Cobwebs provides a leading AI-powered, user-friendly search engine for
deep, automated web investigations from your phone and social media activity and turns it into intelligence.
LAPD has bolstered its online surveillance operations
by adding another piece of technology to its roster. LAPD’s newest
surveillance partner, Cobwebs Technologies, gathers data from your phone
and social media activity and turns it into intelligence. The Israeli
company’s surveillance software, which outsources much of their
surveillance work to AI and machine learning, gives police warrantless
access to your personal information.
Cobwebs Technologies was founded in 2015 by former IDF special
operatives Omri Timianker, Shay Attias, and former Mossad official Udi Levy. The company is part of the controversial billion-dollar surveillance industry in Israel, where the technology is often tested on Palestinians before being implemented elsewhere in the world. During a 2014 trip to Israel,
LAPD’s top brass saw firsthand how Israel used drones, social media
surveillance software, and automatic license plate readers. Within five
years of the trip, the department would be using all three. This year,
Cobwebs was acquired by private equity firm Spire Capital,
which owns the surveillance companies GeoTime and PenLink. The company
currently has several contracts with local and federal agencies
including the Texas Department of Public Safety (who use it to track migrants), the IRS, and the Department of Homeland Security.
LAPD purchased the nearly $200,000-per-year subscription
to the technology in 2022 with the help of a $600,000 DHS grant that
focuses on terrorism prevention in urban areas. Part of the purchase was
a suite of over 50 digital tools, including surveillance and
investigative software built by other companies. In the grant proposal
for the technology, LAPD said it would make it easier to share
intelligence with federal police agencies.
Meta, the company behind Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, banned
accounts used by Cobwebs and labeled it a surveillance-for-hire company.
In a 2021 report, Meta found
that Cobwebs was being used to target activists, opposition
politicians, and government officials in Hong Kong and Mexico. The
report pushes back against the surveillance company’s claims that it
tracks only criminals and terrorists.
Social Media Monitoring and Data-Driven Profiling
It is not news that LAPD monitors your social media and surveils
your online activity. It is also not news that your phone and computer
are doing the same, sending you targeted ads based on the links you
click and apps you use. Cobwebs can combine all of this data and turn it
into intelligence for police with the help of two platforms: Tangles
and Webloc.
Tangles is Cobwebs’ marquee platform. It uses AI and machine learning
to automate its surveillance capabilities. The software’s AI is
continually searching, scraping, and extracting information from the
public’s online activity. This includes monitoring geotags of geographic
locations, social media posts, and online communities, including those
on the dark web.
Tangles allows police to create extremely detailed dossiers on
people, either targeted by police or found by Cobwebs while scraping
personal and online data. Per the company’s promotion material, the
information it provides to police includes “locations, context, internal
relations, group structures, [and] hierarchies,” as well as the
influence of the target’s “social communities.” This data-driven
profiling, as Cobwebs describes it, can infer a person’s social network,
whether they are “likely perpetrators of violence,” and monitor changes
in a person’s sentiment. Cobwebs says it can help police “prevent
events before they occur.”
Cobwebs’ AI can also profile a person by using its deep image
analysis to make “connections” the company claims are “invisible to the
naked eye.” The software scans photos and videos to find connections in
people’s faces and intentions in text and labels within those photos,
labeling anything it deems suspicious. Cobwebs doesn’t elaborate on what
connections the software makes or how it can assert intentions from an
image.
In a case study, Cobwebs demonstrated how the software could’ve been used to prevent the Alexandria shooting
in 2017. The company pointed to how police missed the intentions in the
shooter’s social media posts, claiming their AI would have been aware
of them: “It can take more than the human mind to comprehend complex
situations, especially when it comes to taking available information
into consideration within context.”
However, there can be real harm in police departments buying in on
artificial intelligence and predictive analysis technologies that may be
nothing more than buzzwords. Dave Maass with the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting civil
liberties in the digital world, says that “when an algorithm
‘underperforms’ or ‘fails to meet expectations,’ that could mean that
innocent people are being harmed by faulty technology.”
The use of data-driven policing software relies on a technology known
to be rife with bias and inaccuracies. Multiple studies have shown that
the algorithms used in AI predictive policing models are racist and inaccurate.
Making matters worse are the shadowy algorithms and calculations used
by Cobwebs. Since they’re proprietary, they aren’t accessible to the
public, making it difficult to independently review them for bias or the
use of bad data.
LAPD has previously used technology for predictive policing, including both Palantir and PredPol,
which has led to the over-policing of Black and brown communities in
Los Angeles. Their marquee predictive policing program to reduce gun
violence, Operation Laser, was shut down in 2019 after internal audits found inconsistencies
in its use. The department now uses “data-informed community-focused
policing,” which activists and community organizers have pointed out is
predictive policing by another name.
Monitoring Protests and Civil Unrest Is the Biggest Selling Point for Police Departments
Cobwebs shared a presentation with LAPD, “Civil Disorder Investigation Methodology,” but LAPD’s gratuitous redactions of the version Knock LA
obtained make it illegible and thus impossible to understand the exact
content of the company’s pitch. There are references to creating target
cards for specific people and organizing them using tags. The sources
the software continuously scans to “reach more tactical information” are
redacted by the department.
More illuminating is a case study created by Cobwebs that shares how
invasive the software is when it comes to surveilling protests. Before a
big soccer game in Europe, police monitored social media using alerts
for keywords and hashtags to find specific soccer fans “who are most
likely to cause trouble.” From there, the software uploads a person’s
photograph and creates a target card, allowing police to track them in
real time, online or in person.
Knock LA requested a list of keywords and hashtags used in
Cobwebs by LAPD. However, the department refused to disclose the list,
citing an exemption that protects confidential records used in active
investigations from being shared with the public. If the past is any
sign of what the hashtags or keywords might be, previous reporting
by the Brennan Center for Justice revealed that in 2020 LAPD surveilled
Black Lives Matter protests on social media using hashtags like #antifa
or #acab. LAPD even followed three specific Twitter accounts, including
one that tweeted out information coming from police scanners about the
protests.
This
slide is part of a Cobwebs PowerPoint presentation introducing the
company’s technology.
Buying Their Way Around the Fourth Amendment
Webloc, the other tool included in the department’s Cobwebs
subscription, is the most invasive one. The application gives police
warrantless access to anyone’s phone data. The software allows police to
track where people have been, collect demographic data from their apps,
and visualize it on a map.
The software can do this thanks to the “billions of data points”
continuously harvested for their users to access. Those data points
include detailed information about people not suspected of any crimes.
This data can be obtained easily from data brokers
and provide far more detailed information about a person’s life than
the cell site location data police normally request. The data available
through Webloc includes mobile advertising IDs from apps a person uses
and other personal information including the gender, age, religion, and
interests of the phone user. Webloc says it uses that data, along with
their location, to create a “threat actor analysis.”
This data can also be geofenced, allowing police to search a specific
location on a map during a specific timeframe and gather phone data
from everyone in that area. Those maps can track a person at a protest
or share a person’s location data with agencies in other states.
The department claimed it gets search warrants
before accessing phone data and does not use Webloc to geofence, but
there are ways to use the information without a warrant. One of the ways
is outlined in a 2021 report
by the Center for Democracy and Technology that highlights how
governments and police departments can, through a loophole in the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act, access phone data without a
warrant so long as it’s done through a data broker. Another way is
through the common practice of parallel construction,
where police can gather evidence in a way that violates the Fourth
Amendment but hide how they got the information — by fabricating or
finding a different source.
‘Ensuring the Public Is Informed’
LAPD’s largest bulk purchase of surveillance technology happened
right before the passage of the department’s Acquisition and Annual
Reporting of Certain Information Systems and Technologies policy. The
bulk purchase of $600,000 worth of surveillance and investigative
technology included payment to Cobwebs Technologies. LAPD passed the
policy on August 17, 2022, and promoted it to ensure the public is
informed about the technology it uses.
The department’s policy requires an application be filled out before
acquiring new surveillance technology. That application must be
submitted and discussed publicly at the Board of Police Commissioners
meeting. The report outlines “an impact on individual privacy rights,
civil liberties, or other constitutional rights.” The application also
outlines the types of data collected, oversight policies, and plans to
safeguard people’s rights. Eight pieces of surveillance software bought
in the bulk purchase escaped this application process.
Another part of the policy states there must be periodic audits of
the surveillance technology the department uses — in a Comprehensive
Technology Audit. The audit includes technologies currently being used
or implemented after the policy’s passage. Missing from the first
technology audit since the new policy went into effect was Cobwebs
Technologies.
When asked about this exclusion, the department said that at the time
of the report’s creation in October 2022, they had used the software
for only two months and felt its addition to the audit would not have
provided a “substantive analysis” of the software’s use. Only two of the
eight applicable surveillance programs the department bulk purchased
with the USAI grant have been audited.
After an entire year of use, the department said that Cobwebs tech
will be audited internally and presented to the Board of Police
Commissioners in the first quarter of next year.
While LAPD remains enamored with the capabilities of today’s
surveillance software, its policies have not kept up with the speed of
advancements in technology. For example, the department lacks a policy
on accessing and tracking people’s phone data through a third party
and/or data brokers. It also lacks a policy about using technology that
uses AI or machine learning, including whether the algorithms in the
software it uses are aligned with the department’s biased policing
policies.
LAPD defends using Cobwebs, saying the information it gathers is
open-source and publicly available. But Cobwebs is not available for use
by the general public, nor does the general public have access to the
breadth of information gathered by Cobwebs.
Dave Maass with EFF pushes back against LAPD’s claim:
“LAPD likes to play games and claims that if it’s public, there is no
public interest in protecting it from police spying. … LAPD should
learn from history and recognize that this kind of surveillance is damaging to everyone.”
1 comment:
You can call it a iPhone, Android or flip phone because end the end they are all radios with internet capabilities. I was astounded when working at just how much information we could gather on anyone. Next time you are talking on an iPhone look at the upper right corner of the screen. If you see an orange dot, someone or something is eavesdropping on you. There is nothing private on the internet. You may as well carve your message in stone because once it's on the net, it will be there forever.
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