Edward Snowden Explains Blockchain to His Lawyer and the …

[This piece originally appreared in McSweeneysnew issue, The End of Trust, a collection featuring over 30 writers investigating surveillance, technology, and privacy, with special advisors the Electronic Frontier Foundation.]

Over the last five years, Edward Snowden and I have carried on an almost daily conversation, most of it unrelated to his legal troubles. Sometimes we meet in person in Moscow over vodka (me) and milkshakes (him). But our friendship has mostly taken place on secure messaging platforms, a channel that was comfortable and intuitive for him but took some getting used to for me. I learned to type with two thumbs as we discussed politics, law, and literature; family, friends, and foster dogs. Our sensibilities are similar but our worldviews quite different: I sometimes accuse him of technological solutionism; he accuses me of timid incrementalism.

Through it all, Ive found him to be the clearest, most patient, and least condescending explainer of technology Ive ever met. Ive often thought that I wished more people or perhaps different people could eavesdrop on our conversations. What follows is a very lightly edited transcript of one of our chats. In it, Ed attempts to explain blockchain to me, despite my best efforts to cling to my own ignorance.

Ben Wizner: The Electronic Frontier Foundation recently joked that the amount of energy required to download tweets, articles, and instant messages which describe what the blockchain is and how decentralized currencies are the future will soon eclipse the total amount of power used by the country of Denmark. Its true that there are a lot of blockchain explainers out there. And yet Im ashamed to admit I still dont really get it.

Edward Snowden: Are you asking for another math lesson? Ive been waiting for this day. You remember what a cryptographic hash function is, right?

BW: This is where Im supposed to make a joke about drugs. But no, I do not now nor will I ever remember that.

ES: Challenge accepted. Lets start simpler: what do you know about these mythical blockchains?

BW: That I could have been rich if Id listened to you about this four years ago? But really, Ive heard a lot and understood little. Decentralized. Ledgers. What the hell is a blockchain?

ES: Its basically just a new kind of database. Imagine updates are always added to the end of it instead of messing with the old, preexisting entries just as you could add new links to an old chain to make it longer and youre on the right track. Start with that concept, and well fill in the details as we go.

BW: Okay, but why? What is the question for which blockchain is the answer?

ES: In a word: trust. Imagine an old database where any entry can be changed just by typing over it and clicking save. Now imagine that entry holds your bank balance. If somebody can just arbitrarily change your balance to zero, that kind of sucks, right? Unless youve got student loans.

The point is that any time a system lets somebody change the history with a keystroke, you have no choice but to trust a huge number of people to be both perfectly good and competent, and humanity doesnt have a great track record of that. Blockchains are an effort to create a history that cant be manipulated.

BW: A history of what?

ES: Transactions. In its oldest and best-known conception, were talking about Bitcoin, a new form of money. But in the last few months, weve seen efforts to put together all kind of records in these histories. Anything that needs to be memorialized and immutable. Health-care records, for example, but also deeds and contracts.

When you think about it at its most basic technological level, a blockchain is just a fancy way of time-stamping things in a manner that you can prove to posterity hasnt been tampered with after the fact. The very first bitcoin ever created, the Genesis Block, famously has one of those general attestations attached to it, which you can still view today.

It was a cypherpunk take on the old practice of taking a selfie with the days newspaper, to prove this new bitcoin blockchain hadnt secretly been created months or years earlier (which would have let the creator give himself an unfair advantage in a kind of lottery well discuss later).

BW: Blockchains are a history of transactions. Thats such a letdown. Because Ive heard some extravagant claims like: blockchain is an answer to censorship. Blockchain is an answer to online platform monopolies.

ES: Some of that is hype cycle. Look, the reality is blockchains can theoretically be applied in many ways, but its important to understand that mechanically, were discussing a very, very simple concept, and therefore the applications are all variations on a single theme: verifiable accounting. Hot.

So, databases, remember? The concept is to bundle up little packets of data, and that can be anything. Transaction records, if were talking about money, but just as easily blog posts, cat pictures, download links, or even moves in the worlds most over-engineered game of chess. Then, we stamp these records in a complicated way that Im happy to explain despite protest, but if youre afraid of math, you can think of this as the high-tech version of a public notary. Finally, we distribute these freshly notarized records to members of the network, who verify them and update their independent copies of this new history. The purpose of this last step is basically to ensure no one person or small group can fudge the numbers, because too many people have copies of the original.

Its this decentralization that some hope can provide a new lever to unseat todays status quo of censorship and entrenched monopolies. Imagine that instead of todays world, where publicly important data is often held exclusively at GenericCorp LLC, which can and does play God with it at the publics expense, its in a thousand places with a hundred jurisdictions. There is no takedown mechanism or other lets be evil button, and creating one requires a global consensus of, generally, at least 51 percent of the network in support of changing the rules.

mechanically, were discussing a very, very simple concept, and therefore the applications are all variations on a single theme: verifiable accounting. Hot.

BW: So even if Peter Thiel won his case and got a court order that some article about his vampire diet had to be removed, there would be no way to enforce it. Yes? That is, if Blockchain Magazine republished it.

ES: Right so long as Blockchain Magazine is publishing to a decentralized, public blockchain, they could have a judgment ordering them to set their office on fire and it wouldnt make a difference to the network.

BW: So how does it work?

ES: Oh man, I was waiting for this. Youre asking for the fun stuff. Are you ready for some abstract math?

BW: As ready as Ill ever be.

ES: Lets pretend youre allergic to finance, and start with the example of an imaginary blockchain of blog posts instead of going to the normal Bitcoin examples. The interesting mathematical property of blockchains, as mentioned earlier, is their general immutability a very short time past the point of initial publication.

For simplicitys sake, think of each new article published as representing a block extending this blockchain. Each time you push out a new article, you are adding another link to the chain itself. Even if its a correction or update to an old article, it goes on the end of the chain, erasing nothing. If your chief concerns were manipulation or censorship, this means once its up, its up. It is practically impossible to remove an earlier block from the chain without also destroying every block that was created after that point and convincing everyone else in the network to agree that your alternate version of the history is the correct one.

Lets take a second and get into the reasons for why thats hard. So, blockchains are record-keeping backed by fancy math. Great. But what does that mean? What actually stops you from adding a new block somewhere other than the end of the chain? Or changing one of the links thats already there?

We need to be able to crystallize the things were trying to account for: typically a record, a timestamp, and some sort of proof of authenticity.

So on the technical level, a blockchain works by taking the data of the new block the next link in the chain stamping it with the mathematic equivalent of a photograph of the block immediately preceding it and a timestamp (to establish chronological order of publication), then hashing it all together in a way that proves the block qualifies for addition to the chain.

BW: Hashing is a real verb?

ES: A cryptographic hash function is basically just a math problem that transforms any data you throw at it in a predictable way. Any time you feed a hash function a particular cat picture, you will always, always get the same number as the result. We call that result the hash of that picture, and feeding the cat picture into that math problem hashing the picture. The key concept to understand is that if you give the very same hash function a slightly different cat picture, or the same cat picture with even the tiniest modification, you will get a WILDLY different number (hash) as the result.

BW: And you can throw any kind of data into a hash function? You can hash a blog post or a financial transaction or Moby-Dick?

ES: Right. So we hash these different blocks, which, if you recall, are just glorified database updates regarding financial transactions, web links, medical records, or whatever. Each new block added to the chain is identified and validated by its hash, which was produced from data that intentionally includes the hash of the block before it. This unbroken chain leads all the way back to the very first block, which is what gives it the name.

Im sparing you some technical nuance here, but the important concepts to understand are that blocks in the chain are meant to be verifiable, strictly ordered by chronology, and immutable. Each new block created, which in the case of Bitcoin happens every ten minutes, effectively testifies about the precise contents of all the ones that came before it, making older blocks harder and harder to change without breaking the chain completely.

So by the time our Peter Thiel catches wind of the story and decides to kill it, the chain has already built a thousand links of confirmable, published history.

Money is, of course, the best and most famous example of where blockchains have been proven to make sense.

BW: And this is going to save the internet? Can you explain why some people think blockchain is a way to get around or replace huge tech platform monopolies? Like how could it weaken Amazon? Or Google?

ES: I think the answer there is wishful thinking. At least for the foreseeable future. We cant talk Amazon without getting into currency, but I believe blockchains have a much better chance of disrupting trade than they do publication, due to their relative inefficiency.

Think about our first example of your bank balance in an old database. That kind of setup is fast, cheap, and easy, but makes you vulnerable to the failures or abuses of what engineers call a trusted authority. Blockchains do away with the need for trusted authorities at the expense of efficiency. Right now, the old authorities like Visa and MasterCard can process tens of thousands of transactions a second, while Bitcoin can only handle about seven. But methods of compensating for that efficiency disadvantage are being worked on, and well see transaction rates for blockchains improve in the next few years to a point where theyre no longer a core concern.

BW: Ive been avoiding this, because I cant separate cryptocurrency from the image of a bunch of tech bros living in a palace in Puerto Rico as society crumbles. But its time for you to explain how Bitcoin works.

ES: Well, I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but Zuckerberg is already rich.

Money is, of course, the best and most famous example of where blockchains have been proven to make sense.

BW: With money, what is the problem that blockchain solves?

ES: The same one it solves everywhere else: trust. Without getting too abstract: what is money today? A little cotton paper at best, right? But most of the time, its just that entry in a database. Some bank says youve got three hundred rupees today, and you really hope they say the same or better tomorrow.

Now think about access to that reliable bank balance that magical number floating in the database as something that cant be taken for granted, but is instead transient. Youre one of the worlds unbanked people. Maybe you dont meet the requirements to have an account. Maybe banks are unreliable where you live, or, as happened in Cyprus not too long ago, they decided to seize peoples savings to bail themselves out. Or maybe the money itself is unsound, as in Venezuela or Zimbabwe, and your balance from yesterday that couldve bought a house isnt worth a cup of coffee today. Monetary systems fail.

BW: Hang on a minute. Why is a bitcoin worth anything? What generates value? What backs the currency? When I own a bitcoin, what do I really own?

ES: Good question. What makes a little piece of green paper worth anything? If youre not cynical enough to say men with guns, which are the reason legal tender is treated different from Monopoly money, youre talking about scarcity and shared belief in the usefulness of the currency as a store of value or a means of exchange.

Lets step outside of paper currencies, which have no fundamental value, to a more difficult case: why is gold worth so much more than its limited but real practical uses in industry? Because people generally agree its worth more than its practical value. Thats really it. The social belief that its expensive to dig out of the ground and put on a shelf, along with the expectation that others are also likely to value it, transforms a boring metal into the worlds oldest store of value.

Blockchain-based cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin have very limited fundamental value: at most, its a token that lets you save data into the blocks of their respective blockchains, forcing everybody participating in that blockchain to keep a copy of it for you. But the scarcity of at least some cryptocurrencies is very real: as of today, no more than twenty-one million bitcoins will ever be created, and seventeen million have already been claimed. Competition to mine the remaining few involves hundreds of millions of dollars worth of equipment and electricity, which economists like to claim are what really backs Bitcoin.

Yet the hard truth is that the only thing that gives cryptocurrencies value is the belief of a large population in their usefulness as a means of exchange. That belief is how cryptocurrencies move enormous amounts of money across the world electronically, without the involvement of banks, every single day. One day capital-B Bitcoin will be gone, but as long as there are people out there who want to be able to move money without banks, cryptocurrencies are likely to be valued.

BW: But what about you? What do you like about it?

ES: I like Bitcoin transactions in that they are impartial. They cant really be stopped or reversed, without the explicit, voluntary participation by the people involved. Lets say Bank of America doesnt want to process a payment for someone like me. In the old financial system, theyve got an enormous amount of clout, as do their peers, and can make that happen. If a teenager in Venezuela wants to get paid in a hard currency for a web development gig they did for someone in Paris, something prohibited by local currency controls, cryptocurrencies can make it possible. Bitcoin may not yet really be private money, but it is the first free money.

Bitcoin has competitors as well. One project, called Monero, tries to make transactions harder to track by playing a little shell game each time anybody spends money. A newer one by academics, called Zcash, uses novel math to enable truly private transactions. If we dont have private transactions by default within five years, itll be because of law, not technology.

As with all new technologies, there will be disruption and there will be abuse. The question is whether, on balance, the impact is positive or negative.

BW: So if Trump tried to cut off your livelihood by blocking banks from wiring your speaking fees, you could still get paid.

ES: And all he could do is tweet about it.

BW: The downside, I suppose, is that sometimes the ability of governments to track and block transactions is a social good. Taxes. Sanctions. Terrorist finance.

We want you to make a living. We also want sanctions against corrupt oligarchs to work.

ES: If you worry the rich cant dodge their taxes without Bitcoin, Im afraid I have some bad news. Kidding aside, this is a good point, but I think most would agree were far from the low-water mark of governmental power in the world today. And remember, people will generally have to convert their magic internet money into another currency in order to spend it on high-ticket items, so the governments days of real worry are far away.

BW: Explore that for me. Wouldnt the need to convert Bitcoin to cash also affect your Venezuelan teen?

ES: The difference is scale. When a Venezuelan teen wants to trade a months wages in cryptocurrency for her local currency, she doesnt need an ID check and a bank for that. Thats a level of cash people barter with every day, particularly in developing economies. But when a corrupt oligarch wants to commission a four hundred million-dollar pleasure yacht, well, yacht builders dont have that kind of liquidity, and the existence of invisible internet money doesnt mean cops wont ask how you paid for it.

The off-ramp for one is a hard requirement, but the other can opt for a footpath.

Similarly, its easier for governments to work collectively against real criminals think bin Laden than it is for them to crack down on dissidents like Ai Weiwei. The French would work hand in hand with the Chinese to track the activity of bin Ladens Bitcoin wallet, but the same is hopefully not true of Ai Weiwei.

BW: So basically youre saying that this wont really help powerful bad actors all that much.

ES: It could actually hurt them, insofar as relying on blockchains will require them to commit evidence of their bad deeds onto computers, which, as weve learned in the last decade, government investigators are remarkably skilled at penetrating.

BW: How would you describe the downsides, if any?

ES: As with all new technologies, there will be disruption and there will be abuse. The question is whether, on balance, the impact is positive or negative. The biggest downside is inequality of opportunity: these are new technologies that are not that easy to use and still harder to understand. They presume access to a level of technology, infrastructure, and education that is not universally available. Think about the disruptive effect globalization has had on national economies all over the world. The winners have won by miles, not inches, with the losers harmed by the same degree. The first-mover advantage for institutional blockchain mastery will be similar.

BW: And the internet economy has shown that a platform can be decentralized while the money and power remain very centralized.

ES: Precisely. There are also more technical criticisms to be made here, beyond the scope of what we can reasonably get into. Suffice it to say cryptocurrencies are normally implemented today through one of two kinds of lottery systems, called proof of work and proof of stake, which are a sort of necessary evil arising from how they secure their systems against attack. Neither is great. Proof of work rewards those who can afford the most infrastructure and consume the most energy, which is destructive and slants the game in favor of the rich. Proof of stake tries to cut out the environmental harm by just giving up and handing the rich the reward directly, and hoping their limitless, rent-seeking greed will keep the lights on. Needless to say, new models are needed.

BW: Say more about the environmental harms. Why does making magical internet money use so much energy?

ES: Okay, imagine you decide to get into mining bitcoins. You know there are a limited number of them up for grabs, but theyre coming from somewhere, right? And its true: new bitcoins will still continue to be created every ten minutes for the next couple years. In an attempt to hand them out fairly, the original creator of Bitcoin devised an extraordinarily clever scheme: a kind of global math contest. The winner of each roughly ten-minute round gets that rounds reward: a little treasure chest of brand new, never-used bitcoins, created from the answer you came up with to that rounds math problem. To keep all the coins in the lottery from being won too quickly, the difficulty of the next math problem is increased based on how quickly the last few were solved. This mechanism is the explanation of how the rounds are always roughly ten minutes long, no matter how many players enter the competition.

The flaw in all of this brilliance was the failure to account for Bitcoin becoming too successful. The reward for winning a round, once worth mere pennies, is now around one hundred thousand dollars, making it economically reasonable for people to divert enormous amounts of energy, and data centers full of computer equipment, toward the math or mining contest. Town-sized Godzillas of computation are being poured into this competition, ratcheting the difficulty of the problems beyond comprehension.

This means the biggest winners are those who can dedicate tens of millions of dollars to solving a never-ending series of problems with no meaning beyond mining bitcoins and making its blockchain harder to attack.

BW: A never-ending series of problems with no meaning sounds like nihilism. Lets talk about the bigger picture. I wanted to understand blockchains because of the ceaseless hype. Some governments think that Bitcoin is an existential threat to the world order, and some venture-capital types swear that blockchains will usher in a golden age of transparency. But youre telling me its basically a fancy database.

ES: The tech is the tech, and its basic. Its the applications that matter. The real question is not what is a blockchain, but how can it be used? And that gets back to what we started on: trust. We live in a world where everyone is lying about everything, with even ordinary teens on Instagram agonizing over how best to project a lifestyle they dont actually have. People get different search results for the same query. Everything requires trust; at the same time nothing deserves it.

This is the one interesting thing about blockchains: they might be that one tiny gear that lets us create systems you dont have to trust. Youve learned the only thing about blockchains that matters: theyre boring, inefficient, and wasteful, but, if well designed, theyre practically impossible to tamper with. And in a world full of shifty bullshit, being able to prove something is true is a radical development. Maybe its the value of your bank account, maybe its the provenance of your pair of Nikes, or maybe its your for-real-this-time permanent record in the principals office, but records are going to transform into chains we cant easily break, even if theyre open for anyone in the world to look at.

The hype is a world where everything can be tracked and verified. The question is whether its going to be voluntary.

BW: That got dark fast. Are you optimistic about how blockchains are going to be used once we get out of the experimental phase?

ES: What do you think?

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Edward Snowden Explains Blockchain to His Lawyer and the ...

Edward Snowden: National Hero or Traitor? The Whittier …

After Edward Snowden, computer specialist and former Central Intelligence Agency employee, leaked information on the United States governments surveillance programs last May, the general public has remained divided in their opinion of whether or not Snowden is a hero. The Reason-Rupe poll conducted September 4-8 of this year interviewed 1013 adults. The poll revealed that 39 percent of Americans think that Snowden is a traitor for leaking government secrets. 35 percent of Americans say that he is a patriot for letting the public know about the governments surveillance programs, and sixteen percent of Americans have mixed feelings on Snowden.

So, who is Edward Snowden? Snowden dropped out of high school, joined the U.S. Army in 2003, and began training with the Special Forces. However, he was forced to leave when he broke both his legs in a training accident. Since then, he has had careers in the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency. Despite his lack of a formal education, Snowden quickly rose through the ranks due to his outstanding computer skills. He lived in Hawaii with his girlfriend until he leaked the information this past May.

In May 2013, Snowden revealed to British newspaper The Guardian that U.S. intelligence had been carrying out widespread and illegal phone and Internet surveillance of American citizens and other nations. In May, Snowden exposed the fact that the N.S.A. has access to user data from U.S. Internet companies, including Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, and Skype; despite the fact that General Keith Alexander, director of the N.S.A., denied fourteen times that the agency had the ability to intercept different types of online communications. He explained his reasoning in an interview with The Guardians Glenn Greenwald: I dont wanna live in a world where everything that I say, everything I do, everyone I talk to, every expression of creativity, or love, or friendship is recorded, and thats not something Im willing to support; its not something Im willing to build, and its not something Im willing to live under. Journalists who interviewed Snowden in Hong Kong described him as quiet, smart, easy-going and self-effacing; a master of computers.

Edward Snowden left the United States on May 20, seeking asylum in Hong Kong, despite his ideal choice being Iceland. Snowden was formally sacked from his job on June 11. The U.S. charged him with theft of government property, unauthorized communication of national defense information, and willful communication of classified communications intelligence on June 14, 2013. Each of the charges carries a maximum ten-year prison sentence. Snowden boarded an Aeroflot Flight to Moscow, Russia on June 23. In Russia, he remained in a transit zone for over a month after the U.S. revoked his travel documents. He was finally granted asylum in Russia for one year on August 1, 2013. Currently, Snowden resides in Russia at an undisclosed residence.

Those who think that Edward Snowden is a hero or whistleblower argue that Snowdens leaks didnt contain any military plans, secret conversations, or identities of U.S. agents and targeted individuals. They also reason that news of the U.S. was monitoring Facebook and Google accounts wouldnt have come as a surprise to any serious terrorists. They believe that Snowden has done a service to the United States as he has uncovered questionable activities by the authorities.

Those who believe that Edward Snowden is a traitor and a criminal argue that Snowden has damaged the defense abilities of the U.S. He has fled to China and Russia, two major competitors of the United States. If Snowden is not careful, then American secrets could end up in the hands of Americas rivals. James Clapper, the director of Nation Intelligence, states that Snowdens leaks have caused huge, grave damage to our intelligence abilities.

Snowdens leaks have sparked a serious debate and the public remains divided in their opinion of Snowdens position as a hero or a traitor.

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Edward Snowden: National Hero or Traitor? The Whittier ...

Edward Snowden: Facebook Is A Surveillance Company Rebranded …

NSA whistleblower and former CIA employee Edward Snowden slammed Facebook in a Saturday tweet following the suspension of Strategic Communication Laboratories (SCL) and its political data analytics firm, Cambridge Analytica, over what Facebook says was imporoper use of collected data.

In a nutshell, in 2015 Cambridge Analytica bought data from a University of Cambridge psychology professor, Dr. Aleksandr Kogan, who had developed an app called "thisisyourdigitallife" that vacuumed up loads of information on users and their contacts. After making Kogan and Cambridge Analyticapromise to delete the data the app had gathered, Facebook received reports (from sources they would not identify) which claimed that not all the data had been deleted - which led the social media giant to delete Cambridge Analytica and parent company SCL's accounts.

By passing information on to a third party, including SCL/Cambridge Analytica and Christopher Wylie of Eunoia Technologies, he violated our platform policies. When we learned of this violation in 2015, we removed his app from Facebook and demanded certifications from Kogan and all parties he had given data to that the information had been destroyed. Cambridge Analytica, Kogan and Wylie all certified to us that they destroyed the data. -Facebook

Of note, Cambridge Analytica worked for Ted Cruz and Ben Carson during the 2016 election before contracting with the Trump campaign. Cruz stopped using CA after their data modeling failed to identify likely supporters.

Cambridge Analytica has vehemently denied any wrongdoing in a statement.

In response to the ban, Edward Snowden fired off twotweets on Saturdaycriticizing Facebook, and claimedsocial media companies were simply "surveillance companies" who engaged in a"successful deception" by rebranding themselves.

Facebook makes their money by exploiting and selling intimate details about the private lives of millions, far beyond the scant details you voluntarily post. They are not victims. They are accomplices. https://t.co/mRkRKxsBcw

Businesses that make money by collecting and selling detailed records of private lives were once plainly described as "surveillance companies." Their rebranding as "social media" is the most successful deception since the Department of War became the Department of Defense.

Snowden isn't the first big nameto call out Silicon Valley companies over their data collection and monitoring practices, or their notorious intersection with the U.S. Government.

In his 2014 book:When Google Met WikiLeaks, Julian Assange describes Google's close relationship with the NSA and the Pentagon.

Around the same time, Google was becoming involved in a program known as the Enduring Security Framework(ESF), which entailed the sharing of information between Silicon Valley tech companies and Pentagon-affiliated agencies at network speed. Emails obtained in 2014 under Freedom of Information requests show Schmidt and his fellow Googler Sergey Brin corresponding on first-name terms with NSA chief General Keith Alexander about ESF Reportage on the emails focused on the familiarity in the correspondence: General Keith . . . so great to see you . . . ! Schmidt wrote. But most reports overlooked a crucial detail. Your insights as a key member of the Defense Industrial Base, Alexander wrote to Brin, are valuable to ensure ESFs efforts have measurable impact. -Julian Assange

Kim Dotcom has also opined on social media's close ties to the government, tweeting in February "Unfortunately all big US Internet companies are in bed with the deep state. Google, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, etc. are all providing backdoors to your data."

Because YouTube belongs to Google and Google is the biggest supplier of user data to the US Govt. Everything you do on any Google service, any search, any email, ends up in the NSA spy cloud. And Google provides custom search technology to the Govt to spy on you better. #Pirates https://t.co/GPqy7L5lvr

Unfortunately all big US Internet companies are in bed with the deep state. Google, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, etc. are all providing backdoors to your data. You may have noticed they all favor the Democrats. Why? Obama made them feel special for sharing your data. Privileges!

.@Google has built a custom search engine for NSA/CIA to index the global mass surveillance data from FVEY. #DontBeEvil #DoTheRightThing

In 2013, the Washington Postand The Guardianrevealed that the NSA has backdoor access to all major Silicon Valley social media firms, includingMicrosoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, Skype, YouTube, and Apple - all through the notorious PRISM program which began in 2007 under the Protect America Act. PRISM's existence was leaked by Edward Snowden before he entered into ongoing asylum in Moscow. Microsoft was the first company to join the PRISM program.

The NSA has the ability to pull any sort of data it likes from these companies, but it claims that it does not try to collect it all. The PRISM program goes above and beyond the existing laws that state companies must comply with government requests for data, as it gives the NSA direct access to each company's servers essentially letting the NSA do as it pleases.-The Verge

After PRISM's existence was leaked by Snowden, the Director of National Intelligence issued a statment which stated that the only people targed by the programs are "outside the United States," and that the program "does not allow" the targeting of citizens within US borders.

In 2006,Wiredmagazine published evidence from a retired AT&T communications technician, Mark Klein, that revealed a secret room used to "split" internet data at a San Francisco office as part of the NSA's bulk data collection techniques used on millions of Americans.

During the course of that work, he learned from a co-worker that similar cabins were being installed in other cities, including Seattle, San Jose, Los Angeles and San Diego, he said.

The split circuits included traffic from peering links connecting to other internet backbone providers, meaning that AT&T was also diverting traffic routed from its network to or from other domestic and international providers, Klein said. -Wired

"They are collecting everything on everybody," Klein said.

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Edward Snowden: Facebook Is A Surveillance Company Rebranded ...

Bitcoin Wont Last, But Crypto is Here to Stay: Edward Snowden

Exiled American whistleblower Edward Snowden has weighed in on the conversation surrounding bitcoin, stating that while the market lodestar will be eventually fade away, the use of cryptocurrencies will not end with bitcoin.

Speaking in an interview with Ben Wizner, Director of the ACLU Speech, Privacy and Technology project, Snowden said that the belief which supports bitcoin acting as a global currency will merely transfer itself to other cryptocurrencies instead of dissipating.

Responding to a question from Wizner about whether he believes bitcoin has long-term intrinsic value, Snowden compared bitcoin to paper fiat money and pointed out that the only difference between fiat and monopoly money is the belief generated by state backing, which essentially boils down to men with guns. In his view, while bitcoin and other blockchain-based crypto assets have a severely limited amount of fundamental value, two things, in particular, ensure that bitcoin remains viable in the near term.

The first he said, is scarcity, which is caused by bitcoins limited supply of 21 million BTC. This scarcity engenders competition to mine the remaining few million bitcoin, and that alone gives it a measure of value. The second and more significant factor in his view is the fact that large segments of the general population view it as a bona fide means of exchange. According to Snowden, this belief in cryptocurrency frameworks as a method of transferring real-world monetary value outside of banking networks is transferable and will survive the death of bitcoin.

In his words:

That belief is how cryptocurrencies move enormous amounts of money across the world electronically, without the involvement of banks, every single day. One day capital-B Bitcoin will be gone, but as long as there are people out there who want to be able to move money without banks, cryptocurrencies are likely to be valued.

Snowden, who lives in Russia after claiming asylum there in 2013 also revealed that despite his prediction of its impending demise, he likes bitcoin because of the opportunities and possibilities it has created around the world. Using himself as an example he said:

Lets say Bank of America doesnt want to process a payment for someone like me. In the old financial system, theyve got an enormous amount of clout, as do their peers, and can make that happen. If a teenager in Venezuela wants to get paid in a hard currency for a web development gig they did for someone in Paris, something prohibited by local currency controls, cryptocurrencies can make it possible. Bitcoin may not yet really be private money, but it is the first free money.

Going further, however, he criticised the existing blockchain hashing paradigm, stating that neither of the two main hashing methods are great and new ones should be developed. Without mincing words, he described Proof of Work as an environmentally destructive activity slanted in favour of the rich, and Proof of Stake as a direct handout to the rich in the hope that their greed will keep the system running.

Featured image from Youtube.

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Bitcoin Wont Last, But Crypto is Here to Stay: Edward Snowden

Edward Snowden: Blockchain Is All About Trust Live …

Whistleblower Edward Snowden has some interesting thoughts regarding Bitcoin and the blockchain.

In a recent interview, Snowden gave a brief description of the blockchain and says that the main reason for implementing it into governments and businesses is trust. He comments:

Imagine an old database where any entry can be changed just by typing over it and clicking save. Now imagine that entry holds your bank balance. If somebody can just arbitrarily change your balance to zero, that kind of sucks, right? Unless youve got student loans. The point is that any time a system lets somebody change the history with a keystroke, you have no choice but to trust a huge number of people to be both perfectly good and competent, and humanity doesnt have a great track record for that. Blockchains are an effort to create a history that cant be manipulated.

Blockchain technology is widely regarded for its ability to create irrefutable evidence of an occurrence between two distinct parties. For example, if party A sends party B some form of currency, that transaction is recorded in real-time, and is forever implemented on the blockchain to show that it occurred should the data ever be needed. Snowden states:

The reality is that blockchains can theoretically be applied in many ways, but its important to understand that mechanically, were discussing a very, very simple concept, and therefore the applications are all variations on a single theme: verifiable accounting. Hot.

While he doesnt foresee blockchain overtaking large tech companies like Facebook or Google in the immediate future, hes confident the technology will one day be so powerful and widespread that it can disrupt trade. In addition, hes particularly fond of bitcoin transactions, describing them as impartial which, in turn, adds greatly to the trust factor of the cryptocurrency arena. He explains:

[Bitcoin transactions] cant really be stopped or reversed without the explicit, voluntary participation of the people involved. Lets say Bank of America doesnt want to process a payment for someone like me. In the old financial system, theyve got an enormous amount of clout, as do their peers, and can make that happen. If a teenager in Venezuela wants to get paid in a hard currency for a web development gig they did for someone in Paris, something prohibited by local currency controls, cryptocurrencies can make it possible. Bitcoin may not yet really be private money, but it is the first free money.

Do you agree with Snowdens thoughts about blockchain? Why or why not? Post your comments below.

Image courtesy of ShutterStock and Youtube/Blockstack

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Edward Snowden | Military Wiki | FANDOM powered by Wikia

Edward SnowdenBornEdward Joseph SnowdenJune 21, 1983(1983-06-21) (age35)Elizabeth City, North Carolina, U.S.ResidenceRussia (temporary asylum)NationalityAmericanOccupationSystem administratorEmployerBooz Allen Hamilton[1]Kunia, Hawaii, U.S.(until June 10, 2013)KnownforRevealing details of classified United States government surveillance programsHome townWilmington, North CarolinaCriminal chargeTheft of government property, unauthorized communication of national defense information, and willful communication of classified intelligence to an unauthorized person (June 2013).AwardsSam Adams Award[2]

Edward Joseph "Ed"[3][4] Snowden (born June 21, 1983) is an exiled American computer specialist and former CIA employee and NSA contractor who disclosed classified details of several top-secret United States and British government mass surveillance programs to the press. He is living in Russia under temporary political asylum and is considered a fugitive from justice by American authorities,[5][6][7][8] who have charged him with espionage and theft of government property.[9][10][11]

Snowden's release of NSA material was called the most significant leak in US history by Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg.[12][13] Based on disclosures leaked to The Guardian in May 2013, while employed by NSA contractor Booz Allen Hamilton, a series of exposs was published revealing programs such as the interception of US and European telephone metadata and the PRISM, XKeyscore, and Tempora Internet surveillance programs.[14][15]Snowden has been a subject of controversy: he has been variously called a hero,[16][17] a whistleblower,[18][19][20][21][22] a dissident,[23] a traitor,[24][25] and a patriot.[26][27] Some US officials, such as Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, condemned his actions as having done "huge, grave damage" to US intelligence capabilities while others, such as former president Jimmy Carter, applauded his actions.[28][29]In Snowden's own words, his "sole motive" for leaking the documents was "to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them."[30] The disclosures have fueled debates over mass surveillance, government secrecy, and the balance between national security and information privacy.[31]

Edward Joseph Snowden was born on June 21, 1983,[32] in Elizabeth City, North Carolina,[33] and grew up in Wilmington, North Carolina.[34] His father, Lonnie Snowden, a resident of Pennsylvania, was an officer in the United States Coast Guard,[35] and his mother, a resident of Baltimore, Maryland, is a clerk at a federal court in Maryland.[34][36] His parents are divorced, and his father subsequently remarried.[37]

By 1999, Snowden had moved with his family to Ellicott City, Maryland.[34] He studied at Anne Arundel Community College[34] to gain the credits necessary to obtain a high-school diploma but he did not complete the coursework.[38][39] Snowden's father explained that his son had missed several months of school owing to illness and, rather than return, took and passed the tests for his GED at a local community college.[30][40][41]

Snowden worked online toward a Master's Degree at the University of Liverpool in 2011.[42] Having worked at a U.S. military base in Japan, Snowden was reportedly interested in Japanese popular culture, had studied the Japanese language,[43] and also worked for an anime company domiciled in the United States.[44][45] He also said he had a basic understanding of Mandarin Chinese and was deeply interested in martial arts and, at age 19 or 20, listed Buddhism as his religion on a military recruitment form, noting that the choice of agnostic was "strangely absent".[46]

Snowden has said that in the 2008 presidential election he voted for a third-party candidate. He has stated he had been planning to make disclosures about NSA surveillance programs at the time, but he decided to wait because he "believed in Obama's promises". He was later disappointed that Obama "continued with the policies of his predecessor".[47] For the 2012, political donation records indicate that he contributed to the primary campaign of Republican candidate Ron Paul.[48][49]

Several sources have alleged that Snowden, under the pseudonym "TheTrueHOOHA", authored hundreds of posts on technology news provider Ars Technica's chat rooms.[4][50][51] The poster discussed a variety of political topics. In a January 2009 entry, TheTrueHOOHA exhibited strong support for the United States' security state apparatus and said he believed leakers of classified information "should be shot in the balls".[52] However, in February 2010 TheTrueHOOHA wrote, "I wonder, how well would envelopes that became transparent under magical federal candlelight have sold in 1750? 1800? 1850? 1900? 1950?"[53]

On June 17, 2013, Snowden's father spoke in an interview on Fox TV, expressing concern about misinformation in the media regarding his son. He described his son as "a sensitive, caring young man...He just is a deep thinker".[40] In accounts published in June 2013, interviewers noted that Snowden's laptop displayed stickers supporting internet freedom organizations including the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the Tor Project.[30] Snowden considers himself "neither traitor nor hero. I'm an American".[54]

On May 7, 2004, Snowden enlisted in the United States Army Reserve as a Special Forces recruit but did not complete any training.[32][55] He said he wanted to fight in the Iraq War because he "felt like [he] had an obligation as a human being to help free people from oppression."[30] In an email to The Guardian the U.S. army confirmed his enlistment as Special Forces recruit and said he was discharged on September 28, 2004. The email said, "He did not complete any training or receive any awards".[56] Snowden stated that this was the result of breaking both of his legs in a training accident.[57]

His next employment was as a National Security Agency (NSA) security guard for the Center for Advanced Study of Language at the University of Maryland,[58] before, he said, joining the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to work on IT security.[59] In May 2006 Snowden wrote in Ars Technica that he had no trouble getting work because he was a "computer wizard". In August he wrote about a possible path in government service, perhaps involving China, but said it "just doesn't seem like as much 'fun' as some of the other places".[55]

Snowden said that in 2007 the CIA stationed him with diplomatic cover in Geneva, Switzerland, where he was responsible for maintaining computer network security.[60] Snowden described his CIA experience in Geneva as "formative", stating that the CIA deliberately got a Swiss banker drunk and encouraged him to drive home. Snowden said that when the latter was arrested, a CIA operative offered to intervene and later recruited the banker.[61] Swiss President Ueli Maurer said it did not seem likely "that this incident played out as it has been described by Snowden and by the media".[62] The revelations were said to be sensitive as the Swiss government was passing legislation for more banking transparency.[63]

Snowden left the CIA in 2009 and began work for Dell, a private contractor, inside an NSA facility on a U.S. military base in Japan .[30] Snowden remained on the Dell payroll until early 2013.[64] Persons familiar with the 2013 government investigation into Snowden's history said that Snowden had downloaded sensitive NSA material in April 2012.[65] NSA Director Keith Alexander has said that Snowden held a position at the NSA for the twelve months prior to his next job as a consultant,[66] with top secret Sensitive Compartmented Information clearances.[67] According to The New York Times, Snowden took a Certified Ethical Hacker training course in 2010.[68] USIS completed a background check on Snowden in 2011.[69]

Snowden described his life as "very comfortable", earning a salary of "roughly US$200,000".[70] At the time of his departure from the United States in May 2013, he had been employed by consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton for less than three months inside the NSA at the Kunia Regional SIGINT Operations Center in Hawaii,[71][72][73] earning $122,000.[74] While intelligence officials have described his position there as a "system administrator", Snowden has said he was an "infrastructure analyst", which meant that his job was to look for new ways to break into Internet and telephone traffic around the world.[75] He said he had taken a pay cut to work at Booz Allen,[76] and that he sought employment in order to gather data on NSA surveillance around the world so he could leak it.[77] The firm said Snowden's employment was terminated on June 10, 2013 "for violations of the firm's code of ethics and firm policy".[74][78]

According to Reuters, a source "with detailed knowledge on the matter" stated that Booz Allen's hiring screeners found some details of his education "did not check out precisely", but decided to hire him anyway; Reuters stated that the element which triggered these concerns, or the manner in which Snowden satisfied the concerns, were not known.[79] The rsum stated that Snowden attended computer-related classes at Johns Hopkins University. A spokesperson for Johns Hopkins said that the university did not find records to show that Snowden attended the university, and suggested that he may instead have attended Advanced Career Technologies, a private for-profit organization which operated as "Computer Career Institute at Johns Hopkins".[79] The University College of the University of Maryland acknowledged that Snowden had attended a summer session at a UM campus in Asia. Snowden's resume stated that he estimated that he would receive a University of Liverpool computer security master's degree in 2013. The university said that Snowden registered for an online master's degree program in computer security in 2011 but that "he is not active in his studies and has not completed the program".[79]

Before leaving for Hong Kong, Snowden resided in Waipahu, Hawaii, with his girlfriend.[80] According to local real estate agents, they moved out of their home on May 1, 2013, leaving nothing behind.[39]

Snowden first made contact with Glenn Greenwald of The Guardian in late 2012.[81] Greenwald found the measures that the anonymous source asked him to take to secure their communications, such as encrypting email, too annoying to employ. Snowden then moved on to contact documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras in January 2013.[82] According to Poitras, Snowden chose to contact her after seeing her report on William Binney, an NSA whistleblower, in The New York Times. Greenwald began working with Snowden in either February[83] or in April after Poitras asked Greenwald to meet her in New York City.[81] Barton Gellman, writing for The Washington Post, says his first "direct contact" was on May 16, 2013.[84] According to Gellman, Snowden approached Greenwald after the Post declined to guarantee publication of all 41 of the PRISM Powerpoint slides within 72 hours and publish online an encrypted code that would allow Snowden to later be able to prove to a foreign embassy that he was the source.[84]

Snowden communicated using encrypted email,[82] using the codename "Verax". He asked not to be quoted at length for fear of identification by semantic analysis.[84]

According to Gellman, prior to their first meeting in person, Snowden wrote, "I understand that I will be made to suffer for my actions, and that the return of this information to the public marks my end."[84] Snowden also told Gellman that until the articles were published, the journalists working with him would also be at mortal risk from the United States Intelligence Community "if they think you are the single point of failure that could stop this disclosure and make them the sole owner of this information."[84]

In May 2013, Snowden was permitted temporary leave from his position at the NSA in Hawaii, on the pretext of receiving treatment for his epilepsy.[30] In mid-May Snowden gave an electronic interview to Poitras and Jacob Appelbaum which was published weeks later by Der Spiegel.[85] On May 20, 2013, Snowden flew to Hong Kong,[86][87] where he was staying when the initial articles about the NSA that he had leaked were published.[86][88] Among other specifics, Snowden divulged the existence and functions of several classified U.S. surveillance programs and their scope, including notably PRISM, NSA call database, and Boundless Informant. He also revealed details of Tempora, a British black-ops surveillance program run by the NSA's British partner, GCHQ. In July 2013, Greenwald stated that Snowden had additional sensitive information about the NSA that he has chosen not to make public, including "very sensitive, detailed blueprints of how the NSA does what they do".[89] In September 2013, the existence of a classified decryption program codernamed Bullrun was revealed.[90][91]

By October 2013, Snowden's disclosures had created tensions[92] between the US and some of its close allies after they revealed the US had spied on countries including France,[93][94] Mexico,[95] Germany,[96][97] Brazil,[98] Britain[99] and China,[100] as well as 35 world leaders.[101]

Snowden's identity was made public by The Guardian at his request[83] on June 9, 2013. He explained: "I have no intention of hiding who I am because I know I have done nothing wrong."[30] He added that by revealing his identity he hoped to protect his colleagues from being subjected to a hunt to determine who had been responsible for the leaks.[102] Snowden explained his actions saying: "I don't want to live in a society that does these sort of things [surveillance on its citizens]... I do not want to live in a world where everything I do and say is recorded... My sole motive is to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them."[3] When Snowden met with representatives of human rights organizations on July 12, he said:

I believe in the principle declared at Nuremberg in 1945: "Individuals have international duties which transcend the national obligations of obedience. Therefore individual citizens have the duty to violate domestic laws to prevent crimes against peace and humanity from occurring."[103]

Snowden, in an early June email sent to the Washington Post, said that in the past, whistleblowers had been 'destroyed by the experience', and that he wanted to "embolden others to step forward" by demonstrating that "they can win".[104] In October, Snowden spoke out again on his motivations for the leaks in an interview with the New York Times, saying that the system for reporting problems does not work. "You have to report wrongdoing to those most responsible for it", Snowden explained, and pointed to the lack of whistleblower protection for government contractors, the use of the 1917 Espionage Act to prosecute leakers, and his belief that had he used internal mechanisms to 'sound the alarm', his revelations "would have been buried forever".[105][106]

Snowden speaks about dangers to democracy at the Sam Adams award presentation.

Snowden speaks about government transparency at the Sam Adams award presentation.

Snowden left Hawaii for Hong Kong alone on May 20, 2013. Snowden was bound for the Republic of Ecuador via Moscow on June 23, as Hong Kong authorities were deliberating the US government's request for his extradition.

Snowden explained his choice of Hong Kong thus:

Snowden said that he was predisposed "to seek asylum in a country with shared values", and that his ideal choice would be Iceland.[6][30] The International Modern Media Institute, an Icelandic freedom of speech advocacy organization, issued a statement offering Snowden legal advice and assistance in gaining asylum.[107] Iceland's ambassador to China, Kristn A. Arnadttir, pointed out that asylum could not be granted to Snowden, because Icelandic law requires that such applications be made from within the country.[108]

Snowden vowed to challenge any extradition attempt by the U.S. government, and had reportedly approached Hong Kong human rights lawyers.[109] Snowden told the South China Morning Post that he planned to remain in Hong Kong until "asked to leave",[110] adding that his intention was to let the "courts and people of Hong Kong" decide his fate.[111] According to Glenn Greenwald, information about U.S. intelligence operations in China that Snowden gave to the South China Morning Post while in Hong Kong were motivated by "a need to ingratiate himself to the people of Hong Kong and China."[112] In late August the Russian newspaper Kommersant reported that Snowden was living at the Russian consulate shortly before his departure from Hong Kong to Moscow.[113] Anatoly Kucherena rejected the Kommersant story, stating that Snowden "did not enter into any communication with our diplomats when he was in Hong Kong."[114][115] Kucherena became Snowden's lawyer in July and was then head of the Russian Interior ministry's public council,[116] in addition to serving as a member[117] of the public council for the Federal Security Service (FSB).[118] In early September, however, Russian president Vladimir Putin acknowledged that "Mr. Snowden first appeared in Hong Kong and met with our diplomatic representatives."[119]

As speculation mounted that Snowden's departure from Hong Kong was imminent, media reports emerged that the British government warned airlines that Snowden was not welcome in the United Kingdom.[120][121] On June 20 and 21, a representative of WikiLeaks said that a chartered jet had been prepared to transport Snowden to Iceland,[122] and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange announced that he was brokering a discussion between Snowden and the Icelandic government for possible asylum.[123]

On June 23, U.S. officials said that Snowden's US passport had been revoked.[124] On the same day, Snowden boarded the commercial Aeroflot flight SU213 to Moscow, accompanied by Sarah Harrison of WikiLeaks.[125][126] Hong Kong authorities said that Snowden had not been detained as requested by the United States, because the United States' extradition request had not fully complied with Hong Kong law,[127][128][129] and there was no legal basis to prevent Snowden from leaving.[130][131][Notes 1] On June 24, Julian Assange said that WikiLeaks had paid for Snowden's lodging in Hong Kong and his flight out.[134]

Ecuadorean embassy car in front of Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow on June 23, 2013.

Snowden's passage through Hong Kong inspired a local production team to produce a low-budget five-minute film entitled Verax. The film, depicting the time Snowden spent hiding in the Mira Hotel while being unsuccessfully tracked by the CIA and China's Ministry of State Security, was uploaded to YouTube on June 25, 2013.[135][136]

On Sunday, June 23, 2013, Snowden landed in Moscow's Sheremetyevo international airport, en route to Ecuador.[137] On the same day, before leaving Hong Kong, US officials annulled his passport.[138] Snowden remained in the Sheremetyevo transit zone until being granted temporary political asylum by the Russian government at the end of July 2013.

In a July 1 statement,[139] Snowden remarked:

Although Snowden had a seat reserved to fly on to Cuba June 24, he did not board that flight. In August, Fidel Castro rejected media reports that the plane would have been denied landing had Snowden been on board.[141]

On July 1, 2013, president Evo Morales of Bolivia, who had been attending a conference of gas-exporting countries in Russia, appeared predisposed to offer asylum to Snowden during an interview with Russia Today.[142] The following day, the airplane carrying him back to Bolivia from Russia was rerouted to Austria and reportedly searched there[143][144] after France, Spain and Italy[145] denied access to their airspace due to suspicions that Snowden was on board.[146]

On July 1, 2013, Snowden had applied for political asylum to 20 countries.[147] A statement attributed to Snowden also contended that the U.S. administration, and specifically Vice President Joe Biden, had pressured the governments of these countries to refuse his petition for asylum.[148] Several days later, Snowden made a second batch of applications for asylum to 6 countries, but declined to name them citing prior interference by US officials.[149][150] Finland, Germany, India, Poland, Norway, Austria, Italy, and the Netherlands cited technical grounds for not considering the application, saying that applications for asylum to these countries must be made from within the countries' borders or at border stations.[147][151][152][153][154][155] Ecuador had initially offered Snowden a temporary travel document but later withdrew it:[156] on July 1, president Rafael Correa said the decision to issue the offer had been "a mistake".[157][158]

On June 25 and July 15, Russian president Putin said that Snowden's arrival in Moscow was "a surprise" and "like an unwanted Christmas gift".[159] Putin said that Snowden remained in the transit area of Sheremetyevo, noted that he had not committed any crime on Russian soil,[160] and declared that Snowden was free to leave and should do so.[161] He also claimed that Russia's intelligence agencies neither "had worked, nor were working with" Snowden.[159][161] Putin's claims were received skeptically by some observers:[162][163] one Moscow political analyst said "Snowden will fly out of Russia when the Kremlin decides he can go"[164] and in July Yulia Latynina expressed her view that Snowden was under the "total control" of Russia's security services.[165] According to the Jamestown Foundation, an anonymous source informed them in early July that Snowden was not, in fact, residing at the airport but at a safe house controlled by Russia's intelligence and security agency, the Federal Security Service (FSB).[166] Correa of Ecuador said that Snowden was "under care" of Russia and could not leave Moscow.[167]

On July 1, Putin said that if Snowden wanted to be granted asylum in Russia, Snowden would have to "stop his work aimed at harming our American partners".[168][169] A spokesman for Putin subsequently said that Snowden had withdrawn his asylum application upon learning about the conditions.[147][170]

On July 12, in a meeting at Sheremetyevo Airport with representatives of human rights organizations and lawyers that the Kremlin helped organize,[171] Snowden stated that he was accepting all offers of asylum that he had already received or that he would receive in the future, noting that his Venezuela's "asylee status was now formal",[103] he also said he would request asylum in Russia until he resolved his travel problems.[172]On July 16, 2013, Russian Federal Migration Service officials confirmed that Snowden had submitted an application for temporary asylum in Russia.[173] According to Kucherena, Snowden had stated that he would meet Putin's condition for granting asylum and would not further harm US interests.[173] On July 23 Kucherena said his client intended to settle in Russia.[174]

Amid media reports in early July 2013 attributed to US administration sources that Obama's one-on-one meeting with Putin, ahead of a G20 meeting in St Petersburg scheduled for September, was in doubt due to Snowden's protracted sojourn in Russia,[175][176] top US officials repeatedly made it clear to Moscow that Snowden should without delay be returned to the United States to face justice.[177][178][179] In a letter to Russian Minister of Justice Alexander Konovalov dated July 23, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder sought to eliminate the "asserted grounds for Mr. Snowden's claim that he should be treated as a refugee or granted asylum, temporary or otherwise":[10][180] he assured the Russian government that the U.S. would not seek the death penalty for Snowden irrespective of the charges he might eventually face and said Snowden would be issued a limited validity passport for returning to the U.S., and that upon his return, Snowden would benefit from legal and constitutional safeguards and not be tortured, as "torture is unlawful in the United States".[10] The same day, the Russian president's spokesman reiterated the Kremlin's position that it would "not hand anyone over"; he also noted that Putin was not personally involved in the matter as Snowden "had not made any request that would require examination by the head of state"; according to him the issue was being handled through talks between the FSB and the FBI.[181][182]

In late July 2013, Lon Snowden expressed a belief that his son would be better off staying in Russia, saying he was no longer confident his son would receive a fair trial in the United States,[183] and that Russia was probably the best place to seek asylum.[184] The elder Snowden said that the FBI had offered to fly him to Russia on their behalf but that he had declined citing a lack of assurance that he would see his son, and adding that he didn't wish to be used as "an emotional tool".[185]

On August 1, 2013, Snowden left the airport after more than a month in the transit section, having been granted temporary asylum in Russia for one year.[186] Snowden's attorney, Anatoly Kucherena, said the asylum could be extended indefinitely on an annual basis, and that Snowden had gone to an undisclosed location which would be kept secret for security reasons.[187]

In response to the asylum grant, White House spokesman Jay Carney said the U.S. administration was "extremely disappointed" by the Russian government's decision and that the meeting scheduled for September between Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin was under reconsideration.[188][189] Some U.S. legislators urged the president to take a tough stand against Russia, possibly including a U.S. boycott of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.[189][190] On August 7, the White House announced that Obama had canceled the meeting previously planned with Putin in Moscow citing lack of progress on a series of issues that included Russia's granting Snowden temporary asylum.[191][192][193] Following cancellation of the bilateral talks, Putin's foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov said they were "disappointed" and that it was clear to him that the decision was due to the situation around Snowden, which they "had not created"; Ushakov alleged that the U.S. had been avoiding signing an extradition agreement and had "invariably" used its absence as a pretext for denying Russian extradition requests.[194][195]

Lon Snowden spoke with his son on August 15, 2013, via an internet chat program although Lon Snowden's lawyer had advised against it, saying "we don't really know who this guy is on the other end". Edward's lawyer, Kucherena, had also advised against any interactions between the family members unless they were in person. In mid-August, The Wall Street Journal reported that Lon Snowden's legal team was concerned that Greenwald and WikiLeaks were using Snowden to advance their own agendas.[196] About the same time, The Huffington Post reported that Edward Snowden had sent them a statement, confirmed by the American Civil Liberties Union as authentic, saying that no one associated with his father represented him or had any special knowledge about his situation. He stated that he remained confident in the lawyers and journalists with whom he had been working, and that there was no conflict between them.[197][198]

The owner of a secure email service which Snowden used, Lavabit, shut down the service after being forced to release the secure keys to his site to the FBI, exposing all 410,000 users to FBI's resulting ability to read all email routed via Lavabit.[199]

In an October 2013 interview, Edward maintained that he did not bring any classified material into Russia "because it wouldnt serve the public interest". He added "theres a zero percent chance the Russians or Chinese have received any documents".[200]

On June 14, 2013, United States federal prosecutors charged Snowden with theft of government property, unauthorized communication of national defense information and willful communication of classified communications intelligence information to an unauthorized person, the last two charges having been brought under the 1917 Espionage Act.[9][10][11]

According to the Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and others, Snowden's actions precipitated an intense debate on privacy and warrantless domestic surveillance in the United States.[31][201]

Edward Snowden was awarded the biennial German "whistleblower prize" in August 2013, in absentia, with an accompanying award equal to 3,000 euro. Established in 1999, the award is sponsored by the German branch of the International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms and by the Association of German Scientists.[202] Organizers in Berlin said the prize was to acknowledge his "bold efforts to expose the massive and unsuspecting monitoring and storage of communication data, which cannot be accepted in democratic societies".[203] Snowden responded to the award, saying it was "a great honor to be recognized for the public good created by this act of whistleblowing", and that it was not him, but the public who "affected this powerful change to abrogation of basic constitutional rights by secret agencies".[204] File:Edward Snowden receives Sam Adams award in Moscow.webmThe Sam Adams Award was presented to Snowden by a group of American former intelligence officers and whistleblowers. In October 2013, after two months as an asylee, Snowden made his first public appearance to accept the award in Moscow. FBI whistleblower Jesselyn Radack of the Government Accountability Project was one of four Americans to present the award. She told The Nation, "We believe that Snowden exemplifies Sam Adamss courage, persistence and devotion to truthno matter what the consequences. We wanted Snowden to know that, as opposed to the daily vitriol from the US government and mainstream media, 60 percent of the United States supports him, including thousands in the national security and intelligence agencies where we used to work."[205][206][207]

Classified: The Edward Snowden Story, a dramatic thriller about Edward Snowden, is to be released on September 19, 2014. The film is directed by Jason Bourque and produced by computer hacker turned filmmaker Travis Doering; actor Kevin Zegers plays the character of Edward Snowden."[208]

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Edward Snowden: Bitcoin Has Become Too Successful – Ethereum …

Edward Snowden, The famous Whistle-blower, known for revealing the existence of PRISM, a clandestine program of mass espionage perpetrated by the U.S. government on its own people, was interviewed a few days ago by Ben Wizner for McSweeneys magazine, The End of Trust (McSweeneys Issue 54). In it, he spoke about the benefits of crypto money and blockchain technologies proving to be quite enthusiastic about the potential of Bitcoin to change the way society works.

Snowden, whom Mr. Wizner describes as the clearest, most patient, and least condescending explainer of technology hes ever met, started the interview explaining how blockchain is basically a new kind of database in which users write a history that cant be manipulated.

Look, the reality is blockchains can theoretically be applied in many ways, but its important to understand that mechanically, were discussing a very, very simple concept, and therefore the applications are all variations on a single theme: verifiable accounting. Hot

Imagine that instead of todays world, where publicly important data is often held exclusively at GenericCorp LLC, which can and does play God with it at the publics expense, its in a thousand places with a hundred jurisdictions. There is no takedown mechanism or other lets be evil button, and creating one requires a global consensus of, generally, at least 51 percent of the network in support of changing the rule.

In addition to being a fervent believer in the role of cryptocurrencies as tools to promote transparency in different aspects of everyday life, Snowden referred to Bitcoin, explaining why it can be a crucial component of todays economy despite opinions of its lack of fundamental value:

What makes a little piece of green paper worth anything? If youre not cynical enough to say men with guns, which are the reason legal tender is treated different from Monopoly money, youre talking about scarcity and shared belief in the usefulness of the currency as a store of value or a means of exchange.

Lets step outside of paper currencies, which have no fundamental value, to a more difficult case: why is gold worth so much more than its limited but real practical uses in industry? Because people generally agree its worth more than its practical value. Thats really it.

Blockchain-based cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin have very limited fundamental value: at most, its a token that lets you save data into the blocks of their respective blockchains, forcing everybody participating in that blockchain to keep a copy of it for you. But the scarcity of at least some cryptocurrencies is very real Competition to mine the remaining few involves hundreds of millions of dollars worth of equipment and electricity, which economists like to claim are what really backs Bitcoin.

Yet the hard truth is that the only thing that gives cryptocurrencies value is the belief of a large population in their usefulness as a means of exchange As long as there are people out there who want to be able to move money without banks, cryptocurrencies are likely to be valued.

Regarding the characteristics of the most important consensus mechanisms, Snowden comments that neither PoW nor PoS are perfect. Each has its pros and cons; however, he asserted that both accomplish their mission and provide security to the network despite attacking the problem from different angles.

While explaining the features of PoW as the consensus mechanism of the Bitcoin blockchain, Snowden hinted that the popular cryptocurrency might have exceeded Satoshi Nakamotos own expectations:

The flaw in all of this brilliance was the failure to account for Bitcoin becoming too successful. The reward for winning a round, once worth mere pennies, is now around one hundred thousand dollars, making it economically reasonable for people to divert enormous amounts of energy, and data centers full of computer equipment, toward the math or mining contest. Town-sized Godzillas of computation are being poured into this competition, ratcheting the difficulty of the problems beyond comprehension.

The interview ended with a more than obvious response to his optimistic sentiment regarding the future adoption of cryptos and blockchains technologies. When Mr. Wizner asked him are you optimistic about how blockchains are going to be used once we get out of the experimental phase? Snowden responded with a simple, yet powerful answer:

What do you think?

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Edward Snowden: Bitcoin Has Become Too Successful - Ethereum ...

Edward Snowden Bullish On Crypto: Blockchain Money Makes Sense

In 2013, to the chagrin of the U.S. government, Edward Snowden broke Americas laws of secrecy in dramatic fashion, unveiling metaphorical heaps of the NSAs classified documents to the public at large. As explained in a number of interviews from his Russian refuge, Snowden believed that the worlds people shouldnt be supervised incessantly, finding it logical to break the ice on the NSAs most caged initiatives.So, it should come as no surprise, that Snowden himself is a fan of blockchain technologies and crypto.

And as such, Snowden has cemented himself as someone that is near and dear to the hearts ofdiehard non-traditionalists, anarcho-capitalists, and zealot libertarians worldwide, a majority of which are advocates for blockchain and decentralized crypto assets.

Since Snowden fled to Russia for asylum, the world-renowned whistleblower has appeared in a number of interviews and talks around the globe. Keeping in mind that his views of the world are in-line with Bitcoins ethos and raison dtre, many have asked the former NSA contractor about his thoughts on blockchain technologies as a whole. And while he has brieflyexplained his conjectures on the matter,via a transcript outlining a blockchain-centric candid conversation between Edward Snowden and his legal counsel, it appears he knows more than he may let on.

Ben Wizner, Snowdens personal lawyer, ashamedly asked the controversial figure about blockchain, noting that he doesnt really get it. In an extended conversation, Snowden broke down the basic of a blockchain, conferring on what makes this newfangled data structure tickand, more importantly, the value of blockchains themselves.

Snowden, likening blockchains to a new form of database, gave Wizner a single word to exemplify the issue that blockchains solve trust.

Prior to 2008s Great Recession, consumers blindly threw capital at centralized banks, presumably due to the fact that they trusted these institutions. But, as the crash began, sending millions into a state of financial disrepair and ruin, it became palpable that trusting centralized entities with data and money was a risky business. And hence, as alluded to by Snowden, the creation of Bitcoin, the worlds first bonafide blockchain network. The seeming libertarian noted:

Imagine that instead of todays world, where publicly important data is often held exclusively its in a thousand places with a hundred jurisdictions. There is no takedown mechanism or other lets be evil button, and creating one requires a global consensus of, generally, at least 51 percent of the network in support of changing the rules.

Wizner, taken slightly aback by Snowdens technical explanation, posed an interesting question to his client, asking him if blockchain technologies can weaken huge tech platform monopolies, like Amazon or Google?

Snowden, remaining cautiously optimistic on the prospects of this innovation, said that for the foreseeable future, usurping such giants from their high horses through blockchain is nothing more than wishful thinking. However, he went on to acknowledge that money is, of course, the best and most famous example of where blockchains have been proven to make sense, leading him logically to the topic of Bitcoin.

Although he pointed out that cryptocurrencies, namely Bitcoin, have limited fundamental value, Snowden then eulogized Bitcoin for its scarcity, censorship-resistant, and borderless nature. However, he was tentative to call Bitcoin private money, but rather, the worlds first free money, which is valued by the need for transactions without intermediaries.

Keeping his penchant for privacy in mind, Snowden also brought up Monero and ZCash, alluding to his sentiment that he prefers the former because Monero is private by default.

While he may be touting his opinion that cryptocurrencies should hold value, Snowdens views on blockchain arent all sunshine and rainbows. Concluding his comments, Snowden told his lawyer that Bitcoins current Proof of Work (PoW) consensus mechanism is flawed, adding that these protocols are destructive and slants the game in favor of the rich, while adding that the rise of blockchains may lead to an over-transparent world, where everything can be traced.

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Edward Snowden Bullish On Crypto: Blockchain Money Makes Sense

The Mind of Leaker Edward Snowden: An Armchair Analysis

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden may just be a naive do-gooder in over his head. Or he could be a narcissist, motivated by the glory of seeing his name in print. Maybe he's just a disgruntled guy who thinks he's smarter than everyone else.

The psychological motives of the former CIA employee, who worked as a U.S. contractor in Hawaii before he became the latest snitch to divulge highly sensitive government information, are far from clear. But these are the possibilities offered by professional criminal profilers who have analyzed Snowdens published quotes in the Guardian and the Washington Post as well as a 12-minute video posted by the Guardian.

He thinks hes a hero, says Dr. Casey Jordan, a criminologist who specializes in crime and human behavior. He thinks of himself as a conscientious objector. He thinks hes going to be like the French revolutionaries in Les Miserablesthat if you die trying you will be remembered for your actions.

Snowden, who made a roughly $200,000 salary and had a live-in girlfriend before he went into hiding, said he decided to disclose information about the governments PRISM program, which makes use of internet surveillance to assist counterterrorism efforts, to protect "basic liberties for people around the world." He became disenchanted with the Obama administration, he said, after it continued the policies of former president George W. Bush.

Retired FBI profiler Clint van Zandt, a former U.S. Army counterintelligence agent and onetime supervisor of the bureau's Behavioral Science Unit, also sees sign of vanity in Snowdens explanations. For someone to believe he could make decisions on world events and he can shape the world and he alonenot the federal judges, or the attorney general, or the Supreme Courtshould be the only one to determine what should be a national secret...Thats a level of arrogance only he can explain.

Van Zandt says there are usually personal reasons why someone like Snowden gives up the goods. FBI and CIA agents have given up secret information to the Sovietssometimes for money and sometimes because they were underpaid and underappreciated and this was their way of saying, Look how smart I am. Was there a level of narcissism? Did he feel his supervisors demeaned him? Did he feel he was underpaid? All these questions will have to be answered.

According to Canadian criminal-profile expert Jim van Allen, who specializes in analyzing threatening cyber communications, Snowden was the wrong guy in the wrong placesomeone who shouldnt have had access to the information he had access to. They put him in areas where he sees this data collection at such a large scale and he feels affronted by it. Hes more loyal to his personal ideals than government and national security.

Holed up in a swank hotel in Hong Kong, Snowden said he has barely left his room, had lined the door of his hotel room with pillows to prevent eavesdropping, and put a red hood over his head and computer when entering his password to prevent hidden cameras from getting the information. The U.S. government, he told the Guardian, was building a massive spying machine that would destroy privacy, internet freedom and basic liberties for people around the world with this massive surveillance machine they're secretly building."

Such a strongly paranoid worldview, according to van Allen, is typical of a whistleblowers personality.

Hes using some really emotionally charged language, van Allen says. He figures if the government is left unchecked it is going to exponentially abuse peoples rights until we reach the point of turnkey tyranny. Thats some extreme thinking. However, Jordan says such actions are normal behavior for former CIA employees. He probably resented the fact that they knew things about his life.

According to the June 6 interview, Snowden said that prior to fleeing to Hong Kong, he told his NSA bosses that he needed medical treatment for epilepsy. Instead, he packed his bags and told his girlfriend he was going to be away for a few weeks. Then, on May 20, he flew to Hong Kong, where the Guardian interviewed him in a hotel "just up the road" from the U.S. Consulate.

I laughed when he said the CIA has a post just up the road, says van Allen. I thought that, well, that narrows down the hotels youre in. The whole thing to me appears reckless. He was with the military, the CIA, and was involved in security work. He should be way better in covering his tracks.

Snowden told the Guardian that he in fact wanted to avoid the media spotlight. "I don't want public attention because I don't want the story to be about me, he told the paper. I want it to be about what the U.S. government is doing."

Van Allen disagrees. He wants people to notice him, he said. The fact this guy allowed himself to be named leads to a notoriety aspect of his personality.

Jordan also sees selfish motives in Snowdens decision to reveal his identity. I think hes scared, she says. Its a last-ditch effort. The interviews were so we wouldnt think of him as a crackpot when hes brought up on the charges. It is his last speech before the gallows A lot of these government agents, they think theyre Jason Bourne. I think hes young and naive and seduced to the Julian Assange-WikiLeaks concept that he can be a hero. Its a miscalculation on his part.

Snowdens desire to go to Iceland, where he said he is hoping to seek asylum from the American government that has already begun an investigation, could also be a miscalculation.

I hope he Googles the median temperature in Iceland in January, says van Allen. Hes certainly not realistic. Its not exactly the chosen career choice of many people. What is he going to do is Iceland? Its like saying I want to go to Winnipeg for the rest of his life.

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The Mind of Leaker Edward Snowden: An Armchair Analysis

Snowden Archive – Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE)

The Snowden Archive is a collection of all documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden that have subsequently been published by news media.

The Snowden Surveillance Archive is a complete collection of all documents that former NSA contractor Edward Snowden leaked in June 2013 to journalists Laura Poitras, Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill, and subsequently were published by news media, such as The Guardian, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Der Spiegel, Le Monde, El Mundo and The Intercept. The leaked documents and their coverage have raised significant public concerns and had a major impact on intelligence policy debates internationally over issues of freedom of expression, privacy, national security and democratic governance more broadly. The Archive also contains some documents that the U.S. Government has published which are helpful in understanding the leaked documents. The Archive does not contain any documents that have not already been published in other sources. The approximately 400 documents currently in the Archive are a small fraction of the estimated 50,000 documents Snowden turned over. Most of these will likely not be published, but as new documents are published, they will be added to the Archive.

Our aim in creating this Archive is to provide a tool that would facilitate citizen and researcher access to these important documents. Indexes, document descriptions, links to original documents and to related news stories, glossary and comprehensive search features are all designed to enable a better understanding of state surveillance programs within the wider context of surveillance by the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) along with its partners in the Five Eyes countries U.K., Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Our hope is that this resource will contribute to greater appreciation of the broad scope, intimate reach and profound implications of the global surveillance infrastructures and practices that Edward Snowdens historic document leak reveals.

The Archive was designed and built by George Raine, a graduate of the Master of Information program in the Faculty of Information at the University of Toronto, with the assistance of Jillian Harkness, currently a student in this program.

Important note: The descriptions contained in this archive are the work of interested amateurs in the area of state intelligence, without detailed insight into the legal and technological issues that the documents describe. If readers identify any potential inaccuracies, they are encouraged to contact the curators, who will endeavour to improve the collection. The curators of the Archive have no special access to documents that are not already in the public domain. Redactions that occur in the documents have been performed either by government classifiers, or by the media outlets that first published the documents.

Project Partners Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE) The Politics of Surveillance Project in the Faculty of Information at the University of Toronto, led by Dr. Andrew Clement, a sub-project of The New Transparency: Surveillance and Social Sorting project, based at Queen's University, led by Dr. David Lyon

Supporters Surveillance Studies Centre, Queen's University Digital Curation Institute, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto Centre for Freedom of Expression, Faculty of Communications and Design, Ryerson University

The official launch of the Snowden Archive, "Snowden Live: Canada and the Security State," featuring a live Q&A with Edward Snowden, took place on March 4, 2015, at Ryerson University in Toronto. The event video can be watched at cjfe.org/asksnowden.

If you think we are missing any documents in the archive, spot errors or otherwise have comments and suggestions to make, please contact us at: cjfe@cjfe.org VISIT THE ARCHIVE

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Snowden Archive - Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE)