US Military: Data Brokers Used to Target American Troops in War Zones
- U.S. Central Command confirmed to lawmakers it received threat reports that adversaries are exploiting commercial location data to target or surveil U.S. forces in active war zones, marking the first official admission of such battlefield vulnerability.
- Senator Ron Wyden and a bipartisan group of legislators prompted the disclosure in a letter sent last Thursday to the Pentagon, urging officials to start treating the adtech industry as a national security threat.
- Representative Pat Harrigan, a former U.S. Army Special Forces officer, warned that browsers like Chrome "are built from the ground up to collect and share user data," effectively handing adversaries a weapon against troops.
- Alphabet's Google defended its browser, stating Chrome has "industry-leading security" and that the company has "long advocated for stronger rules and safeguards against data brokers" amid the ongoing debate.
- While journalists recently used billions of coordinates to expose movements around 11 U.S. military and intelligence sites in Germany, the threat dates back to 2016, when a contractor tracked special operations forces in Syria.
68 Articles
68 Articles
Commercial location data is being used to target US servicemembers, lawmakers warn
Foreign adversaries have used commercially available data from U.S. servicemembers to target their locations in active war zones, a bipartisan group of lawmakers revealed Thursday. In a letter to Department of Defense Chief Information Officer Kirsten Davies, fourteen members of Congress — led by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Rep. Pat Harrigan, R-N.C. — warned that the Pentagon “has not taken basic steps to protect U.S. military personnel from th…
Data brokers are helping enemies target US troops. The Pentagon must step up, lawmakers say
Adversaries have used commercially available location data to target U.S. servicemembers in war zones, a bipartisan group of lawmakers revealed Thursday. In a letter to Pentagon CIO Kirsten Davies, 14 members of Congress — led by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Rep. Pat Harrigan, R-N.C. — warned that the department “has not taken basic steps to protect U.S. military personnel from the serious counterintelligence and force protection threat posed by…
Is Big Tech Creating a National Security Crisis? Pentagon Says U.S. Troops Were Targeted Using Ad Data
The post Is Big Tech Creating a National Security Crisis? Pentagon Says U.S. Troops Were Targeted Using Ad Data appeared first on 24/7 Wall St.. Quick Read Alphabet (GOOG) generated $295B in 2025 ad revenue (74% of total company revenue), while Meta (META) earned $196B from ads (97% of revenue), but Walmart (WMT) and Netflix (NFLX) are proving advertising can be layered onto any platform with Walmart’s ad business growing 31% year-over-year an…
U.S. Troops Are Being Tracked And Targeted Through Commercial Phone Data
Despite knowing for a decade that commercial location data on smart phones could be used to track U.S. military personnel, the Pentagon took little action to neutralize the potential threat.
From Pentagon Concerns to Street-Level Phone Theft: Digital Tracking Is Everyone's Problem Now
From ad-tech surveillance targeting US troops to stolen iPhones and AI-assisted cyberattacks, this week's security news showed how deeply digital tracking now affects everyone.
‘Five-alarm fire’: Lawmakers say Pentagon must act after smartphone data used to target U.S. troops
The ability of adversaries to use commercial location data from smartphones to find and target U.S. troops in the Middle East is a "five-alarm fire" that demands immediate action, a group of bipartisan lawmakers said Thursday.
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