SORM

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SORM ( Russian С истема технических средств Exemples обеспечения функций О перативно- Р озыскных М ероприятий; СОРМ ) is a monitoring program of the Russian Federal Security Service FSB intercept the telephone and Internet data in Russia and stores.

Technically, SORM is comparable to PRISM . In both cases, data packets are intercepted with a black box directly at the access provider in order to be able to analyze them remotely: “Ultimately, you don't need the operator or the court”. The legal requirement is the suspicion of a "moderate" crime or information about it.

Expansion stages

  • SORM-1 (1996): Telephone Surveillance
  • SORM-2 (1998): Internet Monitoring
  • SORM-3 (2014): Collection and storage of all types of information, use of selectors

Russian Internet service providers have been obliged to deliver data to SORM since 2000 .

In 2012, around 530,000 surveillance permits were issued by Russian courts.

Others

In the spring of 2010, the system was used to convict a hacker who played a pornographic film on an advertising board in Moscow using a Chechen server.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Stefan Kremp: Intelligence expert: Russian FSB monitors like the NSA. In: heise.de. January 22, 2014, accessed February 24, 2016 .
  2. a b wiretapping of telephone calls and interception of Internet data in Russia. Sputniknews, 2013.
  3. ^ A b Carsten Knop, Holger Schmidt : Companies and States in Cyber ​​War. In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. October 12, 2010, accessed October 12, 2010 .