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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Tue Sep 24, 2013, 12:46 PM Sep 2013

Brazil’s President Tells The United Nations: NSA Spying Violates International Law

Brazil’s president, Dilma Rousseff, has launched a blistering attack on US espionage at the UN general assembly, accusing the NSA of violating international law by its indiscriminate collection of personal information of Brazilian citizens and economic espionage targeted on the country’s strategic industries.

Rousseff’s angry speech was a direct challenge to President Barack Obama, who was waiting in the wings to deliver his own address to the UN general assembly, and represented the most serious diplomatic fallout to date from the revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.

Rousseff had already put off a planned visit to Washington in protest at US spying, after NSA documents leaked by Snowden revealed that the US electronic eavesdropping agency had monitored the Brazilian president’s phone calls, as well as Brazilian embassies and spied on the state oil corporation, Petrobras.

“Personal data of citizens was intercepted indiscriminately. Corporate information – often of high economic and even strategic value – was at the centre of espionage activity.

Also, Brazilian diplomatic missions, among them the permanent mission to the UN and the office of the president of the republic itself, had their communications intercepted,” Rousseff said, in a global rallying cry against what she portrayed as the overweening power of the US security apparatus.

MORE...

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/09/24/brazils-president-tells-the-united-nations-nsa-spying-violates-international-law/

Someone needs to tell the good President Dilma Rousseff that the USA is the "international law" or at least we think we are...

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Brazil’s President Tells The United Nations: NSA Spying Violates International Law (Original Post) Purveyor Sep 2013 OP
Does NSA Spying violates international law? ehcross Sep 2013 #1
One could surmise that every industrialized country Rex Sep 2013 #2
 

ehcross

(166 posts)
1. Does NSA Spying violates international law?
Tue Sep 24, 2013, 01:46 PM
Sep 2013

I wonder if there are any formal limitations on any country´s, or citizens or any country's ability to listen to other countries' communications. Radio operators would have vanished if such limitations did exist.

With the proper equipment, virtually anybody can listen to anything that is transmitted. I don´t know of any laws that prohibit or limit that.

I undertand most major countries are able to monitor communications of many types, wherever they come from. A country that wishes to restrict its communications from being intercepted must use encoding methods to achieve privacy. As far as I know, there is no way to "prohibit" anybody from listening to international communications at will. If that is the case, Brazil´s president Dilma Rousseff can't argue that other countries are involved in "indiscriminate collection of personal information of Brazilian citizens and economic espionage targeted on the country’s strategic industries."

If there exists legislation regulating that capacity, it would be interesting to learn about it.

 

Rex

(65,616 posts)
2. One could surmise that every industrialized country
Tue Sep 24, 2013, 01:52 PM
Sep 2013

spies on every other industrialized country. Kinda like water is wet.

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