Off the wire
Registration for Egypt parliamentary elections starts Feb. 8  • Ukraine used as wedge between Russia, EU: Kremlin official  • Australian Open results  • 1st LD Writethru: France says F-16 fighter crash due to technical failure during take-off  • Africa Economy: Telecoms in Kenya battle for shrinking landline phone market  • Urgent: Car explosion injures 1 in Russia's Arkhangelsk  • Philippines clarifies only one female Filipino injured in Libya attack  • UNICEF launches largest-ever appeal to reach over 60 mln children worldwide  • News Analysis: U.S. nuclear deal with India draws ire of Pakistan  • Flights, trains suspended as snow hits northern England  
You are here:   Home

Snowden files show Canadian spy agency tracks millions of downloads daily

Xinhua, January 29, 2015 Adjust font size:

Canada's electronic spy agency intercepts and analyzes millions of videos and documents downloaded online every day by people around the world to identify extremists, Canada's CBC News reported Wednesday.

The Communications Security Establishment (CSE) project, named "LEVITATION", was carried out in partnership with countries including the United States, Britain, New Zealand and Australia, according to a document recently released to CBC News by U.S. whistleblower Edward Snowden.

Under Levitation, analysts with the electronic eavesdropping service can access information on about 10 million to 15 million uploads and downloads of files from free websites each day.

A CSE spokesman said in a statement that "CSE does not direct its activities at Canadians or anyone in Canada" and "has a range of measures in place to protect the privacy of Canadians incidentally encountered in the course of these foreign intelligence operations." But he declined to comment on whether LEVITATION remained active.

These documents are the first evidence from Snowden files to show that Canada carried out its own mass surveillance program to combat terrorism.

Snowden came to international attention in June 2013 after disclosing thousands of classified documents that he acquired while working as an NSA contractor.

In August 2014, he was granted a one-year asylum by the Russian government. Endi