The shortener doesn't appear to have been used past 2013, and it's not clear whether or not the agency has either switched shorteners or dropped the strategy entirely. When asked, GCHQ would only issue its stock response that it doesn't comment on "intelligence matters," and that all its activity is conducted inside a "strict legal and policy framework" with "rigorous oversight."

Specialized web links aren't nearly as intrusive as hacks, of course, but there's still a reason for concern. The same concept used to pinpoint would-be revolutionaries has also been used to identify Anonymous and LulzSec participants, and could be used to monitor any group a government doesn't like. Online activists can avoid this kind of tracking by refusing to click links from unfamiliar URL shorteners, but that's one more thing they have to worry about.