[liberationtech] New report on Internet Censorship and Surveillance in Turkmenistan
Rafal Rohozinski
r.rohozinski at psiphon.ca
Sat Jan 5 14:12:27 PST 2013
Morgan,
Thanks for your note. I use the term "interview" euphemistically. Obviously
we used a much more sophisticated set of methods including in depth
debriefs with former employees, contractors, suppliers as well as other
forms of clandestine collection. The point is that we were able to get a
very detailed picture of how surveillance is carried out within the
Ministry of communications, by whom, and with what means. This includes
people that had access to the special rooms that are designated for
surveillance in telephone switches throughout the former Soviet Union. All
the people we talked to, directly, or indirectly, that had detailed
technical knowledge of how surveillance is conducted in an operational
manner were unable to confirm, or even suggest that these two systems were
being used operationally. In the case of SORM-II, it also has a very
distinct signature which is visible if you are sitting in line with the
system.
By contrast, we were able to confirm these details in other CIS countries.
In some cases it was quite easy because security officials are quite open
about their use of surveillance technology for counterterrorism, criminal
investigations et cetera. There are also laws on the books that govern how
these technologies are used, and by whom, and therefore its possible to
have a relatively open discussion if you know who to talk to, and how. I
would say , however, that our interviewees have exceptionally privileged
access, and therefore are able to have these discussions with the right
people.
Is it possible that these techniques are insufficient to detect traces of
close hold activities? Undoubtably, yes. However, when you do enough
asking, through enough different means, you usually come up with at least a
shadow, or a trace. In this case, everything came up as negative.
I'd be interested in further material that could help us detect FINFISHER
at a technical level. We do operate a testing platform and certainly
calibrating it to detect or scan for these signatures would be very helpful
given that we are present in a large number of countries. Our intention
with the testing platform is to contribute to the creation of censorship
and surveillance Open Data, so having it routinely scan for known
signatures of surveillance products would certainly be a great addition to
the overall effort.
Cheers,
Rafal
Sent by PsiPhone mobile. Please excuse typos or other oddities.
On 2013-01-05, at 3:38 PM, Morgan Marquis-Boire <
morgan.marquisboire at gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Rafal,
It is interesting that in your efforts talking to officials you were unable
to elicit admissions of operational use of surveillance software. I'm not
able to comment on the human elements of your interviews but the technical
elements of the work used to enumerate the use of FinFisher in Turkmenistan
are reproducible.
FinFisher malware samples were reverse engineered which lead to enumeration
of the command and control protocol. Knowledge of this protocol was then
used to scan for FinSpy master servers. The hashes to the FinFisher samples
were published as were the IPs of the servers. We (Bill Marczak and myself)
were not the only ones doing work in this area. Boston based security
company Rapid7 also used similar techniques and we found that a technical
replication of their work was reasonably straightforward.
If your team has had any problems replicating these results, I'd be to
happy to direct them toward relevant materials.
-Morgan
On Fri, Jan 4, 2013 at 8:41 AM, Rafal Rohozinski <r.rohozinski at psiphon.ca>wrote:
> Hi Eva,
>
> Thanks for your note and good question.
>
> The simple answer is that we could find no compelling evidence beyond
> that reported by Privacy International, Citizen Lab and the German news
> report that FINFISHER was being operationally employed in Turkmenistan.
> That's not for lack of looking. The report was built upon interviews with
> people that have first-hand experience at the Ministry of Communication and
> Ministry of National Security, and civil society activists involved in
> political and new media activity. While it appears that a pilot project
> may have been implemented sometime around 2010/11, we could find no
> evidence (from sources inside the ministry) that it was actually
> operationally employed, nor were we able to track down any
> samples/technical evidence from the activist/ opposition community.
>
> We had a similar situation with SORM. Our sources indicated that SORM
> equipment was installed on Turkmen core networks sometime in 2009. Quite
> likely, this equipment came by way of a assistance program run by the
> Russian Ministry of Interior aimed at creating a CIS wide monitoring
> system for cybercrime/cyber terrorism (Operation Proxy). However, we found
> no evidence that the equipment was actually being used.
>
> There may be reasons for this - which are borne out through some of our
> interview work in Turkmenistan and elsewhere in Central Asia.
>
> First, the level of technical knowledge in government agencies and the
> telecommunication ministry in Turkmenistan is quite low. In general, the
> Ministry of Communication has been very dependent on outside consultants
> and companies to install equipment (Including HuaWei and NOKIA). Once it's
> installed, maintaining equipment is a challenge. As a result, generally
> only be most basic default settings and capabilities are used. For
> example, Turkmen telecom uses equipment from Huawei and CISCO that is
> capable of advanced DPI. However, these capabilities are barely used to
> manage bandwidth and traffic. They have not been used to develop keyword
> lists for blocking. Blocking is still done by way of IP address and domain
> name. (The same is true on mobile networks, where a Checkpoint firewall are
> used to filter traffic by domain and IP).
>
> Second, the Turkmen security regime is pervasive, and as a result has
> many more direct and simple ways of targeting " antisocial elements".
> Online surveillance tends to be over-kill when they can easily accomplish
> things through direct surveillance, informants and other forms of physical
> controls. We've also noted that in other Central Asia countries the
> security forces tend to co-opt criminal hackers in order to target specific
> individuals via electronic means. That means that the technical work is
> done by someone who actually knows what they're doing, and the results are
> more understandable and immediate to the security forces, i.e., they can
> ask questions and target the hacker to get at stuff they want to see.
> It's also important not to forget that security/ intelligence forces are by
> nature suspicious of anything outside of their control, including and
> especially "foreign built" systems and software.
>
> Third, security forces in Turkmenistan are much more concerned about
> opposition from radical groups, and criminal elements that they are with
> civil society opposition movements. That's because civil society in
> Turkmenistan is extremely weak, and controllable through arrest,
> detention, harassment. Criminal and radical groups are a lot more
> resilient, because they are by design covert organizations and generally
> because of their incentive system, which can be ideological, or financial,
> don't have the same fear of the regime, and, in the case of some criminal
> structures can be embedded in state structures. As a result, my own
> observation is that advanced surveillance means, (including SORM) are
> treated as a "scarce resource" and are focused on high-value targets that
> include criminal elements and radical groups. A third group I'd add here
> are members of the regime itself, which tend to be more of a threat to the
> higher leadership than civil society groups.
>
> Lastly, as we point out in the report, the Turkmen authorities have an
> ambivalent relationship to ICTs. On the one hand, they recognize them as a
> important element of national development, and also revenue generation for
> the state ( and in particular, members of the elite). On the other hand,
> they've seen how these technologies can be leveraged by opposition groups
> and so are inclined towards imposing controls. However, because
> Turkmenistan remains such a highly controlled society overall, the fear of
> civil society being mobilized through cyberspace is probably much less
> than it would be elsewhere and as a result, thus far, the necessity for
> surveillance has probably been less than in other Central Asian countries
> where the opposition movement has had space to organize.
>
> I think the last point to mention is that we've tried to keep this report
> factual and based on verifiable information. This means we had to make
> some editorial choices. I'd be happy to amend the report with a fuller
> section on FINFISHER and would welcome any additional factual information
> that can be provided by members of this group, or elsewhere.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Rafal
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Jan 3, 2013, at 7:11 PM, Eva Galperin <eva at eff.org> wrote:
>
> > Thank you for sharing your report, Rafal. I read it with great interest.
> >
> > I see that you devoted about a third of this report to Internet
> > surveillance in Turkmenistan, but you don't mention Gamma or Finfisher
> > even once. The discovery that Gamma International's products were being
> > used to spy on citizens in over a dozen countries, including
> > Turkmenistan, was a pretty major story last year. Was there a reason why
> > you decided to leave it out of the report?
> >
> >
> > ************************************************
> > Eva Galperin
> > International Freedom of Expression Coordinator
> > Electronic Frontier Foundation
> > eva at eff.org
> > (415) 436-9333 ex. 111
> > ************************************************
> >
> > On 1/2/13 9:01 AM, Rafal Rohozinski wrote:
> >> The SecDev Group has released a study of Internet censorship and
> surveillance in Turkmenistan. The report was commissioned and financially
> supported by the Open Society Foundations. It is posted on the ONI Website
> , and can also be downloaded from here
> >>
> >> Neither Here Nor There: Turkmenistan’s Digital Doldrums
> >>
> >>
> >> Abstract
> >>
> >> Turkmenistan is slowly emerging from decades of darkness. President
> Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedov has vowed to modernize the country by
> encouraging the uptake of new technology for economic development and more
> efficient governance. Hundreds of thousands of Turkmen citizens are now
> online. However, the country faces serious challenges as it prepares to go
> digital. Infrastructure is primitive, and public access is enforced by a
> state monopoly. Slow speeds, exorbitant pricing, and technological
> illiteracy all constitute major hurdles. A new study from the SecDev Group
> highlights the ambivalent policies and practices that have left
> Turkmenistan mired in the digital doldrums, torn between its desire to join
> the worldwide web and its compulsion to control cyberspace.
> >>
> >>
> >>
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