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svd71_12013-12-08 13:53:32
Google
svd71_1, 2013-12-08 13:53:32

Security of mail and documents from Yandex and Google

Recently I talked with one of the law enforcement officers of Ukraine. He told me that any registered third-party account can watch under a special account - you just need to specify it correctly.
This account has read-only privileges. It also allows you to view the entire history of all documents, including deleted ones.
I admit that this is the case with some Yandex, but Google or Yahoo, which is not under the jurisdiction, makes me a little doubtful. Does anyone know anything about this? share information.

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7 answer(s)
F
frees2, 2013-12-08
@frees2

The semantics of hearing formation fits into the theory of mythology.
If the militiamen had such an invention, we would have known long ago.

Q
Quber, 2013-12-08
@Quber

I doubt there is such a thing in the police. I used to work there myself. In the FSB, there may still be ... in the police - no.

M
Matvey Pravosudov, 2013-12-08
@oxyberg

PRISM is everywhere.

L
lubezniy, 2013-12-08
@lubezniy

Security consists in the complete distrust of confidential information to outsiders - including free or paid communication services. Mail.ru, for example, on the basis of correspondence between its addresses, offers a "list of acquaintances" for its My World service: at one time they wrote under a specific address - they say, you exchanged letters with this person. Search engines that offer a bunch of mail services have a very specific interest (I don’t know the facts) to isolate individual words from unencrypted correspondence between real (not spam - more precisely, what the user did not complain about) subscribers in order to offer the user targeted advertising . What security are we talking about here? Then encrypt the correspondence yourself on your computer with an asymmetric crypto-resistant algorithm, and then send it.

P
Puma Thailand, 2013-12-08
@opium

just healed you, it's very easy to ask him to show what he sees in your documents.

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Michael Danilov, 2013-12-08
@MonkAlbino

Yandex, like Google, obeys the laws of their country, and sometimes even the laws of another country, in order to work in it without quarreling with local authorities. In my opinion, both companies have representative offices in Ukraine, so that both can, at the legally justified request of the authorities (for example, a court decision), provide some information about their users, and correspondence, and contacts, and the last IP from which the user wanted. The same is true in Russia and the United States, and in some countries, for insubordination, you can get a nationwide ban on the entire service, or even a pool of services.
In addition, there are all sorts of intermediate wiretapping of traffic, SORMs, PRISMs and a bunch of everything unknown to the general public.

Y
Yuri Lobanov, 2013-12-08
@iiil

I'm sure of one thing: people who have something to hide do not ask such stupid questions, and those people who ask such questions have nothing to hide.

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