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Digital privacy campaign urges users to 'Dump Yahoo'

The tech advocacy group Fight for the Future is calling on Yahoo users to delete accounts after reports alleged the company let US officials scan millions of emails.

Digital demonstrators says Yahoo violated user trust by making it possible for US intelligence agencies to scan user emails.

Robert Galbraith/Reuters

October 13, 2016

AfterÌýYahoo allegedlyÌýlet government investigators scan millions ofÌýemails, privacy advocates areÌýurging users to delete their accounts.Ìý

The digital rights group Fight for the Future launched itsÌýÌýWednesday, saying access the company provided US government officials was an unprecedented levels of surveillance and an unacceptable violation of privacy.Ìý

"We want to send a very clear message – Yahoo users trusted the company with their most sensitive information, and they were betrayed. And it is not OK,"ÌýsaidÌýLizzy Jean of , known forÌýspearheading internet protests againstÌýNational Security Agency surveillance and in support of net neutrality.Ìý

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Reuters that Yahoo gave into classified US government demands to scan users' emails in 2015. In a follow up story,ÌýÌýoutlinedÌýthat Yahoo made it possible for investigators to search users' emails for a certain "signature," or unique identifier, that could surface messagesÌýoriginating from aÌý"state-sponsored terrorist organization."Ìý

Key details about the surveillance tool – exactly how it worked, who built it, who had access to user emails, and others – remain unclear, and other tech companies have denied they're using similar tools.ÌýAn Apple spokesperson told The Intercept the company "never received this type of request... . If we were to receive one, we would oppose it in court."

Sources told the Times that a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court judge authorized an individualized order to search emails for the digital signature. But rather than scanning only suspicious emails, Yahoo scanned allÌýmessages sent by its users, according to media reports.ÌýÌýthe surveillance tool was similar to a "rootkit," a kind of software that gives attackers advanced eavesdropping capabilities.

Fight for the Future said its campaign is not just about convincing Yahoo users to ditch the company, but also to send a clear message to the tech community that this kind of secret surveillance won't go unanswered.Ìý

"The level of access that Yahoo granted the government goes far beyond anything we've ever seen in any other the previous surveillance orders that have come to light in recent years," saidÌýJeff Lyon, chief technology officer at Fight for the Future.Ìý"This program was operated outside of any legal authority that we know to exist."

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But it appears that despite extensive reporting about the program, much of the public remains unaware.ÌýA Wednesday pollÌý, a nonpartisan research company,Ìýfound that 60 percent of 1,989 respondents heard "not much" or "nothing at all" regarding news about the surveillance program. Half of those surveyed said they viewed Yahoo's actions negatively, and 25 percent say it was good, citing national security concerns.

The Yahoo news immediately drew condemnation from many prominent voices.Ìý

The Dump Yahoo campaign comes just three weeks afterÌýthe hackers stole account information on at least 500 million user accounts in 2014 in what appears to be the largest theft of corporate data ever.

The hack was to complicate Verizon's $4.8 billion purchase of Yahoo, though Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam said the deal will move forward in some form.