Edward Snowden Identified A Reporter Having A Seizure Over …

Edward Snowden wasn't legally allowed to be there in person, but that didn't stop him from coming to a seizing journalist's aid during a recent Skype conference with the ACLU.

The exiled journalist -- who video-chats via an advanced computer on wheels called "The Snowdenbot" out of Russia -- suffers from epilepsy himself, and subsequently knew just what to do when he saw someone across his screen faint.

German journalist Julia Proisinger described Snowden's heroism for Der Tagesspiegel:

I wake up, my head lies bedded on a sand bag, my body is in the recovery position. A calm voice is coming from the screen. The first fits are always the worst, Snowden says... He tells me that he was only diagnosed when he was 23 years old. When he fled the US a little more than a year ago, he told his employer that he had to go away for a few weeks for treatment for his epilepsy. Then Snowden apologises for making me look at the flickering screen, it had triggered the fit, he says.

Snowden then instructed ACLU lawyer Ben Wizner to bring her "a glass of juice."

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Edward Snowden ‘robot’ helps epileptic journalist at ACLU …

A journalist recently woke to the soothing voice of Edward Snowden walking his attorney in New York through her epileptic seizure.

The flickering of a video screen had triggered a seizure in Julia Prosinger, a German reporter for Der Tagesspiegel, as she spoke to Edward Snowden on a Skype call.

Snowden then told his American Civil Liberties Union attorney Ben Wizner, who was sitting with Prosinger in New York, how to help her citing his own epilepsy as experience.

The exiled whistleblower recognized the medical emergency all the way from Moscow during the call, which was channeled through a telepresence robot.

The 'bot is at the ACLU office in lower Manhattan, where Snowden can talk constitutional law, meet with journalists and even get a view of the Statue of Liberty.

"He's used it to roll out into the hallway and generally interact with large numbers of ACLU staff," Wizner told Wired.

That day, Snowden also used it to tell Wizner what to do when Julia Prosinger fainted in the ACLU office.

Prosinger had been explaining German politics to Snowden when the flicker of his video screen spurred the seizure.

She woke up with her head resting on a bean bag and her body "in the recovery position," Prosinger wrote in a June 10 article translated to English. Snowden also instructed Wizner to grab a glass of juice for her.

The seizure nearly knocked Prosinger into a set of metal filing cabinets, but Snowden had Wizner get her away from the hard surface before she hurt herself.

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Hong Kong still without answers one year after Edward …

Relations between Hong Kong and the United States took a big hit with the Edward Snowden saga, and while they appear to have warmed since then, the long-term impact is harder to assess.

The ramifications of the city's brief encounter with the realities of superpower espionage had an immediate effect on the city he chose as his first "safe harbour".

Attempts by Washington to have Snowden extradited sparked street demonstrations in support of the former NSA contractor, and the public generally seemed to back the young American's crusade.

We will probably never know if Hong Kong's Justice Department was just being scrupulous or was practising a diplomatic sleight of hand conceived in Beijing when it rejected Washington's request for Snowden's arrest. But we do know the events of a year ago this month allowed the city and the nation to walk away relatively unscathed.

"We know that when Snowden left, Hong Kong-US relations were probably at an all-time low," said Simon Young, barrister and law professor at the University of Hong Kong.

"There are no obvious signs that relations have been restored or warmed much in the past year, especially with Chinese-backed criticisms of US intervention in Hong Kong's political reform process."

The US knows [we] will not necessarily bend over backwards to assist

HKU LAW PROFESSOR SIMON YOUNG

A few days after Snowden broke cover in Hong Kong via a 12-minute video on The Guardian website on June 10, justice officials in the US asked Hong Kong to detain him.

But when the US failed to get their man, a war of words broke out between Justice Secretary Rimsky Yuen Kwok-keung and the US Attorney General Eric Holder, prompting Yuen to release details of the events leading up to Snowden's departure.

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EDWARD SNOWDEN OBEYED THE WORD OF GOD AND THE CONSTITUTION: Michael Anthony Peroutka – Video


EDWARD SNOWDEN OBEYED THE WORD OF GOD AND THE CONSTITUTION: Michael Anthony Peroutka
I #39;ve been in a lot of airports lately and airports are hard on me. Nowadays, airports seem to be places where we get to see a preview of the latest loss of American liberty and the purposeful...

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EDWARD SNOWDEN OBEYED THE WORD OF GOD AND THE CONSTITUTION: Michael Anthony Peroutka - Video

Inside Edward Snowden’s Life as a Robot | Threat Level …

Snowden appears via Beam bot in the ACLUs New York offices with (from left) journalist Laura Poitras, Freedom of the Press Foundation director Trevor Timm and security technologist Micah Lee. Photo: Courtesy of Freedom of the Press Foundation

Since he first became a household name a year ago, Edward Snowden has been a modern Max Headroom, appearing only as a face on a screen broadcast from exile in Hong Kong or Russia. But in the age of the telepresence robot, being a face on a screen isnt as restrictive as it used to be.

For at least the past three months, Snowden and his supporters have been experimenting with a Beam Pro remote presence system, a Wi-Fi-connected screen and camera on wheels that Snowden can use to communicate with the staffers in the New York office of the American Civil Liberties Union, according to his ACLU lawyer Ben Wizner. From a computer in Moscow, Snowden can turn on the video bot and wheel around the ACLUs office on a whim. And Snowdens supporters hope the Beam system might be the first of several that could bring the distant whistleblower into the room with colleagues around the world, partially erasing the isolation enforced by the Espionage Act charges awaiting him if he leaves the relative safety of Russia.

Hes used it to roll out into the hallway and generously interact with large numbers of ACLU staff, says Wizner. I think it can be a profound response to exile.

Snowdens Beam bot has been in the ACLU offices since before his TED talk in March, when he used the same $16,000 wheeled robot to speak on stage. Wizner says the TED organizers wanted to test the robot in New York before it was used at the Vancouver conference. They brought a couple models to the office, and gave us a login, says Wizner. We found that it worked really well.

Snowden can drive his in-office telepresence system with his keyboards arrow keys at around two miles an hour. It has an eight hour battery life before it needs to dock into a $950 charging station, and even comes with a party mode that activates more ambient microphones and elevates the volume of its speaker.

Edward Snowden is interviewed by TED Curator Chris Anderson via Beam during the 2014 TED conference. Photo: Steven Rosenbaum/Getty

Since its first appearance at TED, Snowdens Beam came into the spotlight again Wednesday in a story in the German newspaper Tagesspiegel. But while Tagesspiegel described Snowden as using the Beam system on a regular basis, Wizner says Snowdenbot has been a more occasional visitor to the ACLU office. Once, the non-profits executive director Anthony Romero gave the Snowden-possessed machine a walking tour of the building. Another time, Wizner had to jump on a phone call during a meeting with his whistleblower client. When he got off the phone, he found that Snowden had rolled the bot into civil liberties lawyer Jameel Jaffers office and was discussing the 702 provision of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. It was kind of cool, Wizner says.1

Trevor Timm, the director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation where Snowden sits on the board, says Snowden had been interested in trying the telepresence bot even before his TED talk. He was telling people for a while that it could be this game-changing technology, says Timm. I dont think anyone quite believed him until we saw it in actionAll he needs is arms to open doors, and he can go wherever he wants.

Timm met with Snowden-as-robot last April, along with journalist and Snowden-chronicling filmmaker Laura Poitras. It lights up and he shows up on the screen, Timm describes. When it started moving towards us, everyone kind of jumped back.

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Edward Snowden a year on: Odyssey of the whistle-blower …

"If I could go anywhere in the world, that place would be home." So said Edward Snowden in Moscow on May 28.

Home is, of course, America. But for the 30-year-old former NSA contractor, who turned his life upside down to expose the mass surveillance carried out in secret by the US government, the exact location of home is difficult to pinpoint.

Maryland - one of the wealthiest states - could stake a claim. It is where Snowden spent his formative years, attending primary and middle schools in Anne Arundel County, between Washington and Baltimore.

Snowden dropped out of high school in 1998 after a prolonged illness. As a result, he spent long periods at home.

It was during this time that his fascination for how things worked developed into a passion for computers and technology.

In 2001, when he was in his late teens, his parents divorced.

Ed, as he was known, moved into a house his mother, Elizabeth "Wendy" Snowden, bought in Ellicott City, Maryland, where she still lives.

Overlooking a tennis court and playground, the house is a 25-minute drive from downtown Baltimore, the largest city in Maryland, where Wendy works as the chief deputy clerk for administration and information technology at the federal court. She has never spoken publicly about the events that catapulted her son into the global spotlight.

When the South China Morning Post visited the courthouse where she works, we were told by officials she would be making "no comment".

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Former Vice President Al Gore Declines To Call Edward …

Speaking at the Southland Conference, former Vice President Al Gore declined to call former NSA contractor Edward Snowden a traitor for leaking tens of thousands of secret government documents to journalists.

In response to the question Is Edward Snowden a traitor? Gore dismissedthe dichotomy, not putting him into the category of being a traitor or not. Continuing, Gore noted that Snowden clearly violated the law, but also pointed out that his revelations have shown violations of the United States Constitution that were way more serious than the crimes that he committed.

Gores stature at home and abroad makes his unwillingness to call Snowden a traitor notable. Also, his implication that the NSA has violated the Constitution is something to chew on.

Snowden provided an important service, according to Gore.

Current government members have endeavoredto paint Snowden as not merely a traitor, but also possibly anagent of a foreign power. New head of the NSAAdmiral Michael Rogers recently stated that Snowden is probably not a foreign spy, but that admission comes at the end of a parade of insinuations.Gores comments, coming after the Admirals, underscore what Snowdens supporters have been arguing for a year now: That he leaked of his own accord, and that the revelations that have come from those leaks have been productive on a national level.

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