Brazil announces secure email to counter US spying
14 OCTOBER 2013
AFP - Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff announced Sunday
that her government was creating a secure email system to try and shield
official communications from spying by the United States and other countries.
"We need more security on our messages to prevent
possible espionage," Rousseff said on Twitter, ordering the Federal Data
Processing Service, or SERPRO, to implement a safe email system throughout the
federal government.
The agency, which falls under Brazil's Finance Ministry,
develops secure systems for online tax returns and also creates new passports.
The move came after Rousseff publicly condemned spying
against Brazilian government agencies attributed to the United States and
Canada.
"This is the first step toward extending the privacy
and inviolability of official posts," Rousseff said.
After bringing her complaints against US intelligence
agencies to the United Nations General Assembly last month and canceling a
state visit to Washington, Rousseff announced that the country will host an
international conference on Internet governance in April.
In recent months, Brazilian media outlets have published
documents showing that the US National Security Agency's spied on Rousseff's
official communications, her close associates and state-controlled oil giant
Petrobras.
The information was revealed by Edward Snowden, a
30-year-old former NSA contractor who has sought refuge in Russia and is wanted
by the United States after revealing details of the agency's massive snooping
activities.
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