What Bezos got when he bought the Washington Post

What Bezos got when he bought the Washington Post

The new purchaser of the Washington Post, Jeffrey Bezos of Amazon, has stated publicly that when he takes the Post private the newspaper will be a stand-alone business, separate from the company of which Bezos is CEO. Bezos has also assured Post employees that he is committed to quality journalism, even suggesting a new golden era at the Post. There is no reason to doubt the statements, but independence from Amazon is hardly the sole concern raised by this remarkable purchase.

Bezos

Consider the concerns raised by the equally remarkable material leaked by former NSA employee and Booz Allen Hamilton contractor Edward Snowden. While Snowden may not have carried “four laptops” laden with documents, as first reported, he left Booz Allen loaded with information, and what he turned over to the Washington Post, the Post now owns.

 

Snowden

Not that you can accuse the Post of bragging about it. The exact extent of material provided by Snowden to the Post has not been fully reported. The material may not even be catalogued, although there have been hints in print that it is secure.

Still, according to the Post’s own reporting, the NSA material includes information on the U.S. intelligence budget; extrajudicial killings in Pakistan; CIA investigation of applicants seeking jobs in the U.S. intelligence community; an estimated 4,000 recent NSA internal probes of staff activity; information about the investigation of the 2009 Detroit ‘underwear bomber’; “231 offensive cyber-operations” by U.S. intelligence in 2011; the GENIE program, where “U.S. computer specialists break into foreign networks so they can be put under surreptitious U.S. control”; major expansion of the CIA’s Information Operations Center (IOC); information on NSA bulk collection of hundreds of millions of Americans’ phone records under a program started in 2006; construction and expansion of NSA data storage facilities in Ft. Meade and Utah; the official “178-page budget summary for the National Intelligence Program,” which “details the successes, failures and objectives” of the intelligence community with its (reported) “107,035 employees”; and “cutting-edge technologies, agent recruiting and ongoing operations.” This in just a quick overview, with presumably more revelations to come.

And all of this invaluable material will now be owned by one man, Jeffrey Bezos. Or looking at it another way, the trove of material will no longer be owned by Post Company shareholders including the Graham family, and will be owned instead by the private company Bezos sets up, whose management will have corporate authority to call the shots on the foregoing. In short, Mr. Bezos now owns documents concerning NSA metadata.

 

Amazon book sales

Not to be accused of being anti-business, and in the interest of full disclosure, I should clarify that I am an Amazon customer myself. I am generally a fan of delivery in commerce, saving time, travel, traffic and the nation’s energy resources–UPS, eBay, Amazon, FedEx, etc. As such, I deplore Texas Governor Rick Perry’s slapping an 8.25 percent sales tax on online sales to Texas customers. So much for that anti-tax, anti-Big Brother, pro-‘growth’ Red State policy we hear so much about. EBay sellers have to stick on an extra eight-and-a-quarter-per-cent for customers in Texas.

Amazon’s service has been generally okay, if nothing to write home (to Texas) about. Amazon makes millions from selling books, and the process seems to be getting smoother. However, the company has been no help whatsoever for individual authors trying to track the sales of their books, when publishers fail to pay royalties owed under contract to their authors. Perhaps that will improve over time, but I have found what a company does in one direction to be a pretty accurate gauge of its quality in another. It is a reasonable working hypothesis, for example, that federal contractor Booz Allen’s faulty vetting of Snowden was not the company’s only lapse.* (For what it’s worth, Amazon Web Services partners with Booz Allen on ‘data science’ and ‘cloud infrastructure’, and Booz Allen has rolled out a cloud computing service using Amazon SQS elements.)

Speaking of intellectual property, Bezos is now also the proud owner of information about data encrypting by competitors Apple, Facebook, Google, Hotmail, Microsoft, and Yahoo. In other words, the CEO of Amazon now owns a trove of NSA information about Amazon’s top competitors.

The Washington Post is not Amazon, of course. But it is ironic that Bezos’ Amazon cut off services for Wikileaks in 2010 after Wikileaks’ famous document dump, mostly from recent years, and now Amazon’s CEO owns copious information on “data from American technology companies, including Google,” collected by PRISM. The Post reported September 6 that the NSA “has made great strides in foiling encryption techniques used to protect Internet communications, and has established back doors to some companies’ encryption software,” according to Snowden documents.

Encryption, NSA bring the world together

By the way, we now also know via Snowden and the Post that under the Corporate Partner Access Project, NSA has paid “hundreds of millions of dollars a year to U.S. companies for clandestine access to their communications networks.” Not all of the companies compensated are Amazon competitors, although some are. Presumably Amazon was not among those compensated.

One final note. It is intriguing that the above story has been so little reported, i.e. not at all. No one pointed out the Snowden acquisition when Bezos purchased the Washington Post. No one has pointed it out since, either, until this writing. Arguably the two biggest names in the Post’s orbit this year were, one, Snowden, and two, Bezos, and until now, no one has connected the two.

 

This lacuna may be the power of narrative–the arc of the story dominates its content. Two flamboyant stories, one about Snowden and the NSA, and the other about the sale of the Washington Post to the CEO of Amazon, have been completely two different and separate stories.

The stories were separate for me also, as a reader; reading about them separately, I was slow putting them together, although presumably the lawyers doing due diligence for the sale took them into account. Exact dates for the chronology of the newspaper sale have not been reported. Edward Snowden’s first releases came the first week of June; the Post went quietly on the market, or put out feelers, reportedly early this year. I for one cannot help wondering whether Snowden would have given his information to the Post if he had known the newspaper was going to be sold. He was not in a position to hire due diligence attorneys.

*We now know that the same contractor who vetted Snowden, USIS, also vetted Washington Navy Yard shooter Aaron Alexis.

 

BOOZ ALLEN ETC and subcontractors

BOOZ ALLEN ETC and subcontractors

 

Part of the fallout from the spectacular security breach at Booz Allen Hamilton itself–when its contractor Edward Snowden, hired at age 29 to monitor global classified security from inside a National Security Agency station in Hawaii, revealed the capabilities–is that the subcontractor who vetted Snowden for Booz Allen is being investigated.

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

Snowden

The subcontractor is northern-Virginia based US Investigations Services (USIS). The company is not connected to the federal United States Information Service. The USIS web site bills it as “the leader in federal background investigations.” From a recent media release comes this announcement that USIS has won a contract from the Department of Homeland Security:

“FALLS CHURCH, Va., – US Investigations Services Professional Services Division, Inc. (USIS PSD), a subsidiary of US Investigations Services, LLC (USIS), the largest commercial provider of background investigations to the federal government, has been awarded a prime contract by the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), to provide biometric capture services in support of applications for a variety of immigration benefits and U.S. citizenship. The indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract is for one base year with four one-year options and has a potential value of $889 million over a five-year period.”

More good news for immigrants. Further information on USIS, from the company:

“USIS provides services under more than 100 contracts. It is the largest commercial provider of background investigations to the federal government. It has more than 6,000 employees providing services in all 50 states and U.S. territories and overseas. USIS offers a variety of adjudication support, including background checks, litigation support, records support, investigative analytics and biometric services, as well as customized solutions that help government clients manage records, information and documents. Learn more at www.USIS.com.”

Also provided is the company’s statement on the June 20 Senate Homeland Security Subcommittee hearing–Yes, we are being investigated–but it was not about Snowden, at least not last year–Nobody knew about Snowden then, including us:

FALLS CHURCH, VA, June 20, 2013 — At a Senate hearing today, questions were raised as to whether USIS is under “criminal investigation.” USIS has never been informed that it is under criminal investigation. In January 2012, USIS received a subpoena for records from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management’s (OPM) Office of Inspector General (OIG). USIS complied with that subpoena and has cooperated fully with the government’s civil investigative efforts.

In the same Senate hearing, questions were raised as to whether USIS had conducted the initial background investigation, or a periodic reinvestigation, for the security clearance of Edward Snowden. USIS conducts thousands of background investigations annually for OPM and other government agencies. These investigations are confidential and USIS does not comment on them.”

The federal investigation into USIS itself was first reported by the Wall Street Journal:

“USIS, a Falls Church, Va., company owned by private-equity firm Providence Equity Partners LLC, has more than 7,000 employees and conducts 45% of OPM investigations done by contractors, officials said. Last year, USIS received $200 million for its work, Ms. McCaskill said.”

The Washington Business Journal faults lack of competition in contracting for problems:

“So what is this type of work worth? In 2011, USIS was awarded a multiyear contract by OPM to conduct background investigative fieldwork for government agencies. The estimated total value of the contract was about $2.45 billion over five years. And USIS held the same contract before that award.”

Bloomberg News blames the outsourcing on Al Gore:

“The revelation that Snowden disclosed two classified U.S. surveillance programs after being vetted by USIS may have damaged the company’s reputation and prompted questions about the wisdom of outsourcing security reviews.”

Olbermann on Countdown

Bloomberg has a point. I, for one, also blame Al Gore for firing Keith Olbermann from CurrentTV.

But I digress.

 

Tom Lehrer, mathematician, humorist and song writer

Moving away from humor, Sourcewatch, among other sites, noted much earlier that the company was involved in the 2004 assault on Fallujah, in Iraq, and in an investigation on the assault connected to the death of Col. Ted Westhusing in 2005.

The company that owns USIS, Providence Equity Partners LLC, focuses according to its web site and company filings on investing in “media, communications, education and information.” More information:

“Established in 1989, the firm pioneered a sector-based approach to private equity, convinced that a dedicated team of industry experts could build companies of enduring value in the dynamic communications industry. Guided by this commitment, we have led some of the most exciting and successful companies in our sectors, generating superior investment returns across economic cycles. Today, having invested in more than 130 companies over our 23-year history, Providence is one of the world’s premiere private equity firms and a dominant global franchise in the media, communications, education and information industries. . . .

Our team actively seeks investment opportunities on a global basis from offices in Providence, New York, London, Hong Kong, Beijing and New Delhi. We partner with companies across different stages in their development, from growth capital and complex recapitalizations of family-owned businesses to large buyouts and take-privates. We can employ a variety of financing structures and target equity investments of $150 million to $800 million. We prefer to lead our investments, serve on company boards, and work collaboratively with company management. From broadband to broadcast, music to film, wireline to wireless, publishing to Internet, we bring unparalleled industry, financial and operational expertise to each of our portfolio companies.”

Sounds secure, doesn’t it? Who would imagine that a global company, its offices around the world connected by thousands of electronic messages and transactions weekly, could have any problems–even indirect–with security breaches on its watch?

When again did satire die, exactly?

Among those companies is Altegrity, the parent company of USIS. Altegrity is among other things the holding company for Kroll Ontrack Inc. and London-based Kroll Advisory Solutions, spin-offs from the former Kroll Inc, which provided security services in Iraq. Kroll, like Booz Allen Hamilton with which it had significant interchange, was up to its eyeballs in boosting war with Iraq, a war for which it also helped prepare and from which it received substantial government contracting business. Kroll was previously owned by Marsh & McLennan, also involved both in boosting the invasion of Iraq and in Iraq war business once the war was underway. So once again–not to hammer a point that should be sufficiently obvious by now–we have security and investigation companies participating in monitoring, oversight, or investigation of what amounts to their own previous work. The companies, furthermore, having won government contracts for their previous work, are now winning government contracts to retrace the steps–so to speak–on a global scale.

 

Another company held by Altegrity, by the way, is HireRight, “the commercial employment screening business of Altegrity that serves more than 30,000 commercial customers in the U.S. and overseas, including more than 25 percent of the Fortune 500.”

 

It remains to be seen whether the vetting for those 30,000 commercial customers rises to the standard of the vetting that gave us Edward Snowden.

 

To be continued