My guess is the Feds are storing the data somewhere. Probably through some offshore proxy so it is more deniable. If I become a person of interest, they will start looking at it.
It was published in 2013 that NSA publicly stated at that time that all encrypted data they had any interest in, was being stored a minimum of five years, in hopes that a flaw in the encryption would be found. No distinction between foreign or domestic data.
Nobody in politics or the media said boo. The average Citizen never heard about it.
They didn’t build that massive data center in Utah on one of the largest cross-country fiber route for their amusement.
This is what they’ll admit to, in public. We all know that isn’t the entirety of the story. Too much money literally disappears into these places with no trace, for the public admitted mission to be all they’re doing.
This information along with other information offered back then, and numerous other announcements by security and privacy researchers, was the end of the most useful website on online and tech law analysis, Groklaw... a site started by a lady attorney who ran it for years.
She decided she could no longer have an online presence and perhaps accidentally entrap foreign or domestic information sources, since the known level of surveillance and retention being acknowledged in public was too risky.
As a lawyer with clients in tech, privacy, and encryption law, she had a responsibility to shut it down — so nobody would ever try to contact her about anything legal about online or tech law via the Internet, ever again.
This was around the time that both of the top rated and audited, fully-encrypted, offshore email providers also shut down, after being warned that their systems were either compromised or would be soon by the storage of the encrypted material direct from the US fiber taps.
Encrypting things is pretty much a myth of privacy or security at this point in history. Even if it’s secure today, it won’t be very long until it’s cracked by an entity with resources as massive as various US agencies have on black budgets. Principally NSA but we really don’t know who they share information with.
It’s basically a setup for major problems and nobody really has control over any of it anymore.
Example: There’s absolutely no way the politicians who think they’re getting away with something on their private emails or even private servers, are. They’re not. NSA knows what they’re up to. They have every phone call and every e-mail.
It takes a pretty amazingly moral leadership to not use that information to leverage politicians into providing larger black budgets.
And if anyone thinks they’re not doing that, they’re naive.
Anyone remember voting for the big data center in Utah and public discussion of costs? Hell no.
It feeds itself now. If anyone goes up against it, it knows their secrets that they don’t want exposed.
Tapping the Internet and storing encrypted traffic that can’t be read today for later viewing, is the way to build the ultimate blackmail machine.
Then you realize that it’s not just the data itself, but metadata is also extremely valuable. Just knowing Bob communicates with Mary and what time of day, is enough to start building a theory about why.