I had
an old Remington typewriter in the house, purchased by my
grandfather. It was small portable machine with limited copy
capability, yet a great pleasure to use with feather touch keys. We
used to get it serviced from a guy occasionally. Except for that, it
never gave us any trouble. When I started my own business sometime
around 1976, I had typed my first quotation, delivery note and the
bill on the same typewriter.
Later
on, I replaced it with the regular office typewriter and subsequently
with a 486 personal computer and the old machine kept lying on a
table catching dust. I then decided to scrap it and sold it off at a
nominal price. I do not know what was it's fate after I sold it, but
I have a hunch that it may be working in some small shop or an office
in a dark allay somewhere in the city.
I was
able to throw away my old faithful, easily, but it seems that the
Indian High Commissioner and his staff based at London in UK, had
kept their old typewriters safely in an attic, when they changed over
to computers and electronic printers. It now looks that it was a
good move, because these old faithfuls are back into action after
being dusted off in the High commission, these days to hammer out all
sensitive and confidential documents.
After
recent revelations made by whistle blower Edward Snowden, which
showed that the US National Security Agency (NSA) planted bugs at the
Permanent Mission of India at the United Nations and the embassy in
Washington, the high commission staff, acutely aware that a similar
attempt might have been made by Britain's spy agency GCHQ to bug
the high commission in London, have taken steps to ensure that no
sensitive information is spied upon.
Londos's
GCHQ has been a partner of America's NSA in its global snooping
operation. Snowden has revealed that a top secret American internet
snooping programme has something like 700 servers installed at 150
locations across the world to track internet traffic, including one
in India. A map of locations of the surveillance servers has shown
that a server was installed near Delhi to snoop into Indian internet
users. The NSA supposedly used four different kinds of devices to spy
on the Indian diplomats and military officials.
That
is why, the high commission has brought back the old faithful
typewriters and all sensitive and classsified documents are strictly
typed on these old machines so that no trace is left behind. Indian
high commissioner in London, Jamini Bhagwati says that staff had been
told to be careful about even discussing classified information
inside the embassy premises for fear of bugs planted by international
security agencies. He says: said, "No highly-classified
information is discussed inside the embassy building. And it's very
tedious to step out into the garden every time something sensitive
has to be discussed." He calls it a blunt force security system
and adds: "Top secret cables are never conveyed through the
internet or machines with cable connections. External hard drives
with tremendous amount of data storage capacity are easy to access.
Therefore, top secret cables are written on the typewriter which
can't be tracked."
Snowden's
revelations also say that the US government paid at least £100m to
the UK spy agency GCHQ over the last three years to secure access to
intelligence gathering programmes. And that GCHQ had tapped into 200
fibre optic cables and was able to process data from at least 46 of
them at a time. By last year, GCHQ was handling 600 million
"telephone events" each day. It has for years been
collecting vast streams of sensitive personal information and then
sharing it with the NSA. Amount of information collected by GCHQ is
so huge every day that it would be equivalent to sending the contents
of all the books in the British Library 192 times.
Indian
high commissioner says in a lighter vein: "The British might
have got bored with what they hear us talking inside the embassy.
They must be saying 'this is what the Indians talk'."
Jokes
apart, the matter is very serious. But I was even more curious about
this sudden revelation by the Indian High Commissioner about the
security environment in his embassy. It appears to be a calculated
effort to pass on a message to the GCHQ, to give up snooping, because
not much can be found out with these simple security measures in
place.
Long
live Typewriters and after dinner walks in the gardens!
30
September 2013
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