NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden reinvents himself as an …

He opened eyes around the world with his exposure of surveillance by the NSA.

But Edward Snowden's next venture will target the world's ears, with the whistleblower set to release a techno tune as he makes his debut as an electronic dance music artist.

The fugitiveintelligence contractor is releasing a track with acclaimed electronica star Jean-Michel Jarre,the Columbia record company announced on Friday.

Scroll down for snippet of Edward Snowden's song

Edward Snowden (right) set to release a techno tune as he makes his debut as an electronic dance music artist withJean-Michel Jarre

The song - called Exit - is set to hit the charts on May 6 and featuresSnowden discussing digital surveillance to the backdrop of a lively electronic soundscape created by Jarre.

It is available to stream online and will appear on Jarre's forthcoming album Electronica Vol. 2: The Heart of Noise.

The pair were brought together by the Guardianafter Jarre gave an interview and asked to be put in touch with the former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor, who is now wanted on espionage charges in the United States.

'Edward is an absolute hero of our times. When I first read about him, it made me think of my mother,' Jarre saud,

'She joined the French resistance in 1941, when people in France still thought they were just troublemakers, and she always told me that when society is generating things you can't stand, you have to stand up against it.'

After being put in touch, Jarre, 67, travelled to Moscow to meet Snowden, 32, who lives in Russia in exile, and record the samples that feature on the track.

The song - called Exit - is set to hit the charts on May 6 and features Snowden (right) discussing digital surveillance to the backdrop of a lively electronic soundscape created by Jarre (left)

Other guest contributors on the album will include Gary Numan and the Pet Shop Boys.

Snowden became one of the worlds most wanted men in 2013 when stole classified documents from the NSA.

Snowden, who was a computer specialist at an intelligence centre in Hawaii, tricked colleagues into handing over passwords so he could copy up to 1.7million documents in one of the biggest leaks in US history.

He also leaked details of attempts by state spy agencies including Britains GCHQ to view citizens private information.

Snowden claimed internet history, emails, text messages, calls and passwords were harvested by spies.

And he made the highly damaging claim revelation that the U.S. had hacked Chinese computers and the communications of allies such as Germany and France.

The defence contractor claims he had to act because the US governments policies were a threat to democracy - but America consider him a traitor and he would face decades in jail if he ever returned.

He fled justice in the US to Hong Kong, then Russia, where he was granted asylum. Snowden is now stranded in Moscow as a fugitive after America took away his passport.

Intelligence chiefs believe he is now a puppet' passing details of military capabilities, operations and tactics to Putin's henchmen, although he denies taking any classified material to Russia.

Continue reading here:
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden reinvents himself as an ...

Edward Snowden releases techno song with Jean-Michel Jarre

Jean-Michel Jarre and Edward Snowden: together in electric dreams. Photograph: EDDA/Aero Productions/EPA

In 2013 Edward Snowden rocked the world of government surveillance when he dropped bombshell revelations about the National Surveillance Agency.

On Thursday it was the music world Snowden rocked, when he dropped a red-hot techno track co-recorded with French music icon Jean-Michel Jarre.

The song, called Exit, mixes clips of Snowden warning of the dangers of privacy interference with what a colleague here at the Guardian described as haunting, discordant synths.

Exit was posted to Jarres YouTube channel on Thursday afternoon. The collaboration came about after Jarre gave an interview to the Guardian last year, and asked our music critic Alexis Petridis to put him in touch with Snowden. Jarre described his music, over which Snowden performs, as a hectic, obsessive techno track, trying to illustrate the idea of this crazy quest for big data on one side and the manhunt for this one young guy by the CIA, NSA and FBI on the other.

Related: Jean-Michel Jarre records with Edward Snowden after the Guardian brings them together

Continuing this theme, the music video has been contrived as a Matrix/Bourne Identity/Wikileaks drone footage mash-up. Theres video of green numbers scrolling down a black screen, interspersed with quick-zoom aerial reconnaissance images. Theres a disorientating car chase, cutting to a fairly shoddy special effect of a satellite circling the Earth. This is a interspersed with shots of Jarre hopping around a studio playing the keyboard.

The rave-style track represents a different type of whistleblowing for Snowden, who appears in the middle of the video, discussing privacy in front of a grey curtain. His contribution sits firmly in the spoken-word category, having been taken from an old interview about the dangers of a government spying on its citizens.

Technology can actually increase privacy, Snowden says. The question is: Why are our private details that are transmitted online... why are private details that are stored on our personal devices, any different than the details and private records of our lives that are stored in our private journals?

And now its an inquiry you can dance to.

Continued here:
Edward Snowden releases techno song with Jean-Michel Jarre

Edward Snowden Responds to ‘Snowden’ Movie Trailer Video …

Transcript for Edward Snowden Responds to 'Snowden' Movie Trailer

We'll do some "Pop news" and begin with your first look at Joseph gordon-levitt as Edward Snowden and no one is more excited than Snowden himself about this movie. The whistle-blower tweeted a link to the new movie's trailer saying two two minutes and 39 seconds everyone at the NSA just stopped working. Edward, really do you think they did? He's confident, that young man. As for oliver stone, he's set to tell his personal story, Snowden is due to come out in theaters on September 16th. Apparently he sounds exactly like him. Exactly. It's like verbatim. Yes. He's got the voice named apparently. The film, I mean, it's classic oliver stone. Yes. So good subject. Come on in, Ging. They usually make me wait. Never. I would never make you wait, my friend. Meanwhile, also in "Pop news" this morning, a 23-year-old new Yorker is discovering that he is practically the star of Adam Sandler's film "The do over" alongside the arc. Not only is the physical resemblance uncanny, his name is max Kessler, the name of his character in the movie. The real-life kegs ler tells us he first found out about this coincidence when this buddies showed him the film's trailer and called a bunch of friends to find out if he was being punk'd. No, just a coincidence, one that Sandler got a kick out of and invited him to the premiere. Isn't that funny? Finally in "Pop news," it is thirsty Thursday, America. Is that a thing. Of course it's a thing. I just made it up so now it's a thing. Isn't that every day. I'm sure we could do -- Alliteration. We'll think about it. Today, though, is thirsty Thursday. I'm sure you've heard the expression drunk as a skunk. Well that's what this guy was. When workers found him, look very closely, he was drunk as a raccoon. The little fellow was stumbling around a beer warehouse. Oh, no. Listen to the workers who found him. Oh, this raccoon is drunk. So today we coined a new

This transcript has been automatically generated and may not be 100% accurate.

See the original post:
Edward Snowden Responds to 'Snowden' Movie Trailer Video ...

Edward Snowden: ‘Governments can reduce our dignity to that …

A US drone used to launch airstrikes in Iraq and Syria. Photograph: John Moore/Getty Images

Ive been waiting 40 years for someone like you. Those were the first words Daniel Ellsberg spoke to me when we met last year. Dan and I felt an immediate kinship; we both knew what it meant to risk so much and to be irrevocably changed by revealing secret truths.

One of the challenges of being a whistleblower is living with the knowledge that people continue to sit, just as you did, at those desks, in that unit, throughout the agency; who see what you saw and comply in silence, without resistance or complaint. They learn to live not just with untruths but with unnecessary untruths, dangerous untruths, corrosive untruths. It is a double tragedy: what begins as a survival strategy ends with the compromise of the human being it sought to preserve and the diminishing of the democracy meant to justify the sacrifice.

But unlike Dan Ellsberg, I didnt have to wait 40 years to witness other citizens breaking that silence with documents. Ellsberg gave the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times and other newspapers in 1971; Chelsea Manning provided the Iraq and Afghan war logs and the Cablegate materials to WikiLeaks in 2010. I came forward in 2013. Now another person of courage and conscience has made available the extraordinary set of documents published in The Assassination Complex, the new book by Jeremy Scahill and the staff of the Intercept.

We are witnessing a compression of the timeframe in which unconstitutional activities can continue before they are exposed by acts of conscience. And this permits the American people to learn about critical government actions, not as part of the historical record but in a way that allows direct action through voting in other words, in a way that empowers an informed citizenry to defend the democracy that state secrets are nominally intended to support.

When I see individuals who are able to bring information forward, it gives me hope that we wont always be required to curtail the illegal activities of our government as if it were a constant task, to uproot official lawbreaking as routinely as we mow the grass. (Interestingly enough, that is how some have begun to describe remote killing operations, as cutting the grass.)

A single act of whistleblowing doesnt change the reality that there are significant portions of the government that operate below the waterline, beneath the visibility of the public. Those secret activities will continue, despite reforms. But those who perform these actions now have to live with the fear that if they engage in activities contrary to the spirit of society if even a single citizen is catalysed to halt the machinery of that injustice they might still be held to account. The thread by which good governance hangs is this equality before the law, for the only fear of the man who turns the gears is that he may find himself upon them.

Hope lies beyond, when we move from extraordinary acts of revelation to a collective culture of accountability within the intelligence community. Here we will have taken a meaningful step towards solving a problem that has existed for as long as our government.

Not all leaks are alike, nor are their makers. David Petraeus, for instance, provided his illicit lover and favourable biographer information so secret it defied classification, including the names of covert operatives and the presidents private thoughts on matters of strategic concern. Petraeus was not charged with a felony, as the Justice Department had initially recommended, but was instead permitted to plead guilty to a misdemeanour. Had an enlisted soldier of modest rank pulled out a stack of highly classified notebooks and handed them to his girlfriend to secure so much as a smile, he would be looking at many decades in prison, not a pile of character references from a Whos Who of the Deep State.

There are authorised leaks and also permitted disclosures. It is rare for senior administration officials to explicitly ask a subordinate to leak a CIA officers name to retaliate against her husband, as appears to have been the case with Valerie Plame. It is equally rare for a month to go by in which some senior official does not disclose some protected information that is beneficial to the political efforts of the parties but clearly damaging to national security under the definitions of our law.

This dynamic can be seen quite clearly in the al-Qaida conference call of doom story, in which intelligence officials, likely seeking to inflate the threat of terrorism and deflect criticism of mass surveillance, revealed to a neoconservative website extraordinarily detailed accounts of specific communications they had intercepted, including locations of the participating parties and the precise contents of the discussions. If the officials claims were to be believed, they irrevocably burned an extraordinary means of learning the precise plans and intentions of terrorist leadership for the sake of a short-lived political advantage in a news cycle. Not a single person seems to have been so much as disciplined as a result of the story that cost us the ability to listen to the alleged al-Qaida hotline.

If harmfulness and authorisation make no difference, what explains the distinction between the permissible and the impermissible disclosure?

The answer is control. A leak is acceptable if it is not seen as a threat, as a challenge to the prerogatives of the institution. But if all the disparate components of the institution not just its head but its hands and feet, every part of its body must be assumed to have the same power to discuss matters of concern, that is an existential threat to the modern political monopoly of information control, particularly if were talking about disclosures of serious wrongdoing, fraudulent activity, unlawful activities. If you cant guarantee that you alone can exploit the flow of controlled information, then the aggregation of all the worlds unmentionables including your own begins to look more like a liability than an asset.

Truly unauthorised disclosures are necessarily an act of resistance that is, if theyre not done simply for press consumption, to fluff up the public appearance or reputation of an institution. However, that doesnt mean they all come from the lowest working level. Sometimes the individuals who step forward happen to be near the pinnacle of power. Ellsberg was in the top tier; he was briefing the secretary of defense. You cant get much higher, unless you are the secretary of defense, and the incentives simply arent there for such a high-ranking official to be involved in public interest disclosures because that person already wields the influence to change the policy directly.

At the other end of the spectrum is Chelsea Manning, a junior enlisted soldier, who was much nearer to the bottom of the hierarchy. I was midway in the professional career path. I sat down at the table with the chief information officer of the CIA, and I was briefing him and his chief technology officer when they were publicly making statements such as: We try to collect everything and hang on to it for ever, and everybody still thought that was a cute business slogan. Meanwhile, I was designing the systems they would use to do precisely that. I wasnt briefing the policy side, the secretary of defense, but I was briefing the operations side, the National Security Agencys director of technology. Official wrongdoing can catalyse all levels of insiders to reveal information, even at great risk to themselves, so long as they can be convinced that it is necessary to do so.

Reaching those individuals, helping them realise that their first allegiance as a public servant is to the public rather than to the government, is the challenge. That is a significant shift in cultural thinking for a government worker today.

Ive argued that whistleblowers are elected by circumstance. Its not a virtue of who you are or your background. Its a question of what you are exposed to, what you witness. At that point, the question becomes: Do you honestly believe that you have the capability to remediate the problem, to influence policy? I would not encourage individuals to reveal information, even about wrongdoing, if they do not believe they can be effective in doing so, because the right moment can be as rare as the will to act.

This is simply a pragmatic, strategic consideration. Whistleblowers are outliers of probability, and if they are to be effective as a political force, it is critical that they maximise the amount of public good produced from scarce seed. When I was making my decision, I came to understand how one strategic consideration, such as waiting until the month before a domestic election, could become overwhelmed by another, such as the moral imperative to provide an opportunity to arrest a global trend that had already gone too far. I was focused on what I saw and on my sense of overwhelming disenfranchisement that the government, in which I had believed for my entire life, was engaged in such an extraordinary act of deception.

At the heart of this evolution is that whistleblowing is a radicalising event and by radical I dont mean extreme; I mean it in the traditional sense of radix, the root of the issue. At some point, you recognise that you cant just move a few letters around on a page and hope for the best. You cant simply report this problem to your supervisor, as I tried to do, because inevitably supervisors get nervous. They think about the structural risk to their career. They are concerned about rocking the boat and getting a reputation. The incentives arent there to produce meaningful reform. Fundamentally, in an open society, change has to flow from the bottom to the top.

As someone who works in the intelligence community, youve given up a lot to do this work. Youve happily committed yourself to tyrannical restrictions. You voluntarily undergo polygraphs; you tell the government everything about your life. You waive a lot of rights because you believe the fundamental goodness of your mission justifies the sacrifice of even the sacred. Its a just cause.

And when youre confronted with evidence not in an edge case, not in a peculiarity, but as a core consequence of the programme that the government is subverting the constitution and violating the ideals you so fervently believe in, you have to make a decision. When you see that the programme or policy is inconsistent with the oaths and obligations that youve sworn to your society and yourself, then that oath and that obligation cannot be reconciled with the programme. To which do you owe a greater loyalty?

One of the extraordinary things about the revelations of the past several years, and their accelerating pace, is that they have occurred in the context of the United States as the uncontested hyperpower.

We now have the largest unchallenged military machine in the history of the world, and it is backed by a political system that is increasingly willing to authorise any use of force in response to practically any justification. In todays context that justification is terrorism, but not necessarily because our leaders are particularly concerned about terrorism in itself or because they think it is an existential threat to society. They recognise that even if we had a 9/11 attack every year, we would still be losing more people to car accidents and heart disease, and we dont see the same expenditure of resources to respond to those more significant threats.

What it really comes down to is the reality that we have a political class that feels it must inoculate itself against allegations of weakness. Our politicians are more fearful of the politics of terrorism of the charge that they do not take terrorism seriously than they are of the crime itself.

As a result, we have arrived at this unmatched capability, unrestrained by policy. We have become reliant upon what was intended to be the limitation of last resort: the courts. Judges, realising that their decisions are suddenly charged with much greater political importance and impact than was originally intended, have gone to great lengths in the post-9/11 period to avoid reviewing the laws or the operations of the executive in the national security context and setting restrictive precedents that, even if entirely proper, would impose limits on government for decades or more. That means the most powerful institution that humanity has ever witnessed has also become the least restrained. Yet that same institution was never designed to operate in such a manner, having instead been explicitly founded on the principle of checks and balances. Our founding impulse was to say: Though we are mighty, we are voluntarily restrained.

When you first go on duty at CIA headquarters, you raise your hand and swear an oath not to government, not to the agency, not to secrecy. You swear an oath to the constitution. So there is this friction, this emerging contest between the obligations and values that the government asks you to uphold, and the actual activities that you are asked to participate in.

These disclosures about the Obama administrations killing programme reveal that there is a part of the American character that is deeply concerned with the unrestrained, unchecked exercise of power. And there is no greater or clearer manifestation of unchecked power than assuming for yourself the authority to execute an individual outside a battlefield context and without the involvement of any sort of judicial process.

Traditionally, in the context of military affairs, we have always understood that lethal force in battle could not be subjected to ex ante judicial constraints. When armies are shooting at each other, there is no room for a judge on that battlefield. But now the government has decided without the publics participation, without our knowledge and consent that the battlefield is everywhere. Individuals who dont represent an imminent threat in any meaningful sense of those words are redefined, through the subversion of language, to meet that definition.

Inevitably, that conceptual subversion finds its way home, along with the technology that enables officials to promote comfortable illusions about surgical killing and nonintrusive surveillance. Take, for instance, the holy grail of drone persistence, a capability that the US has been pursuing forever. The goal is to deploy solar-powered drones that can loiter in the air for weeks without coming down. Once you can do that, and you put any typical signals-collection device on the bottom of it to monitor, unblinkingly, the emanations of, for example, the different network addresses of every laptop, phone and iPod, you know not just where a particular device is in what city, but you know what apartment each device lives in, where it goes at any particular time, and by what route.

Once you know the devices, you know their owners. When you start doing this over several cities, you are tracking the movements not just of individuals but of whole populations.

By preying on the modern necessity to stay connected, governments can reduce our dignity to something like that of tagged animals, the primary difference being that we paid for the tags and they are in our pockets. It sounds like fantasist paranoia, but on the technical level it is so trivial to implement that I cannot imagine a future in which it wont be attempted. It will be limited to the war zones at first, in accordance with our customs, but surveillance technology has a tendency to follow us home.

Here we see the double edge of our uniquely American brand of nationalism. We are raised to be exceptionalists, to think we are the better nation with the manifest destiny to rule. The danger is that some people will actually believe this claim, and some of those will expect the manifestation of our national identity, that is, our government, to comport itself accordingly.

Unrestrained power may be many things, but it is not American.

It is in this sense that the act of whistleblowing increasingly has become an act of political resistance. The whistleblower raises the alarm and lifts the lamp, inheriting the legacy of a line of Americans that begins with Paul Revere.

The individuals who make these disclosures feel so strongly about what they have seen that they are willing to risk their lives and their freedom. They know that we, the people, are ultimately the strongest and most reliable check on the power of government.

The insiders at the highest levels of government have extraordinary capability, extraordinary resources, tremendous access to influence and a monopoly on violence, but in the final calculus there is but one figure that matters: the individual citizen.

And there are more of us than there are of them.

The Assassination Complex: Inside the Governments Secret Drone Warfare Programme by Jeremy Scahill and the staff of the Intercept, with a foreword by Edward Snowden and afterword by Glenn Greenwald, is published by Serpents Tail (8.99) and Simon & Schuster ($30).

See the original post:
Edward Snowden: 'Governments can reduce our dignity to that ...

Edward Snowden: The Untold Story | WIRED

The afternoon of our third meeting, about two weeks after our first, Snowden comes to my hotel room. I have changed locations and am now staying at the Hotel National, across the street from the Kremlin and Red Square. An icon like the Metropol, much of Russias history passed through its front doors at one time or another. Lenin once lived in Room 107, and the ghost of Felix Dzerzhinsky, the feared chief of the old Soviet secret police who also lived here, still haunts the hallways.

But rather than the Russian secret police, its his old employers, the CIA and the NSA, that Snowden most fears. If somebodys really watching me, theyve got a team of guys whose job is just to hack me, he says. I dont think theyve geolocated me, but they almost certainly monitor who Im talking to online. Even if they dont know what youre saying, because its encrypted, they can still get a lot from who youre talking to and when youre talking to them.

More than anything, Snowden fears a blunder that will destroy all the progress toward reforms for which he has sacrificed so much. Im not self-destructive. I dont want to self-immolate and erase myself from the pages of history. But if we dont take chances, we cant win, he says. And so he takes great pains to stay one step ahead of his presumed pursuershe switches computers and email accounts constantly. Nevertheless, he knows hes liable to be compromised eventually: Im going to slip up and theyre going to hack me. Its going to happen.

Indeed, some of his fellow travelers have already committed some egregious mistakes. Last year, Greenwald found himself unable to open a large trove of NSA secrets that Snowden had passed to him. So he sent his longtime partner, David Miranda, from their home in Rio to Berlin to get another set from Poitras, who fixed the archive. But in making the arrangements, The Guardian booked a transfer through London. Tipped off, probably as a result of surveillance by GCHQ, the British counterpart of the NSA, British authorities detained Miranda as soon as he arrived and questioned him for nine hours. In addition, an external hard drive containing 60 gigabits of dataabout 58,000 pages of documentswas seized. Although the documents had been encrypted using a sophisticated program known as True Crypt, the British authorities discovered a paper of Mirandas with the password for one of the files, and they were able to decrypt about 75 pages, according to British court documents. *

Another concern for Snowden is what he calls NSA fatiguethe public becoming numb to disclosures of mass surveillance, just as it becomes inured to news of battle deaths during a war. One death is a tragedy, and a million is a statistic, he says, mordantly quoting Stalin. Just as the violation of Angela Merkels rights is a massive scandal and the violation of 80 million Germans is a nonstory.

Nor is he optimistic that the next election will bring any meaningful reform. In the end, Snowden thinks we should put our faith in technologynot politicians. We have the means and we have the technology to end mass surveillance without any legislative action at all, without any policy changes. The answer, he says, is robust encryption. By basically adopting changes like making encryption a universal standardwhere all communications are encrypted by defaultwe can end mass surveillance not just in the United States but around the world.

Until then, Snowden says, the revelations will keep coming. We havent seen the end, he says. Indeed, a couple of weeks after our meeting, The Washington Post reported that the NSAs surveillance program had captured much more data on innocent Americans than on its intended foreign targets. There are still hundreds of thousands of pages of secret documents out thereto say nothing of the other whistle-blowers he may have already inspired. But Snowden says that information contained in any future leaks is almost beside the point. The question for us is not what new story will come out next. The question is, what are we going to do about it?

*CORRECTION APPENDED [10:55am/August, 22 2014]: An earlier version of this story incorrectly reported that Miranda retrieved GCHQ documents from Poitras; it also incorrectly stated that Greenwald has not gained access to the complete GCHQ documents.

Excerpt from:
Edward Snowden: The Untold Story | WIRED

Edward Snowden won’t say hello to Allo – CNET

James Martin/CNET

Edward Snowden has joined a growing group of privacy experts criticizing Google for not integrating end-to-end encryption as a default feature in its new Allo messaging app. In a tweet the NSA whistleblower called Allo "dangerous" and warned his followers against using it for now.

Allo has an incognito mode that promises end-to-end encryption through the popular Signal messaging protocol, but it has to be manually switched on for specific conversations. And to use Allo's Smart Reply feature, which allows the app to read your messages and suggest possible replies, you'll have to disable incognito mode completely.

Allo, which Google announced at the I/O developer conference this week, is Google's answer to messaging apps such as WhatsApp and comes with added personal-assistant features. WhatsApp also uses Signal for encryption, but Signal is baked into the app for all conversations from the start.

Google didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

The rest is here:
Edward Snowden won't say hello to Allo - CNET

Edward Snowden: New Pentagon Source Shows Need for …

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. (Gage Skidmore / CC-BY-2.0)

Edward Snowden is calling for a complete overhaul of U.S. whistleblower protections after a new source from inside the Pentagon leaked a startling account of how the system became a trap for those seeking to expose wrongdoing by the government.

The Guardian reports:

The account of John Crane, a former senior Pentagon investigator, appears to undermine Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and other major establishment figures who argue that there were established routes for Snowden other than leaking to the media.

Crane, a longtime assistant inspector general at the Pentagon, has accused his old office of retaliating against a major surveillance whistleblower, Thomas Drake, in an episode that helps explain Snowdens 2013 National Security Agency disclosures. Not only did Pentagon officials provide Drakes name to criminal investigators, Crane told the Guardian, they destroyed documents relevant to his defence.

Snowden, responding to Cranes revelations, said he had tried to raise his concerns with colleagues, supervisors and lawyers and been told by all of them: Youre playing with fire.

He told the Guardian: We need iron-clad, enforceable protections for whistleblowers, and we need a public record of success stories. Protect the people who go to members of Congress with oversight roles, and if their efforts lead to a positive change in policy recognize them for their efforts. There are no incentives for people to stand up against an agency on the wrong side of the law today, and thats got to change.

Snowden continued: The sad reality of todays policies is that going to the inspector general with evidence of truly serious wrongdoing is often a mistake. Going to the press involves serious risks, but at least youve got a chance.

Continue reading.

Posted by Alexander Reed Kelly.

More Below the Ad

If you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy.

See the rest here:
Edward Snowden: New Pentagon Source Shows Need for ...

Snowden calls for whistleblower shield after claims by new …

Edward Snowden has called for a complete overhaul of US whistleblower protections after a new source from deep inside the Pentagon came forward with a startling account of how the system became a trap for those seeking to expose wrongdoing.

The account of John Crane, a former senior Pentagon investigator, appears to undermine Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and other major establishment figures who argue that there were established routes for Snowden other than leaking to the media.

Crane, a longtime assistant inspector general at the Pentagon, has accused his old office of retaliating against a major surveillance whistleblower, Thomas Drake, in an episode that helps explain Snowdens 2013 National Security Agency disclosures. Not only did Pentagon officials provide Drakes name to criminal investigators, Crane told the Guardian, they destroyed documents relevant to his defence.

Snowden, responding to Cranes revelations, said he had tried to raise his concerns with colleagues, supervisors and lawyers and been told by all of them: Youre playing with fire.

He told the Guardian: We need iron-clad, enforceable protections for whistleblowers, and we need a public record of success stories. Protect the people who go to members of Congress with oversight roles, and if their efforts lead to a positive change in policy recognize them for their efforts. There are no incentives for people to stand up against an agency on the wrong side of the law today, and thats got to change.

Snowden continued: The sad reality of todays policies is that going to the inspector general with evidence of truly serious wrongdoing is often a mistake. Going to the press involves serious risks, but at least youve got a chance.

Thomas Drakes legal ordeal ruined him financially and ended in 2011 with all serious accusations against him dropped. His case served as a prologue to Snowdens. Now Cranes account has led to a new investigation at the US justice department into whistleblower retaliation at the Pentagon that may serve as an epilogue one Crane hopes will make the Pentagon a safe place for insiders to expose wrongdoing and illegality.

If we have situations where we have whistleblowers investigated because theyre whistleblowers to the inspector generals office, that will simply shut down the whole whistleblower system, Crane told the Guardian.

Crane, who has not previously given interviews, has told his explosive story in a new book, Bravehearts: Whistle Blowing In The Age of Snowden by Mark Hertsgaard, from which the Guardian is running extracts. The Guardian has partnered with Der Spiegel and Newsweek Japan on Cranes story.

When someone becomes a whistleblower, theyre making a serious, conscious decision, Crane said.

Theyre making a decision that can change their lives, change their futures, impact family life, too. There needs to be this certain unbreakable trust. Confidentiality is that trust and that cant ever be violated.

Snowden cited Drakes case as a reason for his lack of faith in the governments official whistleblower channels.

When I was at NSA, everybody knew that for anything more serious than workplace harassment, going through the official process was a career-ender at best. Its part of the culture, Snowden told the Guardian.

If your boss in the mailroom lies on his timesheets, the IG might look into it. But if youre Thomas Drake, and you find out the president of the United States ordered the warrantless wiretapping of everyone in the country, whats the IG going to do? Theyre going to flush it, and you with it.

While Drakes case is well known in US national security circles, its internal history is not.

In 2002, Drake and NSA colleagues contacted the Pentagon inspector general to blow the whistle on an expensive and poorly performing tool, Trailblazer, for mass-data analysis. Crane, head of the offices whistleblower unit, assigned investigators. For over two years, with Drake as a major source, they acquired thousands of pages of documents, classified and unclassified, and prepared a lengthy secret report in December 2004 criticizing Trailblazer, eventually helping to kill the program. As far as Crane was concerned, the whistleblower system was working.

But after an aspect of the NSAs warrantless mass surveillance leaked to the New York Times, Drake himself came under investigation and eventually indictment. Drake was suspected of hoarding documentation exactly what inspector-general investigators tell their whistleblowers to do.

They made it clear to keep [documents] wherever possible, and obviously properly handle anything that was classified, Drake remembered.

Crane feared that his own colleagues had told the FBI about Drake. He suspected the Pentagon inspector generals lead attorney, Henry Shelley, whom Crane said had earlier suggested working with the justice department about the leak, had done so. A confrontation yielded what Crane considered to be evasions.

The top lawyer would not reveal to me whether or not Drakes confidentiality had been compromised or not. That was a concern Normally I expect direct answers, Crane said.

When Drakes attorneys sought potentially exculpatory information from the inspector generals office, they learned that much of it had been destroyed before the defendant was charged, pursuant to a standard document destruction policy, according to a 2011 letter from prosecutors.

Crane was livid. All relevant regulations mandated keeping the documents, not destroying them. But a high-ranking colleague, Lynne Halbrooks, prevented Crane from investigating the document destruction. He suspected Shelley and Halbrooks of sacrificing a whistleblower and misleading the justice department and a federal judge, all in a case centering around the cover-up of NSA bulk surveillance.

Cranes relationship with his superiors spiraled downward until they forced him out in 2013, months before Snowdens revelations. The next year, he filed a complaint with a federal agency that works with whistleblowers, the Office of Special Counsel. In March this year, it found a substantial likelihood that the Pentagon inspector generals office improperly destroyed the Drake documents and arranged, with Pentagon consent, for the justice department inspector general to investigate.

Shelley, still the Pentagon inspector generals senior counsel, declined to answer questions but said he was certain my name will be cleared by the new investigation.

Halbrooks, the Office of Special Counsel and the justice department inspector general declined to comment for this story.

Bridget Serchak, a spokeswoman for the Pentagon inspector general, noted that her office and the Office of Special Counsel jointly requested the justice department investigation.

It is important to point out that there has been no determination on the allegations, and it is unfair to characterize the allegations otherwise at this point. DoD OIG will cooperate fully with the DoJ OIGs investigation of this matter and looks forward to the results of that investigation, Serchak said.

Crane considers this latest inquiry a bellwether for whether the whistleblower system can reform itself in a post-Snowden era.

Snowden responded to the way Drake was handled. The Office of Special Council investigation regarding destruction of possibly exculpatory documents regarding Drake might be the end of this saga, Crane said.

More:
Snowden calls for whistleblower shield after claims by new ...

Edward Snowden performs radical surgery on a phone to make …

If you think that your phone may have been hacked so that your adversaries can watch you through the cameras and listen through the mics, one way to solve the problem is to remove the cameras and microphones, and only use the phone with a headset that you unplug when it's not in use.

In this video for Vice, Edward Snowden demonstrates how to remove the surface-mount mic and camera components from your phone's logic board to render it blind and deaf except when you connect external sensors to it.

On tomorrows episode of Vice, the man himself shows correspondent Shane Smith how to make a smartphone go black by removing the cameras and microphones so they cant be used against you. Find out how to do it yourself in the clip above from Vice, which airs tomorrow at 11 p.m. on HBO.

Watch Edward Snowden Teach Vice How to Make a Phone Go Black [Angela Watercutter/Wired]

Lured by the internets pervasive insistence that it represents a superior, more comfortable typing experience, I recently went back to an old-timey mechanical keyboard. This was a mistake. I am now a hamfisted ASCII jazz disaster.

SpareOne Emergency Phone is a basic cellphone powered by AA batteries. This gives it a relatively short time on a charge, but means that it will have a charge after being stuffed in a drawer or glove box for months. I came across this during my search for the perfect basic phone, but be warned: []

Low-cost carrier Easyjet has prototyped Sneakairs, a pair of shoes that have small vibrating motors and Bluetooth links; they work in concert with your mobile phones mapping app, buzzing left or right when its time to turn, and twice if youve gone the wrong way.

Jared Sinclair developed the RSS reader app Unread, whichmade $10,000 in its first 24 hours on the iOS market.And weve all heard the story of Flappy Bird developer Dong Nguyen, whose creation was reportedly earning $50,000 a day at the height of its 2013 explosion. While those are rare examples, theyre also testament to the []

If you or your companys IT system are besieged by black hat cyber attacks, an ethical hacker might be all that stands between crippling damage and a companys long-term prosperity. Its no wonder that the market for IT security specialists is exploding. Certification is the key so learn the tenets of ethical hacking andget []

Your laptop and mobile devices are top of the lineso why are you trotting out that raggedy decades-old suitcase when you go somewhere? Time to up your travel game with a complete 5-piece Herschel Travel Luggage bundleand well even give it to you for free!Of course, youve got to win the Ultimate Herschel Travel Bundle []

Continued here:
Edward Snowden performs radical surgery on a phone to make ...

Eric Holder gives props to Edward Snowden – usatoday.com

Eric Holder(Photo: Chris Kleponis, epa)

Fugitive former National Security Agency contractorEdward Snowden damaged U.S. interests but also performed a public service when he leaked national security documents in 2013, former U.S. attorney general Eric Holder said Monday.

Holder, in The Axe Filepodcasthosted by Democratic political operativeDavid Axelrod and distributed by CNN, said Snowden's exposure of global surveillance programs, some operated by the NSA,was "inappropriate and illegal." Holder said some agents were put in jeopardy and relationships with other nations were strained.

After Snowden's revelations, federal courts ruled against the NSA's mass collection of American phone records. Congress subsequently passed the USA Freedom Act, which limits the collection of such records.

"We can certainly argue about the way in which Snowden did what he did, but I think that he actually performed a public service by raising the debate that we engaged in and by the changes that we made," Holder said.

Snowden, who fled to Hong Kong and now lives inRussia, faces two counts of Espionage Act violations and one count of theft. He has said he would return to face those charges if he believed he would get a fair trial and would be allowed to use a "public interest" defense.

USA TODAY

What Edward Snowden thinks about the explosive Panama Papers leak

Holder, the first black U.S. attorney general, served from 2009 to 2015. Hesaid Snowden should come back to face the consequences of his actions.

"Go to trial, try to cut a deal. I think there has to be a consequence for what he has done," Holder said. "ButI think ...a judge could take into account the usefulness of having had that national debate."

Snowden did not directly react to Holder's comments. Snowden did, however,retweet Glenn Greenwald, one of the journalists to whom he leaked information. Greenwaldposted: "People so often become honest and candid only once they leave government."

Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/1WV0pTj

See the rest here:
Eric Holder gives props to Edward Snowden - usatoday.com