The Guardian Australia

UK spy agencies may be circumvent­ing datasharin­g law, tribunal told

- Owen Bowcott Legal affairs correspond­ent

MI5 and MI6 may be circumvent­ing legal safeguards when they share bulk datasets with foreign intelligen­ce services and commercial partners, a court has been told.

Most of the bulk personal datasets relate to UK citizens who are not of “legitimate intelligen­ce interest”, the investigat­ory powers tribunal (IPT) heard.

The system of independen­t commission­ers, usually retired judges, who were supposed to maintain independen­t oversight over these procedures had been inadequate and was a “blatant failure”, Ben Jaffey QC, for Privacy Internatio­nal, told the IPT.

While GCHQ has said it insists its partners adopt equivalent standards and safeguards when processing bulk data, Jaffey said, neither MI5 nor MI6 have a similar approach. “The effect will be the circumvent­ion of the UK legal regimes,” he added. “Protection­s will be avoided.”

The challenge brought by Privacy Internatio­nal alleges that data-sharing regimes and the legal oversight system are illegal. The case has been running for three years but continues to unearth fresh details about the way in which the intelligen­ce services handle data.

Bulk personal datasets contain highly sensitive personal informatio­n such as social media sites or online dating sites, the tribunal heard. “Such datasets are very intrusive,” Jaffey said. “They contain informatio­n that goes right to the core of an individual’s private life.”

The IPT, which is sitting at Southwark crown court this week, hears claims about the legality of surveillan­ce and complaints against the intelligen­ce services.

One important industry partner of GCHQ, the tribunal has been told, is the University of Bristol. Documents revealed by Edward Snowden, the US whistleblo­wer, indicate that researcher­s are given access to GCHQ’s entire raw unselected datasets, including internet usage, telephone call logs, websites visited, online file transfers and others.

Researcher­s are also given access to GCHQ’s targeting database, supposedly delivered at least once a day, the tribunal has been told. That, it was said, is an exceptiona­lly sensitive dataset.

Another partner with which GCHQ shares its data is HMRC. The tax collection agency has access to a datastream called Milkwhite Enrichment Service, submission­s reveal.

Jaffey said analysts at GCHQ were supposed to record their reasons for searching bulk datasets, yet those statements were not seen by the oversight commission­ers.

Bulk communicat­ions data and bulk personal datasets are shared in two ways – either by sending out informatio­n on disks or by allowing outside organisati­ons to access the agency’s databases remotely.

Once that informatio­n has been handed over, Jaffey and Thomas de la Mare QC argued in their written submission­s, control over it is lost: “It could be deployed in support of an unlawful detention or torture programme, in the violent interrogat­ion of a suspect, or used to identify a target for a lethal operation. It may be (overtly or covertly) passed on to another country, even though the UK would be unwilling to share directly with that state. There is no evidence that the control principle is operated or respected by the partners with whom data is shared.”

There are no published arrangemen­ts governing the safeguards to be applied when considerin­g sharing of data with foreign intelligen­ce services or other UK law enforcemen­t agencies, the IPT has been told.

One of the documents disclosed to the hearing was a letter from the new Investigat­ory Powers Commission­er’s Office which is critical of a former intelligen­ce services commission­er, Sir Mark Waller.

It said: “Sir Mark Waller (ISCom) remained wholly resistant to acquiring any inspector resources (or indeed technical/legal resources) to assist him in his duties despite being advised by the then head of [the Intercepti­on of Communicat­ions Commission­er’s Office], Jo Cavan, and the interim head that succeeded her of the benefits of such resourcing.”

Outside the court, Millie Graham Wood, a solicitor at Privacy Internatio­nal, said: “The intelligen­ce agencies’ practices in relation to bulk data were previously found to be unlawful.

“After three years of litigation, just before the court hearing we learn not only are safeguards for sharing our sensitive data nonexisten­t, but the government has databases with our social media informatio­n and is potentiall­y sharing access to this informatio­n with foreign government­s.

“The risks associated with these activities are painfully obvious. We are pleased the Investigat­ory Powers Commission­er’s Office is keen to look at these activities as a matter of urgency and the report is publicly available in the near future.”

James Eadie QC, who represents the Foreign Office, Home Office and intelligen­ce agencies, denied in written submission­s that any data-sharing was illegal.

“It is neither confirmed nor denied whether the [agencies] share or have agreed to share bulk personal data and bulk communicat­ions data with foreign partners and [other agencies] or (in the case of [MI6] and

MI5) with industry partners,” Eadie maintained. “However, were they to do so such sharing would be lawful.”

The UK faces serious security and terrorist threats, he added. Use of bulk data is becoming more important. Analysis of bulk data communicat­ions, patterns of communicat­ion and potential subjects of interest, Eadie explained, “enables identifica­tion of specific individual­s without first having to carry out more intrusive investigat­ions into a wide range of individual­s”.

The hearing continues.

 ??  ?? Researcher­s are given access to GCHQ’s entire raw unselected datasets, documents revealed by Edward Snowden, the US whistleblo­wer, indicate. Photograph: EPA
Researcher­s are given access to GCHQ’s entire raw unselected datasets, documents revealed by Edward Snowden, the US whistleblo­wer, indicate. Photograph: EPA

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