TORONTO — A secret document leaked by former National Security Agency analyst Edward Snowden shows Canada's electronic spy agency used information gleaned from a free internet service at a Canadian airport to track the wireless devices of thousands of airline passengers.
The report indicates the Communications Security Establishment Canada was given information taken from wireless devices using the airport's Wi-Fi system over a two-week period. It's not clear which airport was involved.
The document shows the spy agency was then able to track travelers for a week or more as they showed up in other Wi-Fi locations in cities across Canada.
The Canadian Broadcast Corporation obtained the document and posted it to its website Friday.
The report, dated May 2012, is a 27-page PowerPoint presentation describing the spy agency's airport tracking operation.
According to the document, the agency tracked metadata including the location and telephone numbers of calls made and received but not the content.
The spy agency is supposed to collect primarily foreign intelligence by intercepting overseas phone and internet traffic. It is prohibited by law from targeting Canadians without a judicial warrant.
The agency's spokeswoman Lauri Sullivan said no Canadian or foreign travelers were tracked or targeted and no information was collected or used.