hand, the good Christian folks who want "faith-based" laws scare me just as much as the guy interviewed on 60 Minutes last week, insisting that it was his democratic right to tell a woman to cover herself with a hijab AND
      • the guy interviewed on 60 Minutes last week, insisting that it was his democratic right to tell a woman to cover herself with a hijab AND expect her to comply,

        Well, it IS his democratic right to tell her to do so.

        Likewise, it IS his democratic right to expect her to comply.

        Whether she actually complies or not, well, that's a question of HER democratic rights....

        Note that my own opinion is that she should "comply" by macing him....

        • by gmhowell ( 26755 )

          the guy interviewed on 60 Minutes last week, insisting that it was his democratic right to tell a woman to cover herself with a hijab AND expect her to comply,

          Well, it IS his democratic right to tell her to do so.

          Likewise, it IS his democratic right to expect her to comply.

          Whether she actually complies or not, well, that's a question of HER democratic rights....

          Note that my own opinion is that she should "comply" by macing him....

          Preferably with an actual mace.

      • Don't tar everyone with the brush of extremism.

        How dare you point out his hypocrisy!

    • by cob666 ( 656740 )
      Why stop there? The Internet aids terrorist groups.
  • If only they wouldn't breath our cause would be aided. Get over it gov'ment. Do your work the way your supposed to without invading our privacy and whining over every thing we do that keeps you honest and working for US.. the people. Encryptions protects us from you. We use social media because we like it... etc. etc. etc.

  • .. same as the old boss

  • by Noryungi ( 70322 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:25AM (#48308839) Homepage Journal

    Slashdot IS social media, which is why NSA and GCHQ created a fake Slashdot to hack into a Belgian Telecom company [ibtimes.com].

    You dirty terrorists, you! Bad Slashdot! BAD!

    Seriously, though, this is beyond belief and beyond the pale. Where do they get these morons? Most of these people are guilty of perjury [wikipedia.org] (at best) and outright conflict of interests [reuters.com] and gross violations of basic human rights [eff.org] at worst.

    When is this going to stop and when are we going to get rid of these idiots? Where is Senator Franck Church when we need him? [theguardian.com]

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      Slashdot IS social media, which is why NSA and GCHQ created a fake Slashdot to hack into a Belgian Telecom company [ibtimes.com].

      You dirty terrorists, you! Bad Slashdot! BAD!

      I might agree with you there if the fake /. was Beta clone that was full of Bennett's rambling "articles" interspersed with Nerval's dicevertisiments.

      On the other hand I also might feel sorry for the terrorists for being exposed to something like that.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:25AM (#48308841)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • As do civil liberties, privacy, and encryption.

    • Electricity, roads, mechanized farming, and every other technology that makes up our modern way of life.

      That's a good argument for putting the spy chiefs in charge of those things too, then. Like it or not, roads have become the primary means of getting a terrorist to his target - the road people need to accept the new reality. One can never be too safe - try to keep up.

    • Don't forget governments - Bin Laden received his initial funding and training from the CIA.

      Every time a government agent points his finger, he's got 3 more pointing right back at himself.

    • by zlives ( 2009072 )

      what helps them the most is the weapons and training we provide them when we want their help... cause then they are freedom fighters.

  • by purple_cobra ( 848685 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:26AM (#48308845)
    ...get a search warrant. Or, to be a bit more accurate: stop whining about how difficult your job is now and just do what you should have been doing all along. If you are having trouble identifying "persons of interest", that is not my problem. If encryption is too hard for you to break covertly, that is not my problem. If you can't do your job without every single person holding the door open for you to have a look around inside, that is not my problem. See a theme here, Hannigan? You are paid a handsome salary to detect nefarious arseholes who would do damage to the UK and its interests; perhaps you should earn that salary instead of moaning about the IT industry making the life of your staff difficult. If a dragnet is the answer, you are asking the wrong questions.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      To be fair, he was complaining about companies like Google and Apple enabling encryption by default in their operating systems, as well as the social network stuff. Certainly encrypted devices are a problem for law enforcement, and no warrant will help them get in if the password is strong and the suspect refuses to divulge it.

      I imagine the result will be the penalty of failing to disclose passwords will shoot up. Currently it is 2 years jail maximum, far less than you would get for terrorism or paedophilia

      • Yeah, refusal to disclose passwords is covered under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (or it was when I was in college, at least); I suspect *that* law will be tweaked (i.e. to cover the same imprisonment terms as the original offence for which you are being investigated, so for murder that might well mean life for not disclosing your password) but there needs to be a *very* tight scope placed on that (i.e. if the police are searching for terrorist propaganda and find a small amount of cannabis at
      • by The Ickle Jones ( 3869681 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @01:28PM (#48311587)

        That's still utterly ridiculous. Encryption is intended to protect you from Bad Guys (whether they be governments or simple criminals). If it also makes law enforcement difficult, then so be it; our rights don't just vanish just to make their jobs easier.

        Draconian punishments for refusing to give up passwords would just further reveal them to be freedom-hating scumbags. Hopefully courts in the US would recognize that as a violation of the constitution (other places, I'm not sure).

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Roodvlees ( 2742853 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:31AM (#48308889)
    Drinking water allows terrorists to remain hydrated, even in dry environments! Social media aid those who use them.
    • Almost every murder, terrorist act or bad thing has been committed within 24 hours of drinking water or a water based product! Something must be done!

      http://www.dhmo.org/facts.html
  • It's not only social media sites, it's the whole internet! Giving everyone a way to communicate with others makes it impossible to control the terrorists.

    And not only the terrorists, also the pedofiles, the drug lords, all kinds of criminals can communicate using the internet.

    We're in a slippery slope that ends in total chaos.

    A slippery slope that started with the telephone.

    Every technological advance beyond what we had at the end of the 19th century is inherently evil and has to be destroyed. It's so obvio

    • I think you'd have to go back at least to Gutenberg. Gave the power to individuals to create many copies in hours rather than single copies in years.
  • by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:38AM (#48308939)

    This just in!
    Also aiding Terrorists:
    1. Air
    2. Food
    3. Water
    4. Pillows
    5. Gravity
    6. The sun

  • question (Score:4, Funny)

    by JigJag ( 2046772 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @08:42AM (#48308979)

    Did Mr. Hannigan say "that smartphone and other mobile technologies increased the opportunities for terrorist activity to be concealed in the wake of the exposing of secret cables and documents collected by US and UK authorities by whistleblower Edward Snowden"?

    I'm still not sure yet.

  • What he doesn't mention is that the existing powers of the government(s) are already more than sufficient. In cases where there is good reason to watch someone, the processes existed even before the attacks on the US. If one reads the US Congress report on the 9/11 attacks, it is striking to see how much these guys were already under surveillance. There is no example of 'we had a viable suspect and some legal barrier kept us from closing the case'. And the Boston Marathon bombings showed us how useful the g
    • Part of the process was broken, although giving LEO's more powers doesn't really address it. The big failure happened when individuals the CIA were watching and tracking entered the USA. Instead of bringing the FBI onboard and getting them to watch the terrorists, they kept it secret, hoping that the terrorists would leave the country where they could bust them for whatever it was they were planning. So now we get the department of homeland security which is supposed to handle all of it so that there aren't

  • by EmperorOfCanada ( 1332175 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @09:00AM (#48309141)
    Paper helps terrorists make plans, maps help them find their way, cars help them get there, air helps them breath, food helps them grow, playing cars stave off their boredom, blah blah blah.

    I would say that supporting tinpot dictators in these countries has probably been the #1 factor in creating these guys, with any #2 being such a distant second that it hardly counts. Yet it is these very same "security" agencies that have been patting themselves on the back as they trained and supported the secret police in all these countries. Using terms like "Realpolitik" to justify their actions.

    Well sorry, you don't let the serial killer go just because he also runs an after-school program for the kids. Or even if he happens to own an oil well or two.

    Plus it wouldn't be social media that the top terrorist dogs use. Those guys would be using couriers running around on motorcycles with cryptic notes. The only people that are using social media that these KGB types are scared of are new peaceful political movements that might organized to create a society that doesn't give them the free hand that they enjoy today and hope for tomorrow. Including movements in countries where they enjoy tight relationships with the corrupt evil regimes that have their boots on the throats of their people now.

    Think about how much effort the American security services have spent going after Occupy NY whereas how little effort they have spent going after any police who violated the civil rights of those same protesters. That is the social media they seek to control.

  • There are actually a few other things that help terrorists;

    Mobile phones, telephones, radio waves, email, speech, pens, paper, smoke signals...actually who is this idiot?

    Instead of arresting social media site owners, forums users and people with "illegal thoughts"; let's arrest all the senior officials that new the GCHQ are spying on their own via the NSA and arrest senior NSA officials for knowingly spying on their own via the GCHQ.

    You cannot talk to these people because they are "at war" like so man
  • Terrorists commandeer many of society's tools. From Boeings to biology to printing presses, almost any tool that serves a society can be turned by terrorists to serve their ends.
  • by tomxor ( 2379126 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @09:13AM (#48309253)

    Sandwiches Aid Terrorists

    Toothpaste Aid Terrorists

    HD TVs Aid Terrorists

    Sleep Aids Terrorists

    Coffee Aids Terrorists

    Money Aids Terrorists

    ...Another fact we all now know: Robert Hannigan is a fuckwit... and you can probably find a reason that he in some way also aids terrorists.

  • Copied directly from TFS:

    Mr. Hannigan said that smartphone and other mobile technologies increased the opportunities for terrorist activity to be concealed in the wake of the exposing of secret cables and documents collected by US and UK authorities by whistleblower Edward Snowden. Mr. Hannigan said that smartphone and other mobile technologies increased the opportunities for terrorist activity to be concealed in the wake of the exposing of secret cables and documents collected by US and UK authorities by whistleblower Edward Snowden.

    C'mon man. How can you screw up the summary that badly? There are only 3 damn sentences and we still can't avoid a dupe.

    Slashdot: The only place you can have a dupe in a single summary.

  • Intelligence agencies are well aware that no worthwhile discussions happen here any more, so they won't read what you write here. Of course, neither will anyone else...
  • However much they [tech companies] may dislike it, they have become the command and control networks of choice for terrorists and criminals, who find their services as transformational as the rest of us... Mr. Hannigan said that smartphone and other mobile technologies increased the opportunities for terrorist activity to be concealed...

    I agree fully. Things such as social media and cell phones are priceless boons to those governments which aggressively meddle in the affairs of other nations while persistently spying on their own citizens. It's good to see Mr. Hannigan admitting on behalf of his country how "transformational" the latest technology has been for him and his masters.

    People and countries that complain about the sword cutting both ways, should just stop living by the sword.

  • Cars also help terrorists. Maybe we should consider restrictions on them too, to make sure they can't be used for terrorism. And guns help terrorists. I certainly don't see the Americans raising a fuss about that. Curiously, the UK doesn't seem to be raising a fuss about that either. Heck, western governments frequently help terrorists. Perhaps we should address that one first.

  • so there's nothing to be done about it.

  • by Tom ( 822 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @02:19PM (#48312069) Homepage Journal

    Dispite the sensationalistic headline, he's actually spot on:

    "'However much they [tech companies] may dislike it, they have become the command and control networks of choice for terrorists and criminals, who find their services as transformational as the rest of us."

    True. He's not saying social media is aiding terrorists. He says that terrorists use the same tools that normal people use, too.

  • by k2r ( 255754 ) on Tuesday November 04, 2014 @04:13PM (#48312999)

    so let's get rid of it.

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