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Space United States Government

Report: Massive US Spy Satellite May 'Hoover Up' Cellphone Calls (dw.com) 85

Launching today is America's classified NROL-44 spy satellite, which German public broadcaster DW calls "a massive, open secret": NROL-44 is a huge signals intelligence, or SIGINT, satellite, says David Baker, a former NASA scientist who worked on Apollo and Shuttle missions, has written numerous books, including U.S. Spy Satellites and is editor of SpaceFlight magazine. "SIGINT satellites are the core of national government, military security satellites. They are massive things for which no private company has any purpose," says Baker... "It weighs more than five tons. It has a huge parabolic antenna which unfolds to a diameter of more than 100 meters in space, and it will go into an equatorial plane of Earth at a distance of about 36,000 kilometers (22,000 miles)," says Baker...

Spy satellites "hoover up" of hundreds of thousands of cell phone calls or scour the dark web for terrorist activity. "The move from wired communication to digital and wireless is a godsend to governments because you can't cut into wires from a satellite, but you can literally pick up cell phone towers which are radiating this stuff into the atmosphere. It takes a massive antenna, but you're able to sit over one spot and listen to all the communications traffic," says Baker...

Some people worry about congestion in space, or satellites bumping into each other, and the threat of a collision causing space debris that could damage other satellites or knock out communications networks. But that may have benefits, too — little bits of spy satellite can hide in all that mess and connect wirelessly to create a "virtual satellite," says Baker. "There are sleeper satellites which look like debris. You launch all the parts separately and disperse them into various orbits. So, you would have sensors on one bit, an amplifier on another bit, a processor on another, and they'll be orbiting relatively immersed in space debris."

"Space debris is very good for the space defense industry," says Baker, "because the more there is, the more you can hide in it."

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Report: Massive US Spy Satellite May 'Hoover Up' Cellphone Calls

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  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • With these, the US can snoop on the chinese 3G/4G/5G network in mainland china, and China can use their own version to spy on the cell phone calls in the lower 48.

      All without any Huawei products in any US cell tower!
    • by leptons ( 891340 )
      >Didn't Snowden inform us that the NSA routinely collects cell calls from the carriers' own data centers?

      That only covers calls inside the US. A satellite could catch cell tower traffic from anywhere.
      • Spy satellites "hoover up" of hundreds of thousands of cell phone calls or scour the dark web for terrorist activity.

        Where "terrorist" is "anyone who thinks differently to how employees of the NSA, NRO, and CIA think". You're most probably a terrorist. And so is your mother.

    • It also sounds really technically difficult, imagine the bandwidth you'd need on a satellite system to listen to all those very faint signals on radio. Much more difficult than merely plugging into a carrier data center. The datacenter will doa level of decryption [encyclopedia.com] for you free, too.

      Also "scouring the darknet" from space is just nonsense. To begin with, most of that traffic isn't even available on radio waves....
      • by ghoul ( 157158 )

        The satellites dont work very well but they are a good PR weapon to scare bad actors into using wired communications which of course are much easier to tap with telco cooperation

        • The satellites dont work very well

          They don't work at all. How are they going to "hoover up data from the dark web?"

          Seriously, think of how much a datacenter weighs. Five tons is nothing. How are they going to dissipate the heat from that thing?

          Also, imagine the technical difficulty of doing an FFT to read 100million overlapping signals, all of them below the noise floor.

      • There's a shady satillite bouncing global network that is the play thing of intelligence agencies. I'd also be shocked if there aren't any SDR onboard mesh networks. Darknet is an umbrella that easily absorbs anything web and network not accessible easily online.
      • It's nonsense.

        There are a finite number of frequencies for cellphone use, and the transmitters and towers are all relatively low-power, tailored to serve a limited geographic area, to allow re-use of the allocated frequencies outside the limited geographic area. And, BTW, NONE of the antennas involved radiate signals up, instead very carefully laterally to towers and phones on the ground.

        In other words, at any one point in time there may be THOUSANDS of simultaneous users on the exact same frequency across

    • Yes. I'm very doubtful that satellites over 100 miles away can pick up cell towers signals, when I can't get one only ten miles from a tower. They don't beam up. The ones I've seen point out towards the distant terrain, in a circular pattern
      • by NagrothAgain ( 4130865 ) on Saturday August 29, 2020 @01:14PM (#60453118)
        For starters, your phone has a shitty little antenna. And it's designed for 2 way communication so even if it picks up enough signal to sniff traffic it'll still report "no signal" if it can't handshake with the tower. Boosting the broadcast power of the handset will actually allow it to "get signal" from a greater distance. And a lot of the issues with cellphones are because you don't have direct line of sight between the tower and the phone.

        Actual sniffing hardware can pick up enough of the tower to handset broadcast to eavesdrop on half of the conversation, especially when it has direct line of sight.

        • There are other factors that tell me that the idea of listening to cellular traffic from space is bogus. Cellular transmission is digital with power constraints and frequency selection to avoid interferring with neighbouring cells.

          If old fashioned AM transmission was used such as a radio station then a satellite would be able to pick up the signal because the signal would be high power and continuous.

          Modern cellular communications use non-continuous transmission with frequency hopping, encryption, dynamic p

    • Didn't Snowden inform us that the NSA routinely collects cell calls from the carriers' own data centers?

      -jcr

      Yes but I rather doubt that sort of cooperation can be had from telecom companies in Iran, Russia, China etc.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Personnel in telcos in such countries aren't high earners. Spies can be surprisingly cheap to hire.

          -jcr

          Yes but you need more than a single underpaid telephone switch administrator to record, voice analyse, automatically transcribe into metadata and archive every single mobile phone call in Iran, Russia, China etc. You need a massive infrastructure for that and if you can't plug physical cables into their network backbone a satellite like this is the only other way. Expect Huawei/Ericsson/Nokia and phone manufacturers to roll out a mobile voice encryption standard as a response to satellites like this.

    • By placing the listening devices in space, they can catch a whole hemispere at once and they are not limited by the regulations that exist down below on the planet surface.
  • If it was tiny or not a satellite at all, I'd be so much less worried.

  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Saturday August 29, 2020 @12:46PM (#60453016)

    Under 'Hoover up' I understood an old fat man wearing a tutu.

    • I just figured it was how they were going to get the data into the tubes, which are apparently pneumatic.

      • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

        I just figured it was how they were going to get the data into the tubes, which are apparently pneumatic.

        That's why the satellite transforms into megamaid.

      • In space, everything is vacuum, so the tube is redundant...
        • by Osgeld ( 1900440 )

          but then how do the turtles breathe

          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            by nospam007 ( 722110 ) *

            "but then how do the turtles breathe"

            What do you mean by 'turtles'?

            There's only the Great A'Tuin.

            PS.
            'The Light Fantastic', in which the Great A'Tuin attended the hatching of eight baby turtles, each with four baby elephants and a tiny discworld of their own, doesn't count.

  • Utter bullshit (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Saturday August 29, 2020 @12:55PM (#60453058)
    This is utter nonsense and bullshit. You simply can't spy on cell phone signals from the geosynchronous orbit. First, the 4G cell phone protocols are all encrypted, you need collaboration of the cellular network provider to be able to spy on them. Second, your satellite will see several tens of millions of phones all operating at the same frequency at mere 2W power. There's zero chance you can extract one conversation out of this noise.
    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      This is utter nonsense and bullshit. You simply can't spy on cell phone signals from the geosynchronous orbit. First, the 4G cell phone protocols are all encrypted, you need collaboration of the cellular network provider to be able to spy on them.

      Collaboration between major cellular carriers and government spy agencies is absolutely happening.

      I didn't think anyone was still naive enough to believe otherwise.

      • Which makes the satellite being used to do this ridiculous as well. This is going to be for either imaging or military communication. The only way I can see this being used for Signal Intelligence is intercepting other ground to satellite communication.
    • But they also "scour the dark web for terrorist activity." LMAO. Yes, the article is nonsense. How would putting a sensor on one satellite and linking it to an amplifier wirelessly even work? And then send that amplified signal to a third satellite for processing? They must have secret technology or something ... or the article is sci-fi.
    • by ktung ( 963626 )
      yep 100%. This was either written by someone who knows absolutely shit about technology or are just trying to misinform the public.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by xleeko ( 551231 )

      Quite right, it is simply ludicrous to expect them to pick up anything useful with a mere 100m antenna over 24000 miles away! Why, we can barely pick up a 1watt transmission with a 70m antenna at 11 billion miles distance! https://www.nytimes.com/2020/0... [nytimes.com]

      • by Cyberax ( 705495 )
        The problem is not the signal strength, it's actually not hard to detect a 2W signal bounced off the freaking Moon. It's that you have tens of millions of the signal sources all operating on one frequency band.
        • Dark web is on the same internet backhaul fiber along with everything else web, I have no idea what the the author is talking about. The carriers give anything to the three letter agencies they ask for saying good luck if we could see through the encryption we would do the same thing your doing.

          Cellular band specifically chosen because they fall off to noise floor in 5 miles of humid atmosphere, 10-20 in the middle of parched nowhere. The newer bands are even more short ranged. One side of the
          • by chr1973 ( 711475 )

            I did a rough/quick calculation and got that a 100 m antenna at say 2 GHz has a half-power beamwidth of about 0.09 degrees. From geostationary orbit the corresponding footprint would have a radius of about 56 km. So it's doesn't seem that useful to me for those frequencies, you'd pick up to many cell phone base stations at once.

            Maybe the purpose instead is to locate ground terminals, i.e. there's a spy with a satellite phone somewhere and you want to detect his location. For instance, if the satphone uses

            • by Cyberax ( 705495 )
              I would actually bet on something like spying on remote-controlled drones or enemy aircraft.
              • by chr1973 ( 711475 )

                Whatever it is, it'd have to be reasonably stationary. A 100-meter antenna will have a significant moment of inertia while having to be made quite flexible (to keep the mass down). I expect this makes for quite a control problem to change orientation "quickly", where quickly for me and a normal GEO satellite is maybe 0.1 deg/s or something. With an antenna this size, I have no idea.

                Hmm, maybe it'd be a good idea to spin the antenna around its boresight and let the centripetal forces help with keeping the sh

          • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

            Maybe it doesn't eavesdrop on the cell towers directly below it, but on those that are far away, eg. tangent of the earth from the viewpoint of the satellite, as I presume these waves go straight while the earth has curvature.

        • What if you have a high gain, super selective antenna... And do something novel like point it at a cell tower near your target? Or maybe a limited geographical area? The value of the average voice conversation or text thread is probably much less than zero, when you factor in needing to decrypt it. So, limit your search to areas that are likely to be of interest. Embassies? Areas with known terrorist activity? Industrial centers? The possibilities are endless.

    • > Second, your satellite will see several tens of millions of phones all operating at the same frequency at mere 2W power. There's zero chance you can extract one conversation out of this noise.

      Agreed. Imagine you have a microphone sensitive enough to hear a voice 200 miles away. You point it at a city, you're going pick up 200,000 overlapping voices. Trying to pick out one conversation would be just about impossible.

      > the 4G cell phone protocols are all encrypted

      Well, about that encryption

      • by Cyberax ( 705495 )
        As far as I know, all the LTE attacks require active man-in-the-middle to spoof a phone tower. There are no purely passive attacks on the encryption. And since the problems are in the protocol itself (lack of data integrity protection), changing encryption won't help with anything.
    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      I 100% agree it's bullshit, governments don't spy from outside, they spy from inside, it's much more efficient. From inside, tapped into every landline and mobile phone company they can neatly copy all data out to their massive data warehouses with the decryption done for them already.

      The summary is pure fantasy, sure it may be a sigint satellite but what it actual does IDK. You don't stick a hugely expensive satellite in the sky to do what you are already doing from the ground.

    • My gut reaction is that this is partially true.

      The parts about the dark web are nonsense. Getting information there is about breaking encryption or hacking into systems on the inside. The simplest approach is to get the same people to sign up for accounts elsewhere and use the same user ID and passwords at the dark sites; that would probably get you 80% of the accounts.

      The parts about clusters hiding in debris is science fiction, just like the asteroids in Empire Strikes Back. Space is huge, even in orbi

    • It's a huge, expensive satellite. It wouldn't have been launched if it wasn't collecting *something.* What is collects might not be the same as the apparent accounts of what it collects though. Giant antenna means weak signals radio, but it doesn't have to mean cell traffic. It could be for monitoring military radio - even if potentially hostile forces encrypt everything, just being able to get an approximate location could be valuable information. Or it could be part of the country's own communications - a

    • You've never even heard of a National Security Letter.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The really fun thing about it is, they're going to catch all the crap people post on Facebook. Should have just looked there from the start...
    • by Hank21 ( 6290732 )
      Ever see what a positronic brain can do? https://youtu.be/e29k-F5jBpk?t... [youtu.be] Don't you know they have Data inside the satellite?
    • I know nothing about the area but I have some questions...

      Q1. Presumably the signals from cell towers are much stronger than those from phones? Could it be listening to that?

      Q2. Presumably the time or frequency multiplexing algorithms of the protocols are well known, so the satellite could figure out which device the cell tower is speaking to?

      Q3. Even without knowing the content of the call, how much Metadata could a satellite pick up from listening to a cell tower? Can it get device fingerprints? Deduce an

  • Huawei (Score:5, Funny)

    by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Saturday August 29, 2020 @12:55PM (#60453064)

    This is why we need to get rid of Huawei. If everyone was using Cisco routers we could simply use the built in backdoors instead of having to spend billions on sending up spy satellites. If the germans and French want us to stop spying on their Presidents they should simply join 5 eyes instead of building 5G networks with Huawei eqipment

  • what is this, slashdot news for ignorant old fucks? Does anyone even actually use the phrase "hoover up" anymore and did they ever in the USA? OMG I have to leave... now my "electronic brain" needs to rest on the dynamo.

    • Pretty much the entirety of the non-American anglophone world uses âoeHooverâ as a proprietary eponym like Americans use âoeKleenexâ to mean âoetissue paperâ or that rest of the world uses âoeAmericanâ to mean âoefat bastard.â

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      From now on, "Roomba up".

    • by Megane ( 129182 )
      It's a Brit-ism from where they use Hoover as the generic name for a vacuum cleaner. I think the first time I remember hearing it used was when MTV ran The Young Ones.
  • Whatever the merits of this article, I like the idea of hiding a satellite among the space trash. It reminds me of the Millennium Falcon's getaway.

  • Suck to Blow Joke Here.
  • 1) You do not need to a satellite to `scour the dark web for terrorist activity`. How would a satellite help and how is that in any way efficient.

    2) You would need an enormous amount of bandwidth to gather cell phone traffic and then send all that traffic back to earth for processing. Unless the satellite can target specific users or do some data analysis directly no way is this device up there for gathering arbitrary voice audio.

  • > "Space debris is very good for the space defense industry," says Baker, "because the more there is, the more you can hide in it."

    1) this seems to be falling for the asteroid belt fallacy. Space debris is in all kinds of orbits, not clumped together like a pile of rubbish at the side of a road. "Hiding in space debris" is stupid. "Hiding /as/ space debris" might work for a while, but one characteristic of space debris is that it doesn't give off radio signals. Little bits of satellite connected by w

    • Came here to say your number-2 item. TFA's conjecture is the dumbest, ever:

      You launch all the parts separately and disperse them into various orbits. So, you would have sensors on one bit, an amplifier on another bit, a processor on another, and they'll be orbiting relatively immersed in space debris.

      And every damn one of them would need ground-comms, inter-debris-comms, power, and guidance. Each one is a weak link to reliability and security. Not gonna happen.

    • Not that I think the concept makes much sense, but ...

      > Little bits of satellite connected by wifi, on the other hand...

      When local Channel One station broadcasts on 470 MHz at 5,000 watts and the picosatellite up in space transmits on 470 MHz at 1 watt ...

      Done well, it would be like trying to find two people whispering on the other side of the stadium at a rock concert. And you don't even know if anyone is whispering, much less where in the stadium they might be.

  • I believe that SIGINT is not in NRO's scope of work.
  • Report: Massive US Spy Satellite May 'Hoover Up' Cellphone Calls

    Well, that sucks.

  • They go up to around 7 tons these days, and hang out in GEO too.

    The 100-meter dish is very impressive though. Depending on what it's pointed at, it could pick up some very faint signals indeed. I am curious what/who they plan to listen to.

    The "distributed spy satellite disguised as debris" is pure science fiction. There's very little reason to make such a thing, and it would be logistically difficult. The members would drift apart and become useless unless they have active propulsion (or high power comms) t

  • Over our government's number one mortal enemy. That would put it somewhere over Kansas' longitude.

  • Why should someone use a billions worth of technology to watch deepweb? You don't need a satellite for that. You need exit nodes, not satellites. That is analogous to employing a surgeon to dig ditches. You can do it, but it is stupidly wasteful. Space debris is good for hiding? Space debris is moving in various directions with friggin orbital speeds, if it hits your satellite, it punches hole in it. Anything big enough to be able to hide behind is tracked so satellites can avoid it. It is not like in carto
  • I can't see any reason for this unless they want to spy on communications that don't go through cell towers. Satellite phones come to mind. That's the kind of thing you need to use because you don't happen to have a cell tower that the NSA would be able to access.
  • A cell network snooping satellite does exactly nothing for spying on the dark net. It does not even see the relevant signals. The whole "justification" is a lie, as usual. The real purpose is to spy in ordinary citizens, which is an illegal act for good reasons. Authoritarians cannot stand that people use their freedoms and, gasp!, may exchange unauthorized ideas! I am surprised they did not claim this could recognize child abuse in the act or track drug dealers (which it probably can, but nothing will be d

All seems condemned in the long run to approximate a state akin to Gaussian noise. -- James Martin

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