#ポケモンgoの秘密 hashtag on Twitter 、 #ポケモンgoの裏話 hashtag on Twitter ← ※国内へ、効果が高い。 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ #dontplaypokemongo hashtag on Twitter https://twitter.com/hashtag/dontplaypokemongo #dontplaypokemongo - Twitter Search 検索
#pokemongoisagovernmentsurveillancetool hashtag on Twitter ← 効果が高い。 #pokemongomakingzombiestool hashtag on Twitter ← 効果が高い。 #cultbusinesssyndicatenintendo hashtag on Twitter 「So können Sie sich vor der NSA-Überwachung schützen - pc-magazin.de」 (2013/2/7) ← ※ドイツからのレポート。 Wir verraten, wie Sie sich vor der NSA oder der GCHQ schützen können. Die Abhörskandale um Prism und Tempora haben in den jüngsten Wochen viele Nutzer verunsichert. Was steckt dahinter, und wie kann man sich schützen? Z um Hintergrund: Alle großen Internet-Firmen der USA haben es dem amerikanischen Geheimdienst NSA gestattet, den kompletten Datenverkehr zu filtern: Apple, Facebook, GoogleAnzeige: Zu den besten Technikprodukten auf Amazon [powered by kontextR], Microsoft, Skype und Yahoo. Das "Prism" genannte Programm zielt in erster Linie auf Nicht-US-Bürger. Die Idee dahinter ist, dass auch solcher Datenverkehr durch die USA fließt, der die USA gar nicht betrifft. ※ 「The NSA is behind Pokemon Go. I know it all along. : facepalm - reddit.com」 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ※ 「CIA-backed, NSA-approved Pokemon GO users give away all privacy rights - sociable.co」 (2016/7/) ※ 「Pokémon Go is a Government Surveillance Tool | Humans Are Free - humansarefree.com」 (2016/7/) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ※ 「Could Pokémon Go be a worldwide surveillance operation conducted by the CIA? - dailysabah.com」 (2016/7/14) In a world where we literally hand out all of our personal information via social media, escaping the prying eyes of the "Big Brother" of a Orwellian dystopia may be hard. But maybe, turning off the AR switch and using a blank Google account could be a good idea.
※ 「The CIA, NSA - Niantic and Pokemon Go! - forum.notebookreview.com」 (2016/7/24) ← 現在、8ページまで。 Let’s start with a little history.
Keyhole, Inc. was founded by John Hanke (who previously worked in a “foreign affairs” position within the U.S. government). The company was named after the old “eye-in-the-sky” military satellites. One of the key, early backers of Keyhole was a firm called In-Q-Tel. In-Q-Tel is the venture capital firm of the CIA. Yes, the Central Intelligence Agency. Much of the funding purportedly came from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA). The NGA handles combat support for the U.S. Department of Defense and provides intelligence to the NSA and CIA, among others. Keyhole’s noteworthy public product was “Earth.” Renamed to “Google Earth” after Google acquired Keyhole in 2004. In 2010, Niantic Labs was founded (inside Google) by Keyhole’s founder, John Hanke." "Over the next few years, Niantic created two location-based apps/games. The first wasField Trip, a smartphone application where users walk around and find things. The second was Ingress, a sci-fi-themed game where players walk around and between locations in the real world. In 2015, Niantic was spun off from Google and became its own company. Then Pokémon Go was developed and launched by Niantic. It’s a game where you walk around in the real world (between locations suggested by the service) while holding your smartphone." 「The CIA’s ‘Pokémon Go’ App is Doing What the Patriot Act Can’t - corbettreport.com」 (2016/7/14) Firstly, the app requires an excessive amount of permissions on a user’s device, including the ability to read your contacts, find accounts on your device, and access your camera. The app even requires full access to a user’s Google account, which it can then use to read your emails, send emails from your account, browse your Google Drive documents and photos, etc. But apparently that’s just “a mistake” and will be “corrected soon.”
Secondly, the game’s privacy policy contains such gems as: “We may disclose any information about you (or your authorized child) that is in our possession or control to government or law enforcement officials or private parties.” What could go wrong? But wait, it gets worse! The maker of the app? Niantic Labs. Never heard of them? That’s because until last year they were an internal start-up of none other than Google, the NSA-linked Big Brother company. Even now Google remains one of Niantic’s major backers. Niantic was founded by John Hanke, who also founded Keyhole, Inc., the mapping company which was created with seed money from In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital arm, and which was eventually rolled into Google Maps. So yes, the Pokémon game currently taking the internet by storm (and scooping up all their data, including activities, movements and communications) was created by a CIA-linked businessman who gestated his company at Google. Feeling safe yet? As it turns out, the big, bad Big Brother Spies of the NSA and the DHS and the CIA don’t really need their Patriot Act powers, after all. All the powers-that-shouldn’t-be need to do is create a fun, shiny trinket for the people to play with and they will literally pay for their own surveillance. Welcome to the “Matrix Economy,” where people pay to spy on themselves…and have fun doing it! Huxley would be proud. 「nsa | | Lift the Veil - lifttheveil411.com/tag/nsa/」 (2016/7/23) A major part of keeping track of everything on Earth is having accurate GIS mapping. Pokemon Go allows our intelligence services to map everything – even the inside of your house – and learn patterns about how humans move around.
|