Revealed: Israel demanded Google and Amazon use secret wink' to sidestep legal orders
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Revealed: Israel demanded Google and Amazon use secret wink' to sidestep legal orders
"When Google and Amazon negotiated a major $1.2bn cloud-computing deal in 2021, their customer the Israeli government had an unusual demand: agree to use a secret code as part of an arrangement that would become known as the winking mechanism. The demand, which would require Google and Amazon to effectively sidestep legal obligations in countries around the world, was born out of Israel's concerns that data it moves into the global corporations' cloud platforms could end up in the hands of foreign law enforcement authorities."
"Like other big tech companies, Google and Amazon's cloud businesses routinely comply with requests from police, prosecutors and security services to hand over customer data to assist investigations. This process is often cloaked in secrecy. The companies are frequently gagged from alerting the affected customer their information has been turned over. This is either because the law enforcement agency has the power to demand this or a court has ordered them to stay silent. For Israel, losing control of its data to authorities overseas was a significant concern."
"So to deal with the threat, officials created a secret warning system: the companies must send signals hidden in payments to the Israeli government, tipping it off when it has disclosed Israeli data to foreign courts or investigators. To clinch the lucrative contract, Google and Amazon agreed to the so-called winking mechanism, according to leaked documents seen by the Guardian, as part of a joint investigation with Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and Hebrew-language outlet Local Call. Based on the documents and descriptions"
Israel required Google and Amazon to adopt a secret code, the winking mechanism, in a $1.2bn 2021 cloud contract. The mechanism compelled the companies to send hidden payment signals to warn Israel if Israeli data was disclosed to foreign courts or investigators. The requirement arose from fears that data placed on global cloud platforms could be accessed by overseas law enforcement. Big tech cloud businesses routinely comply with police, prosecutors and security services, often under gag orders or secrecy. Documents and contract descriptions show the companies accepted stringent, unorthodox controls within Project Nimbus. Both companies denied evading legal obligations.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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