aucisson_masque 2 hours ago

> Several experts described the mechanism as a “clever” workaround that could comply with the letter of the law but not its spirit. “It’s kind of brilliant, but it’s risky,” said a former senior US security official.

If it wasn't Amazon, Google and Israel government, there wouldn't be people pretending it comply with the 'letter of the law'. It is simple treason, selling your own country secret to another.

And the way it's done isn't that 'brilliant'. Oh yes they aren't writing on paper that x country asked for Israel data, they are instead using the country phone index and making payment based on that...

  • runarberg 39 minutes ago

    Isn’t there a legal term for this?

    It is like if it is illegal to import more then $1000 into the country without declaring, and you (clever) give $900 each to 4 of your friends who are conveniently traveling with you, so you only walk across the border with remaining $400, not breaking any laws. Then when inside the country, your friends give you back the $900 each, meaning you just de-facto imported $4000 while technically crossing the border with less then $1000, as legally required.

    If normal people tried to do this they would obviously be charged with the crime of illegally importing money, but also with something like a conspiracy to evade the law.

    • sitharus 24 minutes ago

      I don't know of a general term, but in financial crime it's generally referred to as 'structuring'. IIRC this is from US legislation but it's definitely used in several other countries. I've also heard it referred to as 'smurfing', particularly when splitting a task like purchasing items in a small enough quantity to not be suspicious.

    • stocksinsmocks 21 minutes ago

      Obstruction of justice.

      At least for us. For the more fortunate, maybe it’s just a “creative interpretation of law.”

rwmj a day ago

The method is buried about 60% through the article, but it's interesting. It seems incredibly risky for the cloud companies to do this. Was it agreed by some salespeople without the knowledge of legal / management?

Leaked documents from Israel’s finance ministry, which include a finalised version of the Nimbus agreement, suggest the secret code would take the form of payments – referred to as “special compensation” – made by the companies to the Israeli government.

According to the documents, the payments must be made “within 24 hours of the information being transferred” and correspond to the telephone dialing code of the foreign country, amounting to sums between 1,000 and 9,999 shekels.

If either Google or Amazon provides information to authorities in the US, where the dialing code is +1, and they are prevented from disclosing their cooperation, they must send the Israeli government 1,000 shekels.

If, for example, the companies receive a request for Israeli data from authorities in Italy, where the dialing code is +39, they must send 3,900 shekels.

If the companies conclude the terms of a gag order prevent them from even signaling which country has received the data, there is a backstop: the companies must pay 100,000 shekels ($30,000) to the Israeli government.

  • nitwit005 7 hours ago

    It does seem a bit baffling. This method just adds a second potential crime, in the form of fraudulent payments.

    • falcor84 4 hours ago

      Why would it be fraudulent in this case? I assume that these would be paid as refunds accounted for as a discount to a particular customer - aren't these generally discretionary? Also, I would assume that it would be the Israeli government getting services from the Israeli subsidiary of that company, so it's not clear whether even if it were a crime, which jurisdiction would have an issue with it.

      You could argue that it's against something like the OECD Anti‑Bribery Convention, but that would be a much more difficult case, given that this isn't a particular foreign official, but essentially a central body of the foreign government.

      Just to clarify, not saying that it's ok, but just that accusing it of being a "crime" might be a category error.

      • prodigycorp 9 minutes ago

        Not speaking to the fraudulence of this specific case, but wire fraud is an umbrella term that covers pretty much every non tangible crime.

    • sebzim4500 7 hours ago

      In what sense would the payments be fraudulent? It would be real money paid out of Amazon's accounts as part of a contract they willingly signed with Israel.

      • master_crab 7 hours ago

        It is two crimes:

        1. Alerting a country to secret actions taken by a third party government (my nation of citizenship, the US, definitely has rules against that)

        2. Passing money to commit a crime. See money laundering.

        Honestly, the second crime seems aggravated and stupid. Just pass random digits in an API call if you want to tell Israel you did something.

        • pcthrowaway 2 hours ago

          Wouldn't just having 1000 canaries be a "legal" way to do the alerting?

          A government can compel Amazon to avoid notifying a target (Israel in this case) that their information has been subpoenaed, but can't compel Amazon to lie and say it hasn't sent their info.

          Or is the concept of a canary pretty much useless now?

          I'm personally one of the "activists" who is trying to avoid Amazon and Google to a practical degree, due to project Nimbus, so I'd be more than happy if their data could be accessed, and even happier to see Amazon and Google just cut ties with them altogether.

        • sebzim4500 5 hours ago

          I'm not disputing that the company would be breaking the law by doing this. That's not what fraud is though.

          • Retric 5 hours ago

            Fraud is intentional deception + criminal intent. The deception comes from using payments as a code instead of say an encrypted channel.

            • victorbjorklund 4 hours ago

              No, fraud is intentional deception to deprive a victim of a legal right or to gain from a victim unlawfully or unfairly.

              Who exactly here is the victim that gets it legal rights deprived or what is the gain at the expense of the victim?

              • Retric 2 hours ago

                IE criminal intent vs criminal activity, critically the criminal activity only needs to be intended not actually occur for it to be fraud. Specifying which criminal intent is applicable is reasonable but nothing I said was incorrect.

                The victims are the people being deprived of their legal protections.

                Not everyone agrees which information should be protected but sending information can be a form of harm. If I break into your bank, find all your financial transactions, and post it on Facebook, I have harmed you.

                Courts imposing gag orders over criminal or civil matters is a critical protection, and attempting to violate those gag orders is harm. The specific victims aren’t known, but they intend for there to be victims.

            • gmueckl 4 hours ago

              IANAL, but all criminal definitions of fraud that I am aware of require an intention to harm to a victim. It's kind of hard to argue that sending money fulfills this criteria.

              • Retric 2 hours ago

                Americans get legal protections for their private health data because the disclosure of such information is considered harmful.

                Other countries provide legal protections for other bits of information because disclosure of that information is considered harmful to the individual, it’s that protection they are trying to breach which thus harms the person.

                • gmueckl 2 hours ago

                  How is this related to the fraud discussion in this thread? Illegal disckosure of confidential information is usually handled by a separate legal framework.

                  • Retric 2 hours ago

                    Stuff is generally also fraud rather than only being fraud. We don’t know the details of what else happened so we can’t say what other crimes occurred.

                    Same deal as most illegal things public companies do also being SEC violations.

                • immibis an hour ago

                  The other person is saying that disclosure of health data in violation of HIPAA wouldn't be fraud. It would be a HIPAA violation, not fraud.

  • 8note 7 hours ago

    > If either Google or Amazon provides information to authorities in the US, where the dialing code is +1, and they are prevented from disclosing their cooperation, they must send the Israeli government 1,000 shekels.

    its a buggy method, considering canada also uses +1, and a bunch of countries look like they use +1 but dont, like barbados +1(246) using what looks like an area code as part of the country code.

    • toast0 6 hours ago

      > its a buggy method, considering canada also uses +1, and a bunch of countries look like they use +1 but dont, like barbados +1(246) using what looks like an area code as part of the country code.

      You are correct that ITU code is not specific enough to identify a country, but I'm sorry, +1 is the ITU country code for the North American Numbering Plan Area. 246 is the NANPA area code for Barbados (which only has one area code) but as a NANPA member, Barbados' country code is +1, same as the rest of the members. There is no '+1246' country code.

      There's not a lot of countries that are in a shared numbering plan other than NANPA, but for example, Khazakstan and Russia share +7 (Of course, the USSR needed a single digit country code, or there would have been a country code gap), and many of the former Netherland Antilles share +599, although Aruba has +297, and Sint Maarten is in +1 (with NANPA Area code 721)

  • levi-turner a day ago

    > Was it agreed by some salespeople without the knowledge of legal / management?

    Never worked for either company, but there's a zero percent chance. Legal agrees to bespoke terms and conditions on contracts (or negotiates them) for contracts. How flexible they are to agreeing to exotic terms depends on the dollar value of the contract, but there is no chance that these terms (a) weren't outlined in the contract and (b) weren't heavily scrutinized by legal (and ops, doing paybacks in such a manner likely require work-arounds for their ops and finance teams).

    • rwmj a day ago

      That's my experience too, but it seems impossible that a competent legal team would have agreed to this.

      • gadders 7 hours ago

        Legal can advise, but it's ultimately up to the business to risk-accept. If they think the risk vs reward analysis makes it worthwhile, they can overrule legal and proceed.

        • bostik 5 hours ago

          When advice from legal conflicts with the upcoming sound of ka-ching! the only question that matters is: "how loud is that cashier going to be?"

  • coliveira 2 hours ago

    It's a criminal scheme to spy on law enforcement. Both the company and the scheming country are committing crimes.

    • dummydummy1234 2 hours ago

      Can a country commit a crime?

      • marcosdumay an hour ago

        No, it's the government that commits it.

        People use the country = government metaphor as a shortcut for communication, but this one takes it further than usual.

      • largbae an hour ago

        Extradition by tectonic subduction

  • Havoc 7 hours ago

    Very much doubt something this hot in an agreement with a foreign government as counterparty gets signed off by some random salesman

  • JumpCrisscross 7 hours ago

    > If either Google or Amazon provides information to authorities in the US, where the dialing code is +1, and they are prevented from disclosing their cooperation, they must send the Israeli government 1,000 shekels

    This is criminal conspiracy. It's fucking insane that they not only did this, but put the crime in writing.;

    • tgsovlerkhgsel an hour ago

      I'm always surprised how often crimes get put in writing in big companies, often despite the same companies having various "don't put crimes in writing" trainings.

  • shevy-java 7 hours ago

    I don't quite understand this. How much money would Israel be able to milk from this? It can't be that much, can it?

  • IshKebab a day ago

    > If the companies conclude the terms of a gag order prevent them from even signaling which country has received the data, there is a backstop: the companies must pay 100,000 shekels ($30,000) to the Israeli government.

    Uhm doesn't that mean that Google and Amazon can easily comply with US law despite this agreement?

    There must be more to it though, otherwise why use this super suss signaling method?

    • skeeter2020 7 hours ago

      How can they comply with a law that forbids disclosing information was shared, by doing just that? THe fact it's a simply kiddie code instead of explicit communication doesn't allow you to side step the law.

gruez a day ago

>Under the terms of the deal, the mechanism works like this:

> If either Google or Amazon provides information to authorities in the US, where the dialing code is +1, and they are prevented from disclosing their cooperation, they must send the Israeli government 1,000 shekels.

This sounds like warrant canaries but worse. At least with warrant canaries you argue that you can't compel speech, but in this case it's pretty clear to any judge that such payments constitute disclosure or violation of gag order, because you're taking a specific action that results in the target knowing the request was made.

  • Zigurd 5 hours ago

    It's a "cute" mechanism. The lawyers and the companies they work for found this to be an acceptable thing to put in a contract, when doing so could be interpreted as conspiring to evade the law. Did they get any assurances that they wouldn't get in trouble for doing this?

    • rainonmoon 41 minutes ago

      If you're working with the people Amazon works with, the risk assessment isn't "Will we get in trouble for this?" it's "When we get in trouble for this, can we defend it on legal grounds?" Given that even the American spooks cited in this article are defending this blatantly immoral and obscene trespass, obviously Amazon's lawyers have reason to believe they can.

  • mikeyouse a day ago

    This reads like something a non-lawyer who watched too many bad detective movies would dream up. Theres absolutely no way this would pass legal muster —- even warrant canaries are mostly untested, but this is clearly like 5x ‘worse’ for the reasons you point out.

    • randallsquared a day ago

      From the article:

      > Several experts described the mechanism as a “clever” workaround that could comply with the letter of the law but not its spirit.

      It's not clear to me how it could comply with the letter of the law, but evidently at least some legal experts think it can? That uncertainty is probably how it made it past the legal teams in the first place.

      • AstralStorm a day ago

        Warrant canary depends on agreed upon inaction, which shields it somewhat. You cannot exactly compel speech by a gag order.

        This, being an active process, if found out, is violating a gag order by direct action.

        • votepaunchy a day ago

          Warrant canaries depend on action, the removal or altering of the canary document. It’s too clever but no more clever than what Israel is requiring here.

          • 8note 7 hours ago

            the canary notification method is a lack of updates, not a specific update.

            you update your canary to say that nothing has changed, at a known cadence.

            if you ever dont make the update, readers know that the canary has expired, and so you have been served a gag order warrant.

            changing or removing the canary in response to a warrant is illegal. not changing it is legal.

            for an equivalent cloudwatch setup, its checking the flag for "alarm when there's no points"

            • verdverm 5 hours ago

              I would think to stopping doing something is equally an action as to do something, in regards to warrant canaries and gag orders. You had to take make some change to your process, or if automated take an actual action to disable. In either case, there was a cognizant choice that was made

              • nkrisc 5 hours ago

                The legal theory is that in the US the first amendment prevents the government from forcing you to make a false update. I don’t know if it’s ever been tested.

                As I understand, this theory wouldn’t even hold up in other countries where you could be compelled to make such a false update.

              • hrimfaxi 5 hours ago

                Yes but the theory, at least in the US, is that the government cannot compel you to say something. That is, they can't make you put up a notice.

                • verdverm 3 hours ago

                  yea, I get that, but my gut tells me this doesn't pass the sniff test

                  It's a choice you make and action you take either way, be it not updating a canary or sending a covert financial transaction

                  That it has not been tested in court is why it's still a "theory" (hypothesis?)

                  My hope is that a jury of our peers would stay closer to the spirit than the letter of the law

                • joshuamorton 3 hours ago

                  More specifically, the theory is that cannot compel you to lie, there are all kinds of cases where businesses are compelled to share specific messages.

                  • Andrex 2 hours ago

                    Ah, that was confusing to me. Thank you.

              • shkkmo 3 hours ago

                And this would be why warrant canaries aren't seen as a proven legal shield yet.

          • gruez a day ago

            >Warrant canaries depend on action, the removal or altering of the canary document.

            No, they can simply not publish a warrant canary in the future, which will tip people off if they've been publishing it regularly in the past.

            • mikeyouse a day ago

              Right - the whole premise is that the government cannot compel speech (in the US). So if you publish something every week that says, “we’ve never been subpoenaed as of this week” and then receive a subpoena, the government can’t force you to lie and publish the same note afterwards. The lack of it being published is the canary here.

              • d1sxeyes 6 hours ago

                Whether you can be compelled to lie under these circumstances or not is not a resolved question of law. Although it seems fairly likely that compelling speech in this way is unconstitutional, if it has been tested in court, the proceedings are not public.

                • lazide 5 hours ago

                  Good thing no one is doing anything unconstitutional right now?

    • tdeck a day ago

      This only works for Israel because members of the Israeli government expect to be above the law. They need to offer only the flimsiest pretext to get away with anything. Look what happened with Tom Alexandrovich.

      • Andrex 2 hours ago

        From reading the Wiki, it seems like the state cops (who were somehow in charge of the case) forgot to take his passport when they arrested him, and then he just fled after he paid bail?

        Is there any evidence he was helped in his escape by anyone? Genuinely asking (and genuinely seeking hard facts and data).

        • tdeck an hour ago

          He was interviewed by the feds after his arrest and mentioned his upcoming flight in the interview transcript but still was allowed to leave the country.

    • puttycat a day ago

      Agree that there's something fishy/missing in this story. Never say never, but I find it extremely unlikely that Google/Amazon lawyers, based in the US, would agree to such a blatantly mafia-like scheme.

      • deanCommie 5 hours ago

        Wouldn't the lawyers be based in Israel - under some Israel-based shell/subsidiary of Google/Amazon, that owns the data centers, and complies with local law?

      • wahnfrieden an hour ago

        I don't know about Google but Amazon works with lawyers and other roles to routinely operate illegal union-busting strategies. It is blatantly illegal behavior that they use all their might to get away with. I don't know why you would find it so unbelievably surprising that they would do illegal mafia-like things.

      • t0lo a day ago

        It's certainly very interesting and difficult to explain...

      • worik 5 hours ago

        > I find it extremely unlikely that Google/Amazon lawyers, based in the US, would agree to such a blatantly mafia-like scheme.

        I trust The Guardian. So I agree It was unlikely. I find it very sad

        Very sad

  • skeeter2020 7 hours ago

    The key with a canary is that the thing you're trying to signal ensures the positive or negative signal itself, like "I will check in every 24 hours as long as everything is good, because if I'm not good I won't be able to check in.". THis is just a very thin, very simple code translation. It's like saying "if you get a request for our info, blink 3 times!"

  • hex4def6 7 hours ago

    Yeah.

    I mean, why pay the money? Why not just skip the payment and email a contact "1,000"? Or perhaps "Interesting article about in the Times about the USA, wink wink"?

    This method is deliberately communicating information in a way that (I assume) is prohibited. It doesn't seem like it would take a judge much time to come to the conclusion that the gag order prohibits communication.

    Creating a secret code is still communication, whether that's converting letters A=1, B=2, sending a video of someone communicating it in sign language, a painting of the country, writing an ethereum contract, everyday sending a voicemail with a list of all the countries in the world from A to Z, but omitting the one(s) that have the gag / warrant...

    • skeeter2020 7 hours ago

      If you ever dealt with the laws around exporting technology to specific jurisidictions, this would be like saying "We can convert the algorithm code to Python and THEN export it to North Korea!"

      • tgsovlerkhgsel an hour ago

        One of the earliest example would be "we can print PGP as a book and then..."

advisedwang 7 hours ago

I wonder if Google's plan here is to just not actually make the "special payments" if a gag order applies. Possibly they think that the contract doesn't actually require those payments (most contracts have a provision about not contradicting the law), or just ignore the contract provision when a gag order comes (how would Israel know, and what would they do about it anyway).

  • shrubble 5 hours ago

    Israel reportedly has unredacted data feeds from the USA(this was part of the Snowden leaks, Guardian link: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/11/nsa-americans-...).

    This means that they can read even the personal email of Supreme Court justices, congressmen and senators.

    However they have a gentleman’s agreement to not do that.

    “Wink”

    • CWuestefeld 4 hours ago

      However they have a gentleman’s agreement to not do that.

      Trying to remember back to Snowden, I think I recall that not only DON'T they have such an agreement, but the intelligence folks consider this a feature. The US government is Constitutionally forbidden from reading "US persons" communications, but our Constitution has no such restriction on third parties. So if those third parties do the spying for us, and then tell our intelligence folks about it, everybody wins. Well, except for the people.

    • _zoltan_ 5 hours ago

      link to any credible report?

      • shrubble 5 hours ago

        Updated my post with a link, thanks.

  • overfeed 6 hours ago

    > how would Israel know, and what would they do about it anyway

    Spy on, insert or recruit an asset from the pool of employees who are involved in any "Should we tell Israel?" discussion. That way, even if an answer is "No, don't alert them", the mere existence of the mechanism provides an actionable intelligence signal.

    • mdasen 3 hours ago

      If they're able to gather the intelligence without a public signal, they wouldn't be wanting a public signal. Any discussion of "should we tell Israel" would be limited to people who knew of the secret subpoena's existence. If Israel already had an asset within that group, they'd just have that person signal them in a much more clandestine manner than a public payment mandated in a signed contract.

      Either Israel already knows about the subpoena, in which case the discussion doesn't matter, or they don't, in which case their asset wouldn't be in on the discussion.

  • greycol 4 hours ago

    >most contracts have a provision about not contradicting the law

    But is there an Israeli law that states contracts must be in concordance with foreign law... When the damages of an Israeli contract get evaluated in an Israeli court and they include the loss of Israeli intelligence assets will the costs not be significant? Yes google can pull out of Israel but they literally built datacentres there for these contracts so there are sizeable seizable assets.

    And yes google may also get fined for breaking foreign law by foreign courts. The question is if the architecture of the system is set up so the only way data can be "secretly" exfiltrated by other governments is to go through local Israeli employees and they're the one's breaking the foreign law (and they were told explicitly by foreign bosses that they can't share this information wink) is there any punishment for google other than fines dwarfed by the contract and having to fire an employee who is strangely ok with that, who is replaced by a equally helpful local employee.

    • mdasen 3 hours ago

      I think it'd be unlikely for the Israeli government to try and push this issue. Yes, Google has assets within Israel that could be seized, but it'd be a bit of a disaster. Israel would be creating a scenario where it told companies: go to prison in your home country or we'll seize everything you've invested here.

      Also, I can't believe that Google or Amazon would sign a contract that doesn't specify the judicial jurisdiction. If the contract says "this contract will be governed by the courts of Santa Clara County California" and the Israelis agreed to that, then they won't have a claim in Israeli courts. If an Israeli court concluded that they have jurisdiction when both parties agreed they don't have jurisdiction, it'd create a very problematic precedent for doing business with Israeli companies.

      Even if an Israeli court would ignore all that, what would Israel get? Maybe it could seize a billion in assets within Israel, but would that be worth it? For Google or Amazon, they face steeper penalties in the US and Europe for various things. For Israel, maybe they'd be able to seize an amount of assets equivalent to 10% of their annual military budget. So while it's not a small sum, it is a small sum relative to the parties' sizes. Neither would really win or lose from the amount of money in play.

      But Israel would lose big time if it went that route. It would guarantee that no one would sign another cloud deal with them once the existing contracts expired. Investment in Israel would fall off a cliff as companies worried that Israeli courts would simply ignore anything they didn't like.

      The point of these agreements is that Israel needs access to cloud resources. The primary objective is probably to avoid getting cut off like Microsoft did to them. That part of the contract is likely enforceable (IANAL): Israel does something against the ToS, but they can't be cut off. I'd guess that's the thing that Israel really wanted out of these deals.

      The "wink" was probably a hopeful long shot that they never expected to work. But they got what they needed: Amazon and Google can't cut them off regardless of shareholder pressure or what they're doing with the cloud no matter what anyone thinks of it. Suing Amazon or Google over a part of the contract that they knew was never going to happen would jeopardize their actual objective: stable, continued access to cloud resources.

      • greycol an hour ago

        Sorry I didn't mean to imply I expected it would degrade to such a point that Israel is actually seizing the assets, it's more I'm pointing out that there's a credible threat of sizeable costs. Compounded with that the real teeth of the espionage laws outside of Israel will be in imprisonment which won't likely apply in these cases if the principal actors are Israeli citizens and the people subject to the foreign law are "doing all they can" to go along espionage orders once they receive one. The point is to get the contract in place in such a way that those who can get punished in a jurisdiction have plausible deniability and profitability to absorb any likely financial penalty by foreign actors. So that everyone just goes along with it as they're not breaking any laws at the time and then later they know their best efforts will be futile.

        The Cloud doesn't just mean foreign data centers it means 3rd party infrastructure and expertise, which in this case at least, some of is local to the country. The point is that any 'secret' surveillance is reported. I.e. person in US gets ordered to access data, they connect to data center with appropriate credentials, which is monitored and either questioned and billed, or get flagged locally as not reportable and so not logged (making it show up on the shadow logs installed by local Israeli intelligence assets). Foreign employees best efforts to comply with espionage orders still reveal their actions and local employees happily obey local reporting laws knowing they are outside of those jurisdictions and helping their country.

        Yes it can be forced to fall apart, but it has to be done in the open (because it will require changing local data center operations) and will be time consuming unless an actual open order by the US to immediately stop working with Israel on this which is extremely unlikely to happen.

  • ngruhn 6 hours ago

    My thoughts as well. Also, "only" violating a contract sounds less illegal.

  • worik 5 hours ago

    > Google's plan here is to just not actually make the "special payments"

    That does not help

    Signing the contract was a criminal conspiracy

    I am not holding my breath for prosecution, though.

helsinkiandrew a day ago

So if a government agency or court (presumably the US government) makes a data request with a non disclosure order (FBI NSL, FISA, SCA) - Google and Amazon would break that non disclosure order and tell Israel.

Wouldn't those involved be liable to years in prison?

  • breppp 7 hours ago

    and your assumption is that if Google has conflicting legal obligations to the USA and Israel it will choose Israel...

    In my opinion that's extremely unlikely. This was probably set up for other kinds of countries

  • IAmBroom a day ago

    In a nation that strictly follows its own laws, sure.

  • alwa a day ago

    I imagine it depends on which country makes that request, its legal basis, and how their gag order is written.

    I find it hard to imagine a federal US order wouldn’t proscribe this cute “wink” payment. (Although who knows? If a state or locality takes it upon themselves to raid a bit barn, can their local courts bind transnational payments or is that federal jurisdiction?)

    But from the way it’s structured—around a specific amount of currency corresponding to a dialing code of the requesting nation—it sure sounds like they’re thinking more broadly.

    I could more easily imagine an opportunistic order—say, from a small neighboring state compelling a local contractor to tap an international cable as it crosses their territory—to accommodate the “winking” disclosure: by being either so loosely drafted or so far removed from the parent company’s jurisdiction as to make the $billions contract worth preserving this way.

asdefghyk 9 minutes ago

Nothing to say any money has actually been sent.

neilv 7 hours ago

Initially, I suspected the cloud contracts were for general government operations, to have geo-distributed backups and continuity, in event of regional disaster (natural or human-made).

But could it instead/also be for international spy operations, like surveillance, propaganda, and cyber attacks? A major cloud provider has fast access at scale in multiple regions, is less likely to be blocked than certain countries, and can hide which customer the traffic is for.

If it were for international operations, two questions:

1. How complicit would the cloud providers be?

2. For US-based providers, how likely that US spy agencies would be consulted before signing the contracts, and consciously allow it to proceed (i.e., let US cloud providers facilitate the foreign spy activity), so that US can monitor the activity?

cedws 7 hours ago

Is managing servers really such a lost art that even governments with sensitive data must cede to AWS/Azure/GCP?

Ozzie_osman 6 hours ago

> Microsoft said that using Azure in this way violated its terms of service and it was “not in the business of facilitating the mass surveillance of civilians”. Under the terms of the Nimbus deal, Google and Amazon are prohibited from taking such action as it would “discriminate” against the Israeli government. Doing so would incur financial penalties for the companies, as well as legal action for breach of contract.

Insane. Obeying the law or ToS, apparently, is discriminatory when it comes to Israel.

  • leoh 3 hours ago

    It's not insane, at least based on the information in the article, which is entirely insinuation. Do we actually have access to the leaked documents and what specifically was being asked besides a "secret code" being used?

  • choeger 4 hours ago

    U.S. law. It's pretty obvious that neither Amazon nor Google are good options for serious actors that are not the U.S. government. So if they want to make business outside the U.S., they need to dance around the fact that in the end they bow to the will of Washington.

  • neuroelectron 6 hours ago

    It would be suicide to sign the contract. It basically allows them to hack their platforms without any repercussions or ability to stop it. They would quickly claim expanded access is part of the contract.

  • ktallett 5 hours ago

    This endless bowing down to Israel is and always will be ridiculous. When a country can do whatever they like unchallenged, no matter how wrong, or how illegal, we have failed as a society.

    • ugh123 4 hours ago

      That now makes two of U.S.

    • churchill 4 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • leoh 3 hours ago

        >Openly paying Western influencers for pro-Israel propaganda.

        I hate to break it to you, but the largest oil "companies in the world" are not Exxon or Royal Dutch Shell -- they are non-democratic, state-controlled Arab entities which are orders of magnitude larger. If you think for a moment that said countries are not quietly pouring millions if not billions of dollars to cover up their own injustices and to foster hatred for Israel, you would be among the great majority, but also tragically uninformed.

        • churchill 3 hours ago

          >I hate to break it to you, but the largest oil "companies in the world" are not Exxon or Royal Dutch Shell -- they are non-democratic, state-controlled Arab entities which are orders of magnitude larger.

          You're strenuously refuting a point I didn't make. So, I decided anything else you wrote would be quite inappropriate and not worth my time.

          • leoh 3 hours ago

            [flagged]

            • churchill 3 hours ago

              You're still strenuously opposing points I didn't make so I'll continue ignoring you, LMAO.

              • leoh 3 hours ago

                [flagged]

      • loverofhumanz 4 hours ago

        [flagged]

        • mikkupikku 4 hours ago

          It's always this same lame rhetoric every single goddamn time.

        • ktallett 3 hours ago

          The genocide they have conducted? The war crimes? The fact they have broken international law?

        • kossTKR 3 hours ago

          [flagged]

          • cyberax 3 hours ago

            > an event that in itself was a crescendo of creating a "jewish ghetto" just for arabs with millions of people crammed together in poverty for decades

            You remind me of a person who (years ago) accused Israel of "killing minors". Not mentioning that the minors in question were committing terrorist acts.

            Israel literally forced Israeli settlers from Gaza to completely give it to Palestine. Yet HAMAS kept the population in poverty by rejecting any attempts at peace. It was a de-facto capital crime in Gaza to work with Israeli government.

            From Israel's point of view, they tried playing fair with HAMAS. While HAMAS kept playing dirty. HAMAS at various times: murdered civilians, indiscriminately bombed cities, attacked hospitals, used ambulances for troop transport, used rape as a weapon of war, etc.

            There's nothing that Israel is doing to HAMAS that HAMAS hadn't done to Israel before. Yet we're not seeing any pushback against HAMAS from the usual suspects. I guess their only problem is just that Israel is doing everything _better_ than HAMAS?

          • loverofhumanz 3 hours ago

            [flagged]

            • SuperNinKenDo 3 hours ago

              Because they overplayed their hand and they know it, so the only thing left to do is go all in and hope the walls they built hold long enough for this to be a fait accompli.

            • ktallett 3 hours ago

              Because Israel have gone too far at this point and war crimes aren't justifiable.

              • churchill 2 hours ago

                You're trying to logically reason people out of a position they didn't reach logically. You'll fail because your target isn't truth-seeking.

      • loverofhumanz 3 hours ago

        [flagged]

        • 1oooqooq 3 hours ago

          while the comment you reply to is borderline insane,

          you're taking from a very privileged position in terms of media consumption. the media that criticizes the genocide and the blackflag on oct 7th is very niche and you seem to consume it exclusively. the message is very different within mass media.

    • leoh 3 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • ktallett 3 hours ago

        I doubt the Guardian has any reason to lie about the documents they have seen. Based on the interactions regarding their war crimes, are you arguing Israel have not basically declared themselves above the law in many ways?

        • leoh 3 hours ago

          Let's stay to the topic at hand lest you continue to make my point, kimosabe. There is a "secret code" that does.. what exactly?

          • avh02 3 hours ago

            it doesn't matter what it does, why it's there, or how often it's used because: 1) skirts the law, 2) infringes on the laws of other countries, and finally 3) it's just so dodgy you have to be asking yourself wtf is going on.

            • dlubarov 3 hours ago

              How can an independent state "infringe on the laws of other countries"? If you think Israel is somehow bound by foreign states' laws, should it also be enforcing the Great Firewall, for example?

              And how is it dodgy to want to know who spies on your data?

              • avh02 2 hours ago

                > How can an independent state "infringe on the laws of other countries"?

                you don't live on earth, do you?

          • ktallett 3 hours ago

            It is Israel's method introduced so that when Google and Microsoft who are legally required to pass over stored data based on where their servers are based, to find out who asked for it. I assume in the goal of trying to influence who asked for it.

            Did you not read the article?

JohnMakin 4 hours ago

If you or I did this, we'd go to jail for a very long time.

AlanYx 4 hours ago

Setting aside the legalities of the "wink" payments, I'm fascinated to know what is the purpose of the country-specific granularity? At most Israel would learn that some order was being sought in country X, but they wouldn't receive knowledge of the particular class of data being targeted.

I wonder if there's a national security aspect here, in that knowing the country would prompt some form of country-specific espionage (signals intelligence, local agents on the inside at these service providers, etc.) to discover what the targeted data might be.

  • avidiax 3 hours ago

    Obviously, they must think it's a feature of some value.

    Knowing the country allows an immediate diplomatic protest, threats to withdraw business, and investigation.

    The payment is to be within 24 hours, which means that they can act quickly to stop the processing of the data, prevent conclusions from being drawn, etc.

    If the signaled country were the US, I would expect a bunch of senators to be immediately called and pressured to look into and perhaps stop the investigation.

nova22033 7 hours ago

If the US government asked Google and amazon for data using specific legal authorities and the companies tipped off the Israeli government, there's a chance they may have broken the law....

  • JumpCrisscross 7 hours ago

    > there's a chance they may have broken the law

    There is certainty they broke the law. Both federally and, in all likelihood, in most states.

    • worik 5 hours ago

      The agreement breaks the law

shevy-java 7 hours ago

Israel and the USA already coordinate, so I doubt this story. Other countries should stop selling data of their citizens to these two countries.

  • Analemma_ 5 hours ago

    They coordinate, but coordination doesn't mean totally aligned behavior and interests which never diverge, nor that they don't try to spy on each other. Multiple people in the United States have been been caught and convicted of spying for Israel and are serving lengthy prison sentences because of it; Israeli lobbying efforts have tried to get their sentences commuted, so far without success. That's not what you would see if "coordination" went as far as your post implied.

    • Seattle3503 4 hours ago

      I wouldn't be surprised if this is all a part of the "game" of spycraft. Israel probably expects the US spy agencies would get wind of this agreement. "I see you watching me."

  • lenerdenator 7 hours ago

    That's basically how all governments work.

    If you don't want your data in the hands of someone with access to the state's monopoly on violence, you're best off getting rid of all internet access in your life.

vladgur 6 hours ago

If we take "Israel" out of the equation to remove much of controversy, i dont understand why wouldnt any actor, especially government actor, take every possible step that their data remains under their sole control.

In other words, im curious why would Israel not invest in making sure that the their were storing in third-party vendor clouds was not encrypted at rest and in transit by keys not stored in that cloud.

This seems like a matter of national security for any government, not to have their data accessible by other parties at the whims of different jurisdiction where that cloud vendor operates.

  • nashashmi 6 hours ago

    It would still be very alarming if a democratic country like Australia or European Union taking a step like this where they tell the vendor that it will use its data and service in whatever way it sees fit, and sidestep existing policies those vendors have on the uses of their services and data.

    Now maybe we can say that Israel is not a democratic system or environment, but then Microsoft would not be wholly desiring to do business serving such an entity, lest they break with US oversight.

    Israel here told the vendor that whenever there is a gag on them by their government against making Israel aware of their request, the vendor is to secretly transmit a message alerting them..

  • FridayoLeary 19 minutes ago

    > If we take "Israel" out of the equation

    Then this whole story would disintegrate.

    I am baffled by the manufactured outrage this story is generating. "oh no. <country> is sidestepping the NSA which we loudly proclaim to be evil at every opportunity, and (gasp) imposing their own conditions and bullying gigantic tech companies which are even more evil."

    This from the same group of people who insist that europe should host their own data.

  • Dig1t 5 hours ago

    Because it is obviously illegal, violates both the letter and spirit of American law.

    Also because no other country has the power to get cloud vendors to do this and this one special country will face no consequences (as usual).

    • vladgur 5 hours ago

      From the article:

      "The demand, which would require Google and Amazon to effectively sidestep legal obligations in countries around the world"

      "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."

      The way I interpret this is Google, Amazon operates in multiple countries under multiple jurisdictions. The security services for any of these countries(including for example Egypt where Google has offices according to....Google), can produce a legal(in Egypt) order requesting Google to produce data of another customer( for example Israeli govt) and Google has to comply or leave Egypt.

      It seems to me that being under constant threat of your government sensitive data being exposed at the whims of another, potentially adversarial government is not a sustainable way of operating and Im surprised that Israel havent either found ways of storing its infrastructure locally or encrypting it five way to Sunday.

      This is not a comment on the specific accusation of actions by Israel but for strange reality of being a small-country government and a customer of a multi-national cloud vendor.

  • tziki 5 hours ago

    It's not irrelevant that it's Israel in question. There's not many countries that have been found to be committing genocide (by UN), are actively involved in a war or where the leaders are sought by ICC.

    • km3r 3 hours ago

      The UN has made no such ruling. Committees don't speak for the UN.

    • vladgur 4 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • gambiting 4 hours ago

        For every killed Israeli in the attacks on the 7th of October, Israel went and killed 18 children in retaliation. If that is not genocide then I don't know what is.

        • km3r 3 hours ago

          That is an elementary understanding international law.

          If after Oct 7th Israel went and killed a single child in retaliation, that would be unjust. Justification and proportionality are not measured like that.

          Justification is established by a valid objective to go to war. Proportionality is measured in comparison to the military objectives. The Oct 7th attack clearly justifies the removal of Hamas. The proportionality of doing so is dependent on the size of Hamas's army (20k-30k), the size of their infrastructure (500 kms of tunnels), and their ability to separate their operations and operators from civilians.

          • nashashmi 2 hours ago

            Their nature was to murder everyone. Valid objective or not, nothing permits their nature.

        • vladgur 3 hours ago

          You’re conveniently ignoring that Hamas took 200+ hostages and refused to return them throughout the war.

          Just because Hamas, build the biggest underground bomb shelter network and refused to let any civilians in it and that that it operated militarily out of civilian infrastructure such as hospitals, causing inevitable casualties by civilians does not make it a genocide. It makes it a terrible war. A war that Hamas started on October 7.

          • gambiting an hour ago

            >>You’re conveniently ignoring that Hamas took 200+ hostages and refused to return them throughout the war.

            Are you saying what I think you're saying? Holding 200+ hostages justifies killing 18 thousand children? "inevitable casualties" - what a feckless way to call what anyone else can see clearly as a systematic attempt to kill and eradicate a group of people.

          • tdeck an hour ago

            You're going to have to download a hasbara update. Israel is still genociding despite the completed prisoner exchange, so the excuse of "why won't they just release the hostages and this will all end" isn't going to work anymore.

      • NickC25 3 hours ago

        > Redefines the meaning of genocide to fit the shape of the conflict -- a war started by Hamas on Oct 7

        My man, Israel had a blockade surrounding Palestine on all sides for years prior. October 7th was a retaliation for a lot of the pain Israel had inflicted on Palestine (sorry- Greater Israel). And Bibi was well in the know and all too happy to let it happen.

        > largely ignores role of Hamas in the conflict

        Bibi loved and loves Hamas. Also, Israel has nuclear weapons. A lot of them.

        It's like David and Goliath, except in this case David is malnourished to the extreme, has no future, no present, no past except seeing his family and friends bombed to oblivion....and only can attack Goliath with a few pebbles. Meanwhile, Goliath has plot armor and nukes.

        >Frames the country as a "settler-colonial" project ignoring realities of jewish history in the region.

        And not ignoring Palestine, which had existed for 12 centuries before the birth of Christ?

        • km3r 3 hours ago

          > My man, Israel had a blockade surrounding Palestine on all sides for years prior.

          A blockade that was specifically accounted for the the preceding ceasefire agreement that was in place on Oct 6th.

          > David and Goliath

          Yet, it is David who keeps starting this fight, losing, then calling Goliath unjust because his ability to punch back is greater.

          > And not ignoring Palestine, which had existed for 12 centuries before the birth of Christ?

          Nope not ignoring. Both groups have a long history in the region. Arabs through colonization centuries ago. Heck, "Palestine" even comes from the Jewish word for invader (the naming is not connected to the arabization of Palestine).

          • nashashmi 2 hours ago

            The Jewish history in the region became the Palestinian history of the region. The Palestinians are literally the direct descendants of the Israelites said to be in prior history. This is per David Ben Gurion.

            • vladgur an hour ago

              Any legitimate sources for this claim?

        • vladgur 3 hours ago

          A) you know that Gaza has border with another country that is not Israel

          B) you’re missing out on cause and effect here — could it be that Israeli started blocking import of goods that can be used for military purposes shortly after Hamas gain control of Gaza in 2007 and started shooting missiles at Israel

          • nashashmi 2 hours ago

            Israel controls the Egypt border as well. They permit goods to go and stop when they wish with Egypt providing the control.

            B) they implemented immediately after Hamas won the election, including the West Bank. Until they were forced out.

            • vladgur 39 minutes ago

              Timelines disagree with you: A) after disengagement from Gaza in 2005 and all the way until this war, Israel did not control the border between Gaza and Egypt. Egypt did

              B) 2005 - Israel withdraws from Gaza

              Jan 2026 - Hamas wins popular elections

              Feb 2026 - rocket and mortar attacks launched by new Hamas govt begin. 179 attacks in February alon

              Feb 2026 - international sanctions and tightened Israeli border control begins

zaoui_amine 7 hours ago

That's wild. Sounds like a sketchy legal loophole for big tech.

xbar 4 hours ago

"The idea that we would evade our legal obligations to the US government as a US company, or in any other country, is categorically wrong,"

I can imagine that this Alphabet General Counsel-approved language could be challenged in court.

Havoc 6 hours ago

Surprised that Israel didn't just decide to go it alone and build their own infra given the multiple reservations they clearly had. They have a vibrant tech ecosystem so could presumably pull it off

  • pcthrowaway 2 hours ago

    Something worth noting is that when they call a significant number of reserves to IDF, their industries suffer.

    Most SWEs are still 20-40-something men, which would be the same demographic being called to service (I realize women also serve in the IDF, but combat positions are generally reserved for men).

    So it's possible that Israel can't rely on their own private tech industry being unaffected during high-engagement periods.

    I think the government does have plenty of its own infra (and military tech sectors would be unaffected by calling in reserves), but given the size of the country (and also considering its Palestinian second-class citizens who make up 20% of the Israeli population may not be trusted to work on more sensitive portions of its infrastructure) they're probably not able to manage every part of the stack. Probably only China and the U.S. can do this.

    • Havoc 2 hours ago

      I work with people that have been called up for service there and don't think it's as disruptive to a country's data-center building ability as you suggest.

  • vorpalhex 6 hours ago

    I imagine the concern becomes survivability. Israeli's really like their multiple levels of backups, and having a data copy out of the reach of enemy arms seems high priority.

    Iran attacking US-East-1 would certainly be unusual.

    • noir_lord 5 hours ago

      They could likely work around that, multiple locations in-country and an off site encrypted backup out of country.

      More likely is it was "aid" from the US which usually comes with stipulations about what/where they can spend it - common with weapons/military kit, wouldn't be surprised if they did something similar with cloud services.

      • vorpalhex 3 hours ago

        Hundreds of missiles get colaunched making up multi-thousand missile waves. A 200 drone wave is "small".

        And any offsite that is "Israel's gov offsite" is an easy target even if in Cyprus or NYC.

        Comingling with a bunch of bulk commercial hosts is very safe from a threat modeling perspective (in this case).

parliament32 2 hours ago

> According to sources familiar with negotiations, Microsoft’s bid suffered as it refused to accept some of Israel’s demands.

MS/Azure being the good guys for once? Colour me surprised.

CKMo 2 hours ago

Microsoft of all companies were the ones who had backbone here? What the heck

kittikitti 39 minutes ago

I don't trust any of these cloud providers with my data specifically because of their ties to Israel and the Trump administration. They will always acquiesce to the bully in the room. I've received too many notices from both Amazon and Google about how my data was leaked already. Their motto, "Don't be evil", should have included a wink wink in it.

gadders 7 hours ago

Imagine if someone asked for the data for money laundering investigations. The cloud provider could get prosecuted for "tipping off".

stogot 2 hours ago

This is basically just the warrant canaries from the FISA prism days. Which at the time hacker news was in favor of. Both companies deny doing this though

rdtsc a day ago

Now that the trick is out the gag order will say explicitly not to make the payment. Or specifically to make a “false flag” payment, tell them it’s the Italians.

  • IAmBroom a day ago

    There's no need to alter a gag order. If you attempt an end-run around a gag order by speaking in French or Latin or Swahili, the gag order is still violated. This is exactly the same: changing the language in which the gag order is violated.

  • Yossarrian22 a day ago

    I don’t think speech can be compelled like that latter idea

    • rdtsc a day ago

      Are payments "speech" though? Just like the Israeli govt thinks they are being "cute" with the "winks" so can other governments be "cute" with their interpretation of "speech".

      • kevin_thibedeau 5 hours ago

        The Supreme court has labeled political spending as free speech. No reason it can't extend everywhere.

worik 5 hours ago

We know already that Google and Amazon are morally bankrupt. (My brain is spinning that Microsoft are the "good guys" here).

But I do not think we knew that Google and Amazon would engage in criminal conspiracy for profit

yshuman 6 hours ago

theyre complicit and profiting off genocide just as they have been forever. The sad reality is, most of these criminals and white collar gangsters will never be held to account

  • econ 4 hours ago

    The empire is EOL tho

ratelimitsteve a day ago

years of "but we have to because of our enemies" undisciplined realpolitik has ended in states that insist upon their own legitimacy but don't even pay lip service to the rule of law. your enemies are people you can and should fuck over and your allies are people you've hoodwinked, and can and should fuck over.

Why is the US in particular tolerating Israel sabotaging antiterrorism investigations?

  • kujjerl7 a day ago

    [flagged]

    • b00ty4breakfast 5 hours ago

      There has been a concerted effort to tie Jewish identity to the modern state of israel. It certainly doesn't help that the birth of said state came in the wake of the Jewish people nearly being wiped out by an industrialized genocide. Add to that the previous 1000 years or so of systematized antisemitism and it's easy to see why the proposition can be very appealing to a Jewish person who had (and sometimes still has) very material reason to fear for their safety.

      This was leveraged (some might say exploited) by unsavory actors in the creation of a reactionary, settler-colonial ethno-state. This should not be too surprising, given that zionism arose in the same sociopolitical milieu that gave us modern nationalism and pan-nationalist ideologies.

    • thaumasiotes 7 hours ago

      People seem more accepting of the concept than you might expect. Compare the song "My Uncle Dan McCann", which you can hear here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_puzpI03Xcs

      I found me uncle Dan McCann

      A very prosperous Yankee man

      He holds a seat in Congress

      And he's leader of his clan

      He's helped to write America's laws

      His heart and soul in Ireland's cause

      And God help the man who opened his jaws to me uncle Dan McCann

      As far as the song is concerned, this is admirable behavior. Of course, the song is written from the perspective of an Irishman visiting from Ireland to look for his uncle. But it's marketed to Americans. The question "is it a good thing to have American legislators whose purpose in life is to work for the benefit of Ireland?" never seems to come up.

      • rgblambda 4 hours ago

        Though I recognise the similarity, a Irish song about a relative who emigrated to America in the 19th century, fought in the Civil War, becomes a politician and advocates for Irish Independence isn't really on the same scale as what the Israel lobby is being accused of.

        And a double reminder that it's an Irish song that tells an Irish perspective,not an American one.

    • Dig1t 5 hours ago

      Imagine if we sent Senagal $10M per day in tax payer money and questioning it led to your own politicians labeling you as "anti-senagalese" and being ousted from every political party.

  • kfterrg67 a day ago

    [flagged]

    • ratelimitsteve a day ago

      +1 for differentiating between country and the ethnicity

    • IAmBroom a day ago

      Downvoted because people don't like to admit that pro-Israel factions of the US have a lot of sway in Washington.

      OK, they're probably OK with the way I worded it, but as soon as you admit that many of those pro-Israel factions are of one religious background in particular, it's a no-no.

      Which is stupid. It's not stereotyping to admit powerful people care about their own subgroups. It's stereotyping to insist it's only one group that's like this, or that everyone in that group is like this.

      • ratelimitsteve a day ago

        it's not stereotyping but its only relevant if you're trying to make a point about that religious background, and if you are then you have to consider that the vast majority of people of that background aren't members of pro-Israel factions that dominate the government so what's the actual point of bringing up the religious background? To muddy the waters, of course, and to try to paint more people with the same broad brush. After all, we don't hold Christendom responsible for everything bad any Christian has ever done.

      • BobaFloutist a day ago

        Is the religious background you're thinking of evangelical Christianity, because if it's not I suspect you're mistaken.

yahoozoo 2 hours ago

Another day, another reason to love Israel. /s

antonvs a day ago

[flagged]

  • dlubarov a day ago

    By wanting to know when foreign states are snooping on their data? The Guardian is trying their best to paint this as something nefarious on Israel's part, but it just isn't.

    Maybe Amazon and Google created a compliance issue for themselves, but that's not Israel's problem; Israel isn't obligated to comply with foreign states' gag orders.

  • t-3 a day ago

    Intentionally. An easy way to accuse people who oppose you of bias is to bait them into producing quotes and soundbites that can later be used (out-of-context or not) as evidence of antisemitism.

    • votepaunchy a day ago

      [flagged]

      • rozap 7 hours ago

        Confidential documents yes. Genocide, also yes.

znpy 6 hours ago

[flagged]

  • b00ty4breakfast 5 hours ago

    As if the terms of Amazon's contract with the Chinese government being leaked wouldn't be massive news. This kind of cynicism is precisely why these things aren't challenged; "of course bad stuff is happening, why should I be concerned???"

  • mynameajeff 6 hours ago

    Could you elaborate on what specifically details regarding cn-northwest-1/similar are remotely similar to what's being described in the article?

buyucu a day ago

[flagged]

  • dang 8 hours ago

    Please don't post in the flamewar style to Hacker News, regardless of what view you hold or how strongly you feel about it. It's not what this site is for, and destroys what it is for.

    https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

    • buyucu 6 hours ago

      If mass murder at this scale does not horrify and offend you, then you have failed as a human being. That is what destroys things.

      • dang 5 hours ago

        We're talking about two different things. You're talking about something big and I'm talking about something small.

        Nevertheless, we need you to follow HN's rules when posting here, same as for any other user.

  • gruez a day ago

    [flagged]

    • jordanb a day ago

      I don't know these places all seem pretty bad but I'm not directly enabling their behavior as an American citizen and taxpayer.

      • gruez a day ago

        [flagged]

        • bell-cot a day ago

          Is he really trying to move those goalposts? Or is he just voicing the most-common way for humans to process such events?

          I'm thinking that 99% of people would feel horrible and/or morally responsible if they lent an axe to their neighbor Mr. Seemed-Nice, which he then used to kill his wife. Vs. far less so, if their neighbor bought his fatal ax from Amazon or Walmart.

          • theobreuerweil a day ago

            This is exactly what I was trying to point out. You've made some reasonable points here, but that doesn't offer any evidence for the hyperbolic statement that Israel is pure and undiluted evil. Israel could be a bad place without that statement being true.

            This might seem like a silly distinction to some but what I find depressing about modern culture wars is how "we disagree on these points" seems to morph into "you and everything you represent is terrible". Nuance matters.

            • bell-cot a day ago

              You seem a bit over-focused on the literal truth value of that "Israel is pure and undiluted..." statement.

              Vs. 99% of educated and rational people recognize that as a bombastic/emotive statement. Arguing its truth value is like kitchen-testing whether a cookie recipe turns out worse if you replace "2C sugar, 1/2t salt" with "2C salt, 1/2t sugar".

              And sadly, such bombastic/emotive mis-statements are far, far older than our modern culture wars.

              • theobreuerweil 4 hours ago

                It’s very possible that things were always this way, you’re right. My own perception is that politics has become more divisive and less respectful in my own lifetime, and I happen to think that social media makes this worse, but that’s admittedly just an opinion.

                To the emotional statement: I think I’d get a reaction if rather than saying “I don’t think Go is a good language” I said something like “Go is objectively the worst programming language ever devised”. I get your point but if you feel emotional about something then say so - IMO the parent comment did much more than that.

              • gruez a day ago

                >You seem a bit over-focused on the literal truth value of that "Israel is pure and undiluted..." statement.

                >Vs. 99% of educated and rational people recognize that as a bombastic/emotive statement.

                That's a cope. Words have meanings, and being able to make and walk back on misleading/false statements with "I was being bombastic/emotive and it wasn't meant to be taken literally" absolutely poisons any sort of attempt rational discourse. "Israel committed war crimes" becomes not a statement about whether Israel broke international laws but whether you support Israel or not, "fake news" becomes not a statement about whether the news story was conjured from thin air but whether you like the story, etc.

                • bell-cot a day ago

                  Words have meanings, and "%" obviously means division by zero.

                  If you logically disproved the "Israel is pure and undiluted..." statement - say, by finding one saintly-pure Israeli preschool teacher - would anyone outside the Temple of Ultimate Pedantry really care?

                  Vs. if you took that statement to mean "I am very angrily anti-Israeli", might you find it quicker & easier to communicate your own position? Or at least make it a bit difficult for people (who you obviously don't like) to deny your interpretations of their positions?

                  • gruez a day ago

                    >If you logically disproved the "Israel is pure and undiluted..." statement - say, by finding one saintly-pure Israeli preschool teacher - would anyone outside the Temple of Ultimate Pedantry really care?

                    Do you think Trump supporters actually cares whether the stories he calls out as "fake news" were actually fake or just displeased the president? Or whether the election was "stolen", or he simply didn't like the way it was conducted?

                    >Vs. if you took that statement to mean "I am very angrily anti-Israeli", might you find it quicker & easier to communicate your own position? Or at least make it a bit difficult for people (who you obviously don't like) to deny your interpretations of their positions?

                    But why add all that extra stuff about being the most evil? If you just wanted to express his displeasure at israel, you could have just said "I'm mad at israel", or even "israel is evil". The fact OP went out of his way to say that "israel is the most evil" suggests that he thought he had something to gain from doing so, like adding the fib makes his argument more convincing or something. Same with Trump calling stuff "fake news" instead of just saying "I don't like this story about me".

                    • bell-cot a day ago

                      > Do you think...?

                      Most don't. A few (and more of the swing voters) care somewhat. Good reason to not spend (waste) time getting picky on the details, eh?

                      > But why...?

                      Some combination of social signalling/performance - "look at my uber-ultimate loyalty to the anti-Israel cause!!!" - and an ancient human tendency to exaggerate for emotional emphasis. Anecdote: Back in the 1900's, one of my nieces routinely referred to her kid sister as the "spawn of the devil" and similar. Why? Until the birth of the younger, the older niece had been the baby of the family, and had her own bedroom. Plus normal sibling rivalry. Fast-forward 2 decades from that - and the two nieces were on perfectly friendly terms. The older one both got the younger one a nice office job, and was happy to have the younger one babysit her own small children.

        • buyucu 18 hours ago

          If the mass murder committed by Israel against the Palestinian, Lebanese and Syrian people does not horrify you, then you don't have shred of humanity left in you.

          Arguing about pedantic details does not change that.

  • theobreuerweil a day ago

    [flagged]

    • baklavaEmperor a day ago

      Because when a nation starts believing its own myths of moral purity, it stops seeing the line between justice and domination. This is a dangerous line to cross.

      • theobreuerweil a day ago

        That might be true but, even if it is, it's a far cry from the statement that the Israeli government is singularly evil.

    • rkozik1989 a day ago

      Israel stole US nuclear secrets to create their own nuclear weapons program, they killed American navy men, they destroyed 90% of the buildings in Gaza and very blatantly committed genocide in the process of doing so, Palestinians prisoners are commonly held without trials or charges i.e. they're hostages. Zionism literally cannot exist without them committing ethnic cleansing because everywhere Israelis live used to be Palestinian properties.

      Honestly, what is your point? What are you seeing that the rest of us aren't getting? For the record, my mother's family is mostly Sephardic.

      • dlubarov a day ago

        > they killed American navy men

        This was about 50 years ago, was accidental, and Israel apologized and paid reparations soon after.

        This is a pretty clear example of double standards for Israel - no other country gets demonized for friendly fire incidents.

        • Stevvo a day ago

          None of the sailors that survived believe it was accidental. They claim it was a deliberate false-flag attack.

          • dlubarov a day ago

            The claims that it was deliberate boil down to "they must have known because there were identifying marks", which can be said about almost any friendly fire incident. In reality, not every operation is executed competently. Plenty of militaries have shot down their own airplanes, for example, despite the existence of several safeguards designed to prevent that.

            • bigyabai a day ago

              Alternatively, Israel may well have identified the ship and decided to sink it regardless. The USS Liberty was a SigInt ship that was well-known for monitoring wireless transmissions to hold nations accountable from offshore. Israel, at the time, was engaged in an internationally condemned and illegal military operation in the Golan Heights, and may just as well have sank it consciously to prevent the US from taking leverage of the situation.

              We may never know the truth, taking Israel's Military Censor into account.

              • dlubarov a day ago

                Your speculation seems a bit farfetched - there's no evidence that intelligence collected by USS Liberty was hurting Israel, and if Israel's goal was to avoid scrutiny, attacking an expensive asset of the world's superpower would have been rather counterproductive.

                Israel captured the Golan Heights because it had been used to shell Israeli communities for decades, and that continued even after Syria officially accepted the ceasefire. It would be unreasonable to expect Israel to tolerate that sort of aggression; no capable military would do so.

                • bigyabai a day ago

                  > It would be unreasonable to expect Israel to tolerate that sort of aggression

                  It would also be unreasonable to allow Israel to colonize the annexed territory in violation of international law, especially if the goal is to reduce the exposure of Israeli citizens to reparation attacks. The Knesset isn't exactly known for reasonable decisions though, and I'm willing to extend that judgement to the upper echelons of Israeli leadership as well. Maybe I'm bigoted.

                  Again - evidence-based speculation would be of use if the IDF didn't directly censor all domestic reporting and investigations. An honest postmortum was never going to be an option, even if Israel bombed the Liberty with custards and coffee. Cui bono, you decide.

                  • dlubarov a day ago

                    > if the IDF didn't directly censor all domestic reporting and investigations

                    This just seems like another double standard. What modern military doesn't censor reporting during a war in its own territory?

                    > An honest postmortum

                    Israel and the US settled the matter (with the help of substantial reparations) and went on to become allies. Why would they bother trying to convince anyone else?

                    And what would the convincing postmortum you're expecting look like? Some kind of third-party investigation? Can you name any military that willingly subjects itself to such investigations?

                    • bigyabai 21 hours ago

                      > What modern military doesn't censor reporting during a war in its own territory?

                      The ones willing to defer to an ICJ investigation? Hell, an IAEA inspection?

                      Both Dimona and the Liberty were critically reliant on America's infinite tolerance for Israeli transgression. Kennedy's stance towards Israel could have only convinced Johnson that resistance was futile, there's no way he could raise a finger if he did suspect foul play. The two nations were motley and often disagreeing partners united by a desire to mete out territory of neighboring petrostates. If a closed-door meeting ever decided that secrecy was the cost of keeping oil prices low, not a single American president would put their name on the line to speak up about it.

                      Not a damning accusation, sure. But it's also the same thing many Americans wondered in 1967.

                      • mikkupikku 6 minutes ago

                        You're putting it gently. They killed him for insisting on inspections of Dimona.

                      • dlubarov 20 hours ago

                        > The ones willing to defer to an ICJ investigation?

                        What state has ever consented to an ICJ investigation that was focused on interrogating its military command or other sensitive military assets?

                        > Hell, an IAEA inspection?

                        If a state is an IAEA member, their nuclear program is (ostensibly) not a military program, so there should be no military secrets at risk.

                        > America's infinite tolerance for Israeli transgression

                        Even if we accept the extraordinary claim that the US would have tolerated what it knew was an intentional attack on an expensive ship, at best that means that we can't infer anything from the US reaction. There are plenty of other reasons to doubt that the attack was intentional. I.e. it's extremely difficult to imagine any risk-benefit analysis under which it would make sense for Israel to suddenly attack a neutral superpower in the middle of a war for its survival.

                        • bigyabai 19 hours ago

                          > There are plenty of other reasons to doubt that the attack was intentional

                          I don't buy them, especially given Israel's 1967 political situation. Fun discussion though, thanks for entertaining it!

              • mhb a day ago

                That's ridiculous to anyone who has read the slightest bit about the lengths to which Israel goes to avoid actions against the US.

                • bigyabai a day ago

                  It seems to track with Seymour Hersh's accusations of Israeli intelligence holding the CIA over a barrel. If the Mossad wanted to maintain their access to satellite surveillance over Russia and Syria, letting the US blackmail them could have jeopardized their cooperation.

                  Taking into account the lengths to which Israel goes currying favor with the US, pretending to show remorse for a sunken ship is nothing compared to the sham Dimona investigation they put together for the Kennedy administration. Lying isn't beneath their means.

      • lokar 10 hours ago

        The started off settlement by legally buying property for wealth (mostly absentee) landlords, who were non-Palestinians (they lived in other part of the Ottoman Empire).

        • churchill 7 hours ago

          If I setup a $10b trust fund to buy up Texan land, I can't unilaterally invade Texas and build my ethnostate on it after I've purchased, say, 6-7% of it. That's the percentage of Palestine the Zionists bought before expelling the indigenous people in the Nakba genocide.

          Likewise, if you legally purchase double-digit percentages of Indian, Chinese, Brit, Australian land, it doesn't give you the moral or legal precedent to expel the natives from the rest of their land and declare it your state.

    • bell-cot a day ago

      [flagged]

      • buyucu a day ago

        Rwandan genocide was almost 30 years ago. There is nothing I can do to help there.

        Israel is comitting a genocide and attacking/murdering everyone right now.

        That is the crucial difference.

        • mhb a day ago

          [flagged]

          • buyucu 18 hours ago

            What is wrong with helping Palestine? Are we to look the other way as the genocidal religious zealots in Tel Aviv commit mass murder?

            • mhb 11 hours ago

              > There is nothing I can do to help there.

              What is wrong with "helping" Sudan? Your comment suggested that the only reason you weren't "helping" in Rwanda is that you couldn't because it was 30 years ago.

              If you think commenting here is "helping" "Palestine", you need to recalibrate your assessment of the impact of HN comments on the world.

              • worik 5 hours ago

                The genocide in Sudan is horrific.

                It in no way diminishes the genocide in Gaza

                Both countries should be sanctioned

          • ilegitmadethisw 19 hours ago

            Oh wow I didn’t know that America was funding the atrocities in Sudan.

            What’s also neat is that in America you can say “free Sudan” and not worry about losing your livelihood, but good luck with saying “free Palestine” and not getting swarmed.

            • mhb 19 hours ago

              I suspect that buyucu's "help[ing]" by spewing into the void about Sudan will have only negligibly less impact than his "help[ing]" with Israel.

      • jedimind a day ago

        It's not just a numbers game. Many of those you've listed also only lasted a few years, while Israel's evil still continues after almost a century.

        "Operation Cast Thy Bread was a top-secret biological warfare operation conducted by the Haganah and later the Israel Defense Forces which began in April 1948, during the 1948 Palestine war. The Haganah used typhoid bacteria to contaminate drinking water wells in violation of the 1925 Geneva Protocol."

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Cast_Thy_Bread

        Not to mention that Israel has dropped the equivalent of several nuclear bombs on a tiny open-air concentration camp with no possibility to flee.

        • theobreuerweil a day ago

          You've now mentioned this twice in this thread. We can agree that you've pointed to some specific misdeeds but you've not demonstrated why is this so much worse than many of the other dreadful things happening in the world. There are massacres in Myanmar and Sudan, ethnic cleansing in China. If we're going back in history, the United States was founded on ethnic cleansing and was funded by the slave trade. Most major European countries have similar track records.

          I'm not saying that the United States or Europe are evil places. I'm trying to illustrate that the things you've mentioned do not justify the claim that Israel is uniquely evil, either in modern or historical terms.

          • buyucu a day ago

            Is Europe or the US engaged in slave trade right now? Israel is committing mass murder right now. There is a difference between past evils that can't be helped and present evils that we have the power to stop.

            • theobreuerweil 4 hours ago

              There is indeed a difference and I don’t think we’re disagreeing on that.

          • jedimind a day ago

            [flagged]

            • dang 8 hours ago

              We've banned this account for using HN primarily for political battle and ignoring our request to stop doing this.

              (No, this is not because of your views; yes it works the same way for accounts with opposite views. It's because this is a failure mode for HN, and therefore an important line to draw.)

              https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

zouhair an hour ago

[flagged]

  • thomassmith65 23 minutes ago

    "Alright, they did give us irrigation. But other than gender equality, freedom of religion, gay rights, democracy, education, a thriving economy, and irrigation, what have the Israelis ever done for us?" /s

hereme888 2 hours ago

Israel is at war with terrorists like Hamas. Given the shady history of Google and Amazon shutting down servers over political opinions, like with Parler, Israel smartly insists on a no-cutoff clause in the Nimbus deal—if the companies sign on, that's on them. Totally reasonable. It's critical, mission-ready services. You can't back out of that in the middle of a war. Big Tech does the same for the U.S. military.

Google fired ~50 protesters who tried to disrupt the project with their personal agendas.

Israel moves intercepted Palestinian comms data from Microsoft to AWS after MS pulls the plug, and then the biased, anti-Israel UN—which the U.S. has publicly rebuked for UNRWA ties to Hamas terror in Gaza—starts complaining, as usual.

Google and AWS, who actually know the contract details, flat-out deny any illegal stuff.

This is critics with strong opposition to Israeli policies joining the political and digital front of the war. Who wrote the article? A super biased guy, Yuval Abraham, who's made a career out of slamming Israel and the IDF, teaming up with an anti-Israel media like +972 Magazine.

But, at the end of the day, only a court with proper jurisdiction can properly investigate. This is my view.

mattfrommars 3 hours ago

Israel just can't get any more shittier.

  • kossTKR 3 hours ago

    My comment and others point to the israeli atrocities here all just all just got flagged and removed in a very suspicious way with tons of "disinformation" comments below them, basic stuff that's literally been said by the UN, Amnesty, Red Cross, Doctors without borders etc. for years is flaggable now?

    I thought censoring and straight up brigading was not allowed here? But i guess if they do what the article is about they can easily sway a thread like this in a few minutes, and i'm sure they do when stuff becomes frontpage on various sites. Can't talk about the genocide.

    • FridayoLeary 13 minutes ago

      You're making the appeal to authority fallacy. Just because these organisations claim it doesn't make it true. The UN is one of the most discredited bodies. None of the others have distinguished themselves over the course of the war. As far as i and many others are concerned they are hopelessly biased captives to hamas concerns, regardless of the good work they do in other areas.

      It's not censoring, hn has a very low tolerance for flamebait.

lingrush4 2 hours ago

Pretty disgustingly anti-Semitic response by this website. I've never seen such support for gag orders in my life. If the ACLU put this same provision in their contract, people would be bending over backwards to tell us how clever it is.

The comments calling Israel evil for wanting to be notified when other countries try to steal their data are particularly grotesque.

  • dlubarov an hour ago

    It is extremely hard to imagine such an article being written, and such a response generated, about any other country. "Denmark asks cloud providers to privately notify it if its data is leaked to other states" sounds way too boring to be published, let alone generate outrage.

    Change it to Israel, sprinkle in some vaguely insidious language (a contract becomes a "secret agreement", etc), and suddenly it's a scandal.

  • wahnfrieden 40 minutes ago

    Why are you advocating for treasonous spying on law enforcement?

  • DocTomoe an hour ago

    In all fairness, if you put data on the internet (aka "the Cloud"), here is no reasonable expectation of privacy, unless you yourself control both the server and the client AND have everything encrypted.