Vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance (R-OH) told Joe Rogan over the weekend that backdoor access to U.S. telecoms likely allowed the Chinese to hack American broadband networks, compromising the data and privacy of millions of Americans and businesses. “The way that they hacked into our phones is they used the backdoor telecom infrastructure that had been developed in the wake of the Patriot Act,” Sen. Vance told Rogan on his podcast last weekend. That law gave U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies access to the data and operations of telecoms that manage the backbone of the internet. Chris Jaikaran, a specialist in cybersecurity policy, added in a recently released Congressional Research Service report about a cyberattack from a group known as Salt Typhoon: “Public reporting suggests that the hackers may have targeted the systems used to provide court-approved access to communication systems used for investigations by law enforcement and intelligence agencies. PRC actors may have sought access to these systems and companies to gain access to presidential candidate communications. With that access, they could potentially retrieve unencrypted communication (e.g., voice calls and text messages).” Thus, the Chinese were able to use algorithms developed for U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies to see to any U.S. national security order and presumably any government extraction of the intercepted communications of Americans and foreign targets under FISA Section 702. China doesn’t need a double agent in the style of Kim Philby. Our own Patriot Act mandates that we make it easier for hostile regimes to find the keys to all of our digital kingdoms – including the private conversations of Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump. As alarming as that is, it is hard to fully appreciate the dangers of such a penetration. The Chinese have chosen not to use their presence deep in U.S. systems to “go kinetic” by sabotaging our electrical grid and other primary systems. The possible consequences of such deep hacking are highlighted in a joint U.S.-Israel advisory that details the actions against Israel that were enabled when an Iranian group, ASA, wormed its way into foreign hosting providers. ASA hackers allowed the manipulation of a dynamic, digital display in Paris for the 2024 Summer Olympics to denounce Israel and the participation of Israeli athletes on the eve of the Games. ASA infiltrated surveillance cameras in Israel and Gaza, searching for weak spots in Israeli defenses. Worst of all, the hack enabled Hamas to contact the families of Israeli hostages in order to “cause additional psychological effects and inflict further trauma.” The lesson is that when our own government orders companies to develop backdoors into Americans’ communications, those doors can be swung open by malevolent state actors as well. Sen. Vance’s comments indicate that there is a growing awareness of the dangers of government surveillance – an insight that we hope increases Congressional support for surveillance reform when FISA Section 702 comes up for renewal in 2026. Comments are closed.
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