21 August 2003:
From: B
Subject: Downtown Switching HubsI visited http://cryptome.org/nytel-eyeball.htm
There is one major mistake. 375 Pearl Street (your #4) is not a switch hub. It is an admin building for Verizon. And there are most definitely windows. The building was designed to be a switching hub but there was difficulty in bringing the lines into the building.
10 July 2002. Update photos of hubs and temporary cabling.
7 July 2002. Add construction dates and names of hub buildings from One Thousand New York Buildings, Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers, New York, 2002.
4 July
2002
Source of maps and photos: Mapquest.com
See related telecommunication cable systems:
http://cryptome.org/cable-eyeball.htm
As in all countries, telecommunication hubs are dependable sources of information by legal and illegal taps, interception of air-borne signals, acoustical and optical Tempest, and lesser known techniques. A specialist in technical surveillance countermeasures (TSCM) says encryption is ineffective against what is available; that may be true or smoke.
Another TSCM specialist claims there are at least 18 US intelligence and counterintelligence offices in Manhattan targeting United Nations members and foreign intelligence, consulate and commercial activities along with a bevy of law enforcement agencies surveilling criminal suspects. Governmental and commercial surveillance teams encounter each other, equipment spying on equipment, competing with latest technology and methods, and practice hands-off tolerance so long as identities and locations are kept quiet within the robust, well-fed and financed family, ready to switch jobs and swap tips for boosting the national and domestic security industry.
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![]() 40 West Street Photo: Cryptome, 3 October 2001
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![]() 40 West Street Photo: Cryptome, 10 July 2002 |
![]() 40 West Street, temporary cables running down face. Photo: Cryptome, 10 July 2002 |
![]() 40 West Street , temporary cables running down face. Photo: Cryptome, 10 July 2002 |
![]() 40 West Street, temporary cables running along south arcade; at left they rise to the underside of sidewalk scaffold. Photo: Cryptome, 10 July 2002 |
![]() 40 West Street, temporary cables running under sidewalk scaffolding. Photo: Cryptome, 10 July 2002
Temporary cables from 40 West Street two blocks away, |
![]() Temporary utilities Photo: Cryptome, 4 January 2002 |
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Three Hubs: at the left is Hub 3 - 32 Avenue of the Americas, center
is Hub 2 - 60 Hudson Street, and at the right Hub 5 - 33 Thomas at Church
Street, with antenna atop each. |
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This is the second oldest hub (built 1930), about 30 stories high. Immediately after the 9/11 attack it was placed under high security and remains one of the heaviest-guarded telecommuncations facilities along with the other hubs described here. |
![]() 60 Hudson Street Photo, Cryptome, 8 July 2002 |
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![]() 32 Avenue of the Americas (6th Avenue) Photo: Cryptome, 8 July 2002 |
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![]() 375 Avenue of the Finest (Pearl Street) Photo: Cryptome, 8 July 2002 |
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![]() 33 Thomas Street Photo: Cryptome, 8 July 2002 |
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