NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden joins Twitter – wptv.com

National Security Agencywhistleblower Edward Snowden joined Twitter today. Snowden, the American former CIA and government contract employee who leaked classified information about global surveillance from the NSA in 2013, sent his first tweet Tuesday afternoon. Snowden escaped the country before leaking the info and now lives in Russia.

Can you hear me now?

The account was verified and confirmed by Twitter, with the companys own co-founder Jack Dorsey welcoming him to the platform.

Yes! Welcome to Twitter. https://t.co/gUBQpET6Gg

Within the first 15 minutes of his first tweet, Snowdenhad garnered more than 30,000 new followers.

In less than an hour, @Snowden has already piled up more Twitter followers than his (ahem) former employer, @NSAGov.

Its still unclear how Snowden plans to use Twitter, but his lawyer tells The Intercept that he plans to control the account himself.

"According to Snowden's lawyer, Ben Wizner of the ACLU, @Snowden himself will be controlling the account." http://t.co/S91IjPhRNN

It is interesting to note that as of about 1:00 p.m. on Tuesday,Snowden only follows one other user the NSA's official account.

Troll so hard... pic.twitter.com/UQscqXlzFj

A few Twitter users, Mashables Brian Ries and TODAY Shows Anthony Quintano had a few words of advice for Snowden as he enters the fray of Twitter that can, at times, be a little unkind.

@Snowden hello! pro tip: don't read the mentions.

Hey @Snowden, protip: don't geotag your tweets.

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NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden joins Twitter - wptv.com

Edward Snowden’s first Twitter follow was the NSA

Edward Snowden poses for a photo during an interview at an undisclosed location in December 2013 in Moscow, Russia.

Image: Barton Gellman/Getty Images/Associated Press

By Megan Specia2015-09-29 16:16:07 UTC

"Can you hear me now?"

Edward Snowden joined Twitter on Tuesday morning with that simple question.

The account went live with Twitter's coveted blue verified tick, and Twitter later confirmed to Mashable that the account belongs to Snowden.

Less than 30 minutes after sending his first tweet, Snowden had more than 56,000 followers and climbing. But on Tuesday morning, he was only following one account the NSA.

Screenshot of Edward Snowden's Twitter handle around 12:25 EST, September 29.

Snowden has lived in Russia since he first leaked the documents in 2013. The country granted his asylum after he was charged with three felonies under the Espionage Act. Snowdens lawyer, Ben Wizner of the ACLU, told The Intercept that Snowden will be controlling the account.

The top of his account features a photo of a stack of newspapers, their front pages bearing the information from NSA documents that he leaked.

He had to reach out to Twitter directly as the @Snowden handle was already in use. But the user hadn't been active on the site in over three years and was handed over to Snowden, according to The Intercept.

One of the first to welcome him to Twitter was renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, who also played an instrumental role in getting him on the social network in the first place.

Snowden's second tweet was a quick shout out to Tyson and also made reference to his limited ability to travel.

Tyson had recently hosted Snowden on his weekly chat show, Star Talk radio, chatting with him in Moscow using a robotic telepresence. During the conversation, Tyson told Snowden, You kind of need a Twitter handle."

Snowden seemed like he was up for the idea, and the pair even mentioned getting him the @Snowden account.

Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey rolled out the welcome mat for Snowden, as messages of support poured in for the famed whistleblower.

Snowden's story will hit the big screen this winter with Oliver Stone's film Snowden, which premieres on Dec. 25.

Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.

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Edward Snowden's first Twitter follow was the NSA

Edward Snowden Inspires Global Treaty for Online Privacy …

Remember when John Oliver joked with Edward Snowden about the NSA's ability to collect dick pics? "The good news is there's no program named the Dick-Pic Program," the whistleblower reassured Oliver, and perhaps we should take that as some form of cold comfort.

The bad news is that two years after Snowden's leaks started ricocheting around the world, and despite some notable gainsa mass surveillance clause in the Patriot Act struck down, an ambitious new Internet Bill of Rights passed in Brazilthe surveillance state is fighting hard to hold on to theabilityto vacuum up calls, emails and data on on all of us.

Last month a U.S. federal appeals court reversed a judge's order to stop the NSA from bulk collecting telephone data on hundreds of millions of Americans. Meanwhile, in Colombia,a recent investigationfound intelligence agencies illegally collecting vast amounts of data on innocent citizens without judicial warrants, using American technology. And across the pond, UK intelligence services are lobbying hard for a new expanded "snoopers charter" to enshrine greater surveillance rights and data collection into law.

Dedicated program or not, that's a hell of a lot of dick pics sucked up by the surveillance state.

It's kind of funny, but not really. Because what we're watching is an entrenchment by governments across the world who, once they've developed a taste for the ever-expanding grab bag of affordable snooping technology, have no intention of kicking their mass surveillance habit.

It doesn't have to be like this. Whistleblowers who bravely show us how states work in the shadows are a public good, and the documents leaked by Edward Snowden made crystal clear how far surveillance had gone off the rails in the United States. The same is true internationally: Angela Merkel, Dilma Rousseffnobody is safe and secure in their communications.

Now we have a chance to change this, on a global scale.

Looking at the arms trade for lessons in international regulation isn't an obvious place to start, but it's instructive. A global treaty to regulate an industry used to working in the shadows started out as a pie-in-the-sky idea, and the betting odds were slim. With arms pouring into war zones in Central America and elsewhere, leaving death and destruction in their wake, former Costa Rican President Oscar Arias wondered how the global arms trade, fueled by profit-hungry arms manufacturers, could ever be held to legally enforceable human rights standards?

Late last year and many battles (literal, rhetorical and political) later, Arias watched his idea became international law, in the landmark Arms Trade Treaty. Signed by more than 130 countries and ratified at the UN, the treaty is designed to make it more difficult for arms dealers to ship weapons to conflict zones rife with human rights abuses. The agreement is imperfect, with major arms-dealing nations like China and Russia opting out, but it's a massive step toward reigning in one of the shadiest businesses on the planet.

This isa case study the surveillance state may want to pay attention to, because lost causes turn into wins when people and movements set their hearts and minds on bringing about change. This week a group of privacy activists and campaigners, including the authors of this article, are previewing another pie-in-the-sky proposal a global treaty to enshrine fundamental rights to privacy against illegal mass surveillance. Theidea took flight in the wake of the revelations by Edward Snowden, whose work inspired the proposal, and itfeels as urgent as ever given thatgovernments large and small continue to beaddicted to the cheap thrill of illegal mass surveillance.

Why a a global treaty? Because surveillance is abstract until it's personal. A drop of inspiration for the treaty came from the 2013 arrest of one of us, David Miranda, by UK intelligence services at Heathrow Airport, in an act of retaliation against the Snowden leaks. As the scope and scale of the snooping kept making headlines, and Snowden's initial temporary visa ran out the clock in Moscow, the two of us worked together on a campaign with global civic networkAvaaz to push the government of Brazil one of the more outspoken governments on the issue togrant Snowden asylum there.

But it soon became clear that despite president Rousseff's public bluster against the NSA (her own calls were intercepted by the agency, it was revealed), it was going to be politically impossible for Brazil to go out on a limb on its own. With the mass surveillance genie so far out of the bottle, no single government is equipped to go up against it, much less set protocols for the protection of whistleblowers who reveal surveillance or other government crimes. A problem of this global scale requires a global response an international legal framework to protect all of our privacy.

Wishful thinking? Maybe. But the idea is incredibly popular. When polled,majorities worldwide say they want something done to protect citizens against mass surveillance, and tech giants like Apple and IBM are already way ahead of the curve, encrypting user communications to protect against government snooping. The core principles of a treaty are already the topic of serious conversation at the United Nations; last month the UN's new special rapporteur on privacy, Joseph Cannataci, spoke on the need for a Geneva Convention-style law to safeguard our data and combat the threat of surveillance.

A draft of a treaty is circulating to a handful of sympathetic governments already, and in the coming weeks and months it will be circulated among other experts and civil society groups, to build out a bulletproof document. Last week author Naomi Klein even passed a copy to the pope's office (the two are now climate change activism allies), and the office has requested a copy in Spanish for review. The pontiff has a lot on his plate these days, but this issue strikes close to home; after all, the NSA spied on his communications during the Vatican conclave that elevated him to the papacy.

Papal blessing or not, the cat is out of the bag on this proposal and soon, hopefully, the NSA and its partners in global surveillance will no longer geta pass onhoovering up our data, dick pics and otherwise.

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Edward Snowden Inspires Global Treaty for Online Privacy ...

Live From Moscow, Edward Snowden Helped Launch a Proposed …

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and the organizers behind the Snowden Treaty yesterday spoke to a gathering of tech journalists and activists in New York about the next step in the global fight for the right to data privacy.

The Treaty on the Right to Privacy, Protection Against Improper Surveillance and Protection of Whistleblowersor the Snowden Treaty,is the brainchild of David Miranda, Brazilian journalist, civil rights campaigner, and partner of Glenn Greenwald. Greenwalds the reporter who helped bring Snowdens revelations of widespread NSA spying to the worlds attention, and is the co-founder of investigative journalism site The Intercept.

Dalia Hashad, an attorney with the campaigns agency, began todays conference by discussing how we are facing an unprecedented mass invasion of privacy, but there is also similarly unprecedented pushback from civilians.

Snowden, who joined us live via link from Moscow, spoke about the need to move forward in a world now accustomed to his revelation of huge government spying operations. In the wake of his work, he said, governments are empowering themselves at the expense of the public. He made clear that these are not just countries like Iranthat this is happening in places like Australia, Canada, the U.K. and France. Programs to expand surveillance are billed as public safety initiatives, but when the programs are investigated, theres scant evidence they do anything of the sort. In the U.S., Snowden pointed out, mass surveillance has never never made a concrete difference in a single terrorism case.

Snowden believes the true motivation behind mass surveillance is adversarial competition between countrieswhoever has the most data from spying (both on their own citizens and the international community) is in the strongest position. And even if programs are launched with genuinely good public safety intentions against supposed foreign threats, Snowden warned that they inevitably come back to impact us at home. This is a global problem that afflicts all of us, he said. How do we assert what our rights are, traditionally and digitally?

This is where Miranda and the Snowden Treaty come in. Back in 2013, at the height of Snowden hysteria, Miranda was detained at Heathrow airport for nine hours and interrogated by seven agentsessentially because he was Greenwalds partner and had been working with Laura Poitras, the director of Academy Award-winning Snowden documentary Citizenfour. The detention served as a wake-up call to Miranda that harsh government tactics could be used against ordinary peoplethat it could happen to any of us.

In the years since Snowdens NSA disclosures, corporations have taken steps to protect and encrypt their data against government interferenceas a direct response to public demand for it, Miranda believes. Now we need a similar public interest demand for a treaty that would codify how governments use surveillance and treat whistleblowers. The treaty was developed by experts in international law and legal experts on Internet freedoms and surveillance. Miranda believes this treaty could help ordinary citizens to protect themselves the same way corporations shield themselves now.

Then Greenwald joined us, speaking via link from Brazil. He believes the treaty initiative is crucial to build support for a digital right to privacy. More important is the treatys emphasis on protection for whistleblowers. Snowden is viewed as a hero worldwide, but many countries who admire Snowden repress their own whistleblowers. Greenwald, and the Snowden Treaty, would see whistleblowers given international protection, freedom from prosecution, and guarantees of asylum. Greenwald pointed out that most treaties are negotiated behind the scenes, but on these matters, public engagement is vital. The treaty campaign offers the chance for worldwide engagement.

I asked Miranda what regular citizens should be doing to get involvedshould they be lobbying politicians about the Snowden petition, participating in social media, protesting in the street? He said its essential that we demand electeds get involved and would love to see social media engagement (online forums to debate the treaty are pending, soon to be live), he also sees this as an in house issue. We should be talking about data privacy and the Snowden Treaty to our friends and familyto our parents, who might be older than the Internet generation and not understand the extent of spying, to our children or younger siblings, who have grown up in a world where it feels like the norm. He envisions a grassroots spread of information regarding the initiative: start at home, at school, at the office, in a bar. We all have to do this, said Miranda. This is our role.

It seems like the Snowden Treaty, which is still in draft form and not yet public, is partly an idealistic dream. The campaigners say they are in discussions with several potential signatory countries as well as human rights groups. However, and its possible more widespread support for the initiative will begin to emerge as the campaign kicks into gear. Some nations might be interested in signing or supporting such a treaty purely to show their opposition to U.S. policy. Meanwhile, corporations like Facebook and Google are in what campaigners called a serious war with governments over enhanced privacy and encryption standards.

If there is enough public interest generated to demand changes for individual people, the Snowden Treaty gives them the means. But to see it enacted, ultimately the group would need U.N. support.

Many brilliant people are engaged in the creation of the Treaty and its ongoing initiative, and were excited to see if they can raise awareness about data privacy and whistleblower protection, two critical issues of our times. The media needs to further the debate, we were told. Im doing my partnow its your turn to check out the Snowden Treaty. You can read about their plans here and follow them on Twitter @Snowdentreaty. The treaty may seem like a dream now, but its one that deserves to become reality. Stranger things have happened, like Edward Snowdens impossibly brave actions on behalf of us all.

[Snowden Treaty; video from event; Treaty summary]

Top image: Kena Betancur/AFP

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Live From Moscow, Edward Snowden Helped Launch a Proposed ...

Edward Snowden calls for global push to expand digital …

Edward Snowden: mass surveillance does not help combat terrorism.

Edward Snowden has called for a global push to protect peoples rights to digital privacy, arguing that now the bare facts of mass data surveillance are known it is time to assert our traditional and digital rights so that we can protect them.

Speaking by video link from Russia where he has been granted asylum, the former National Security Agency contractor and whistleblower said efforts to protect privacy will continue for many years, culminating, he hoped, in a world in which governments could be relied upon to defend their citizens rights rather than working against them.

Snowdens call for new international laws to protect data privacy was made at the launch in New York of the so-called Snowden Treaty, a fledgling campaign designed to apply pressure on governments around the world in the hope of generating new legal protections. The treaty idea, which is being disseminated with the help of the online campaigning network Avaaz, is intended to generate new safeguards both for personal data and for whistleblowers and journalists vulnerable to government prosecution.

A draft version of the putative treaty was circulated at the launch. It says governments signing up to the agreement would have to commit to ending mass surveillance and the right to privacy in all future programs and policies. This will make the preservation of privacy a fundamental responsibility of governments, ensuring the protection of these fundamental human rights for generations to come.

Snowden said in his video-link address that the debate sparked by his leaking of a vast hoard of NSA secret documents to journalist Glenn Greenwald and the Guardian had succeeded in changing public culture. We can discuss things now that five years back would have gotten you labelled as a conspiracy theorist, he said.

It was now established, he went on, that in the arena of basic individual liberties what happens when we travel through a city, or talk to our friends, or browse for books online we are being tracked and recorded. He said that whole populations were being indexed into a sort of surveillance time machine that allows institutions, whether public or private, to empower themselves at the expense of the people.

In the wake of his disclosures, Snowden said that there had been some legislative attempts to tighten up on privacy and rein in mass surveillance. But they were just the first step they dont go anywhere near far enough.

Meanwhile, countries were aggressively pressing to increase their surveillance powers. Not just traditional adversaries of the west such as Iran, China, Russia and North Korea, but also allies of the US such as Australia, Canada, the UK and France.

Whats extraordinary is that in every case these policy proposals that work against the public are being billed as public safety programs. Yet mass surveillance has never made a concrete difference in any single terrorism investigation in the United States.

The Snowden Treaty is the brainchild of David Miranda, who was detained and interrogated under the UK Terrorism Act at Heathrow airport for nine hours in August 2013 at the height of the Snowden leaks. Miranda, who is Greenwalds partner, said that the new campaign was partly inspired by the efforts taken by big tech companies such as Apple, Facebook and Google to offer encryption services to their users.

This is not a dream. If corporations are taking moves to protect themselves, then why cant we? he said.

Miranda said that several governments had been approached around the world, but he declined to name any that were showing interest.

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Edward Snowden calls for global push to expand digital ...

Edward Snowden timeline of events – POLITICO

Edward Snowden has been granted temporary asylum in Russian soil, ending weeks of limbo.

By Associated Press

08/01/13 11:29 AM EDT

LONDON (AP) National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden has been granted temporary asylum in Russian soil, ending weeks of limbo. This is how the story developed:

__

Story Continued Below

May 20: Edward Snowden, 29, arrives in Hong Kong, just after taking leave from his National Security Agency contracting firm Booz Allen Hamilton.

June 5: A British newspaper, the Guardian, reports that the NSA is collecting the telephone records of millions of American customers of Verizon under a secret court order. Security experts say the records of other phone companies are also involved. Subsequent stories by the Guardian and The Washington post contain further surveillance revelations.

June 9: Snowden, who claims to have worked at the National Security Agency and the CIA, allows himself to be identified as the source of disclosures about the secret U.S. surveillance programs. Snowden tells the Guardian his "sole motive is to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them."

June 10: Snowden checks out of his Hong Kong hotel, new whereabouts unknown. A day later, Booz Allen Hamilton says it has fired Snowden "for violations of the firm's code of ethics and firm policy."

June 12: The South China Morning Post in Hong Kong says it interviewed Snowden at a secret location. "I am not here to hide from justice. I am here to reveal criminality," it quoted Snowden as saying.

June 14: British government issues worldwide alert to airlines, urging them not to allow Snowden aboard flights to the United Kingdom.

June 19: Iceland says a spokesman for secret-spilling organization WikiLeaks who claims to represent Snowden has contacted to government officials about a possible application for asylum.

June 22: Unsealed criminal complaint shows the U.S. government has charged Snowden with espionage and theft, and the National Security Council says U.S. officials have contacted authorities in Hong Kong for Snowden's extradition.

June 23: Snowden leaves Hong Kong on an Aeroflot flight to Moscow.

June 24: Snowden has a seat booked on an Aeroflot flight bound for Cuba, but is not seen on board. WikiLeaks officials say Snowden has applied for asylum in Ecuador, Iceland and possibly other countries.

June 25: Russian President Vladimir Putin says Snowden is in the transit zone of a Moscow airport and will not be extradited to the United States, adding that he is free to go anywhere. Without a U.S. passport, Snowden is effectively stranded. The White House says Russia has a "clear legal basis" to expel the leaker.

June 27: President Barack Obama says he won't engage in "wheeling, dealing and trading" to get Snowden extradited to the U.S.

July 1: Putin says Snowden will have to stop leaking U.S. secrets if he wants asylum in Russia which he says is something Snowden doesn't want to do.

July 2: Wikileaks says Snowden is seeking asylum in 19 more countries, including China, Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela and India.

July 3: A plane carrying Bolivian President Evo Morales was rerouted to Austria after various European countries refused to let it cross their airspace because of suspicions that Snowden was on board. European nations later apologize.

July 5: Wikileaks says Snowden has put in asylum applications to six new countries, which it does not identify. The next day, the presidents of Nicaragua, Venezuela and Bolivia say Snowden is welcome in their countries.

July 12: Snowden meets activists and Russian officials, says he is willing to stop leaking secrets about U.S. surveillance programs if Russia will give him asylum until he can move on to Latin America.

July 16: Snowden asks his lawyer to submit a request for temporary asylum in Russia, claiming he faces persecution from the U.S. government and could face torture or death.

July 26: U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder tells the Russian government that the U.S. will not seek the death penalty for Snowden.

Aug. 1: Snowden leaves airport after Russia grants asylum for one year.

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Edward Snowden timeline of events - POLITICO

‘Snowden’: Joseph Gordon-Levitt secretly talked to Edward …

Open RoadJoseph Gordon-Levitt in "Snowden."

In a profile piece on Joseph Gordon-Levitt from The Guardian,the actor revealed that he flew to Russia for a secret meeting with Edward Snowden in preparation for playing the NSA whistle-blower in the upcoming movie Snowden, directed by Oliver Stone (opening in 2016).

Gordon-Levitt said themotivation behind the meeting was to understand this person that I was going to play, observing both his strengths and weaknesses, he said.

The two met for four hours and though the actor wanted to tape record the meeting, it was advised that he did not.

In fact, according to piece, Snowdens lawyers didnt want Gordon-Levitt to admit the meeting had taken place.

Handout/Getty ImagesEdward Snowden.

The actor said that what he took most from the meeting with Snowden was he completely agrees with the actions he took.

I left knowing without a doubt that what [Snowden] did, he did because he believed it was the right thing to do. That he believed it would help the country he loves, said Gordon-Levitt.

Now, as he would say, its not for him to say whether it was right or wrong. Thats really for people to decide on their own, and I would encourage anybody to decide that on their own. I dont want to be the actor guy whos like, You should listen to me! What he did was right! I dont think thats my place. Even though that is what I believe that what he did was right.

Snowden is based on Luke Hardins book The Snowden Files and Anatoly Kucherenas Time of the Octopus.

Along with Gordon-Levitt, the film stars Shailene Woodley as Lindsay Mills, Snowdens girlfriend, Zachary Quinto as Glenn Greenwald, and Melissa Leo as Laura Poitras. Greenwald was the journalist and Poitras the filmmaker Snowden leaked the classified documents to.

Nicolas Cage, Scott Eastwood, and Timothy Olyphantalso star.

Gordon-Levitt will next been seen in the Robert Zemeckis film "The Walk," in which he'll be playing another real-life figure,Philippe Petit. The film recounts Petit's infamous tightrope walk across New York City's World Trade Towers in 1974.

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'Snowden': Joseph Gordon-Levitt secretly talked to Edward ...

Snowden lasted 5 months in Army – POLITICO

The self-proclaimed leaker joined the Army Reserve in 2004, records show. | JOHN SHINKLE/POLITICO

By Stephanie Gaskell

06/10/13 08:24 AM EDT

Updated 06/10/13 11:39 PM EDT

The former CIA computer technician who leaked last weeks explosive details about American classified surveillance programs spent just five months in the Army Reserve before he was discharged, records show.

Edward Snowden, the self-proclaimed whistleblower who sent the information to The Guardian and The Washington Post, joined up in 2004, but separated just five months later, an Army official told POLITICO.

Story Continued Below

His records indicate he enlisted in the Army Reserve as a Special Forces Recruit (18X) on 7 May 2004 but was discharged 28 September 2004. He did not complete any training or receive any awards, the spokesman said.

( PHOTOS: 10 famous whistleblowers)

Records show Snowdens birthday as June 21, 1983. The 18X is a code for an enlistment option that permits recruits to try to go directly into the Armys Special Forces, a path previously open only to serving soldiers.

Those were the new generation of SF babies they started to try to get when the war was really going back then, said Gina Cavallaro, an Army expert and author of the book Sniper: American Single-Shot Warriors in Iraq and Afghanistan.

They didnt require college, they were looking for people they could train up quickly I think it has subsided by now, Cavallaro said. To go directly into the SF world, she said, I think you have to be smart. You cant go into those services and be just your average joe with lots of tattoos and knives. You have to be smart if you have a language its good, plus you have to be physically fit, and there are all these requirements that you have to have.

( Also on POLITICO: Snowden leak exposes cracks in contractor system)

But as it turned out, Snowden did not wind up entering the SF world he told The Guardian that he broke both his legs in a training accident. Its possible he could have injured himself as part of parachute training.

Snowden, who is currently an employee of defense contractor Booz Allen Hamilton, said he has been holed up in secret at a Hong Kong hotel since taking medical leave from his job at an NSA facility in Hawaii in late May. Booz Allen said Sunday night that Snowden had been its employee for less than three months.

According to The Guardian, Snowden was raised in North Carolina and suburban Maryland. Though he did not graduate from high school, the paper said he later received a GED.

Philip Ewing contributed to this report.

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Snowden lasted 5 months in Army - POLITICO

Edward Snowden on Alien Encryption Technology | Digital Trends

According to U.S. government whistleblower Edward Snowden, encryption is great and all, but it might preventus from talking to aliens.

In an appearance from Moscow on Neil deGrasse Tysons space-themed podcast, Snowden arguedthat extraterrestrials mighthave advanced encryption on their communications. If that is the case, it means that alien messages are indistinguishable from background radiation to us.By the same token, as our technology gets more sophisticated, the possibility increases that alien civilizations will miss us, too.

Of course, the entire hypothetical scenario discussed between deGrasse and Snowden assumes that aliens would come in peace. What if the aliens transmitting in secret using encryption were instead amilitary force on a mission to control, colonize, or pillage Earth? They could spy and collect information about our planets and solar system. In such a scenario, it would have been smart for us to encrypt our communication.

Related:Watch Chloe Moretz try to survive an alien invasion in The 5th Wave

The search for extraterrestrial life has progressed pretty far from the early days of looking for signals in radio waves. Today, scientists also hunt forevidence of lifeusing telescopes like Hubble. In the decade to come,NASA plans to launch telescopes that could further the search for extraterrestrial life. Since light travels faster than radio waves, this may a better way to hunt for nearby life.

Additionally, if there was a common algorithm or language that can be shared between different forms of life, it might be mathematical and binary in nature. Detecting binary transmissions would be unmistakable.

Snowden is a fan of encryption, and he utilized a variety of encrypted services to leakgovernment information to reporters back in 2013. The world has not been the same since those revelations were released, and his life has certainly changed since he moved to Russia in the wake of international treason accusations.

Its refreshing to hear his opinion on subjects he is interested in, even if the subject matter is best suited to the world ofcomic books.

Check out the podcast here:

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Edward Snowden on Alien Encryption Technology | Digital Trends

Edward Snowden | New York Post

Sexy Russian spy who tried to seduce Snowden is amom

Published: September 17, 2015 | 11:48am

The beautiful former Russian spy allegedly ordered to seduce NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden has given birth to her first child, but his name and the daddy remain top-secret....

Published: August 18, 2015 | 5:12pm

ATLANTA Republican presidential hopeful Jeb Bush said Tuesday that the government should have broad surveillance powers of Americans and private technology firms should cooperate better with intelligence agencies to...

Published: June 12, 2015 | 10:46am

BERLIN German prosecutors on Friday closed their investigation into the alleged tapping of Chancellor Angela Merkels cellphone by the U.S. National Security Agency, saying they have been unable to...

Published: June 2, 2015 | 6:27pm

WASHINGTON Congress approved sweeping changes Tuesday to surveillance laws enacted after the Sept. 11 attacks, eliminating the National Security Agencys disputed bulk phone-records collection program and replacing it with...

Published: May 7, 2015 | 10:34am

WASHINGTON The governments program of snooping on Americans phone records suffered a major reversal when a federal appeals court said it wasnt justified under the Patriot Act. The 2nd...

Published: May 7, 2015 | 9:19am

NEW YORK Two activists who put a bust of Edward Snowden on a Revolutionary War memorial were ticketed and got their confiscated sculpture back Wednesday, saying they felt the...

Published: May 6, 2015 | 4:58pm

Edward Snowden has been sprung from a property clerks office in Long Island City. A 100-pound bust of the on-the-run government secrets leaker has been returned to the artists...

Published: April 18, 2015 | 8:00pm

The classic example of chutzpah is the guy who kills his parents, then begs the court for mercy because hes an orphan. Lefty lawyer Ron Kuby has a new one:...

Published: April 14, 2015 | 3:57pm

Bring us the head of Edward Snowden! The anonymous artists who constructed the Snowden bust that was stealthily erected and then confiscated by authorities in Brooklyns Fort Greene...

Published: April 6, 2015 | 12:54pm

Even a fake Edward Snowden cant spend a day in NYC before getting carted away by authorities. A 100-pound bronze bust of the infamous whistleblower was erected early Monday morning...

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Edward Snowden | New York Post