How corporations and spy agencies use "security" to defend profiteering and crush activism

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The war on democracy

How corporations and spy agencies use "security" to defend profiteering and crush activism

The Guardian - 11/28/13, Nafeez Ahmed

Anti-NSA rally in Washington DC

Protesters march through downtown Washington DC during the Stop Watching Us Rally. Photograph: Allison Shelley/Getty Images
 

A stunning new report compiles extensive evidence showing how some of the world's largest corporations have partnered with private intelligence firms and government intelligence agencies to spy on activist and nonprofit groups. Environmental activism is a prominent though not exclusive focus of these activities.

The report by the Center for Corporate Policy (CCP) in Washington DC titled Spooky Business: Corporate Espionage against Nonprofit Organizations draws on a wide range of public record evidence, including lawsuits and journalistic investigations. It paints a disturbing picture of a global corporate espionage programme that is out of control, with possibly as much as one in four activists being private spies.
The report argues that a key precondition for corporate espionage is that the nonprofit in question:

"... impairs or at least threatens a company's assets or image sufficiently."

More: TheGuardian.com

 

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