Germany May Switch to Typewriters to Foil NSA Spies

Germany is considering going "old school" in order to counter NSA spying by having their politicians and top officials ditch their computers to use typewriters.

Christian Democrat Patrick Sensburg, the head of the Bundestag's parliamentary inquiry into NSA activity, revealed the possible change during an interview with the Morgenmagazin TV program. On Monday night, the interviewer somewhat jokingly asked whether the government was considering typewriters to protect its communication from electronic surveillance.

"As a matter of fact, we have -- and not electronic models either," Sensburg responded. When pressed for confirmation, Sensburg said, "Yes, no joke."

German media has reported that the revelations brought to light by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden encouraged politicians and government workers to avoid email, texts and phone calls.

"Those concerned talk less on the phone, prefer to meet in person. More coffees are being drunk and lunches eaten together. Even the walk in the park is increasingly enjoying a revival," reported Die Welt.

Germany is not the only country considering the retro tactic. Russia's Federal Guard Service reportedly spent more than $14,800 on electric typewriters in 2013, just after Snowden started leaking documents.

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Original headline: Germany considering using typewriters to counter NSA spying

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Germany May Switch to Typewriters to Foil NSA Spies

NSA Spying Scandal – The US is out of control and will continue to infringe the rights of privacy – Video


NSA Spying Scandal - The US is out of control and will continue to infringe the rights of privacy
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NSA Spying Scandal - The US is out of control and will continue to infringe the rights of privacy - Video

Germany May Counter U.S. Spying With Typewriters

TIME World U.S.-Germany spy scandal Germany May Counter U.S. Spying With Typewriters Rolando Diaz's MINE item is a Spanish-language typewriter, it is seen here on October 19, 2013 in Washington, D.C. Nathaniel GrannThe Washington Post/Getty Images The use of typewriters instead of e-mail was adopted by Russia last year following similar claims of U.S espionage

A leading German politician has suggested that typewriters will be used to write confidential documents, in the wake of the U.S. spying scandal.

Patrick Sensburg, head of the German parliaments enquiry into NSA activity, said that email may soon become redundant, in an interview with the Morgenmagazin TV show Monday night.

Faced with the incredulity of the interviewer, Sensburg insisted that his announcement wasnt a joke. He added that should German politicians adopt typewriters, theyll be using manual, not electronic, models.

Sensburg said that ongoing U.S. monitoring of Germany necessitated the change in operation.

Berlin isnt the first country to consider reverting to old-school technology. Germany follows in the footsteps of Russia, which reportedly took similar measures after whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed the Kremlin had been a target of NSA spying.

The Kremlins security agency spent 486,540 rubles, or around $14,162, on typewriters equipped with a unique typing pattern that allowed each document to be linked to a particular machine.

The scandal surrounding U.S. surveillance of Germany escalated last week after the top U.S. Intelligence official at the American Embassy in Berlin was ordered to leave Germany.

The CIA station chiefs exodus clipped on the heels of news reports earlier this month that a German intelligence official arrested on suspicion of spying had been working as a double agent for the U.S.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry traveled to Germany Sunday to play down tensions, calling the two nations great friends.

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Germany May Counter U.S. Spying With Typewriters

NSA spying on Germany

Social workers tend to be avoided in the field of diplomatic consultancy, since abusive relationships are deemed workable.

It is a rare thing when an ally tells another that one of their embassy individuals should be sent packing from their plumb surrounds. The French did it in 1995, when it expelled several US officials on the grounds of suspected espionage. But French-US relations during the post-World War II period have been periodically icy, making such an act less of a surprise than something of a clarifying gesture.

The order of expulsion was executed on Thursday, when it was revealed in the German press that a CIA station chief was, for all intents and purposes, given his marching orders. While embassies are to spies what honey is to bees, the manner of its execution raised a few eyebrows.

Clemens Binninger, chair of the committee that oversees the intelligence services of Angela Markels Christian Democrats, said at a press conference in Berlin that the action was occasioned by Washingtons failure to cooperate on resolving various allegations, starting with the NSA and up to the latest incidents. The head of the SPD parliamentary group, Thomas Opperman, is beside himself. It is a degrading spectacle to watch US spies being exposed on a weekly basis. Much of this rage, however, must be seen as the indignation of impotence.

Steffen Seibert confirmed the decision in an official statement. The government takes these activities very seriously. It is essential and in the interest of the security of its citizens and its forces abroad for Germany to collaborate closely and trustfully with its western partners, especially the US. Seibert emphasized that openness was fundamental to the relationship. But that is where he is simply wrong. Washington has been selectively open with its German ally, as it has been from the start.

This follows revelations of espionage in Die Welt about a German soldier who was sniffed out by the German military counter-intelligence service. Some days prior, it was revealed that an employee of the German BND had been funneling files to the CIA, the sort of arrangement that went well and truly beyond the bounds of the alliance.

The BND employee in question was supposedly laboring under a physical disability and speech impediment, but received some 25,000 Euros for 218 confidential documents. The psychological profile of the individual in question was less one of greed than egomania. Both characteristics often feature when those privy to information wish to do the dirty on their employees.

The US ambassador to Berlin, John Emerson, has been doing the rounds, placating officials even as his masters take a good long dump on the German-US relationship. In a speech on Tuesday, he conceded that that the German-American relationship is now undergoing a difficult challenge. The CIA chief, John Brennan, has also been doing his share of pacifying.

The Clintons, always masters at the power game, have bought into denouncing the NSA for its conduct regarding Germany. Hillary has taken to the press, arguing in Der Spiegel that such conduct, notably regarding the tapping of Merkels phone, was unwarranted. Not, mind you, that Merkel deserved an apology from the Obama administration. That is just not the done thing. Wounding in a relationship should be taken in your stride. The not so hidden suggestion here is that the Germans are better than all that.

It was clear, according to Clinton, that the US had to do a much better job in working together between Germany and the United States to sort out what the appropriate lines of cooperation are on intelligence and security. I think the cooperation is necessary for our security, but we dont want to undermine it by raising doubts again and again. In truth, neither side intends a separation. There will be tiffs, a few tears perhaps, and a stony glance here and there. But the abused and abusive will still come together in the field of security cooperation, if it can be called that. Social workers tend to be avoided in the field of diplomatic consultancy, since abusive relationships are deemed workable. Even the decision on the part of the US government to refuse access to a request by the German chancellor to access her NSA file will, at the end of the day, be accepted.

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NSA spying on Germany

Hacking Online Polls and Other Ways British Spies Seek to Control the Internet

https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2014/07/14/manipulating-online-polls-ways-british-spies-seek-control-internet/

Hacking Online Polls and Other Ways British Spies Seek to Control the Internet

Hacked poll!

The secretive British spy agency GCHQ has developed covert tools to seed the internet with false information, including the ability to manipulate the results of online polls, artificially inflate pageview counts on web sites, “amplif[y]” sanctioned messages on YouTube, and censor video content judged to be “extremist.” The capabilities, detailed in documents provided by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, even include an old standby for pre-adolescent prank callers everywhere: A way to connect two unsuspecting phone users together in a call.

The tools were created by GCHQ’s Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group (JTRIG), and constitute some of the most startling methods of propaganda and internet deception contained within the Snowden archive. Previously disclosed documents have detailed JTRIG’s use of “fake victim blog posts,” “false flag operations,” “honey traps” and psychological manipulation to target online activists, monitor visitors to WikiLeaks, and spy on YouTube and Facebook users.

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Wyden Probing Economic Harm Caused by NSA Surveillance

Clearly, privacy isn't the only thing at stake here with the NSA spying program. U.S. technology companies are suffering overseas, which will inevitably effect jobs and the economy here.

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2014-07-14/wyden-probing-economic-harm-caused-by-nsa-surveillance

Wyden Probing Economic Harm Caused by NSA Surveillance

Snowden-screen

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden is investigating the economic harm he said is being caused by the U.S. National Security Agency’s surveillance methods.

Wyden, a persistent critic of the NSA, is using his perch as the panel’s chairman to broaden his attack on the agency’s practices, he said in an interview with editors and reporters at Bloomberg News headquarters in New York.

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Germany asks top US intelligence official to leave country over spy row

I'm not surprised that the Germans aren't pleased with recent revelations of US spying.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/10/germany-asks-top-us-intelligence-official-spy-row

Germany asks top US intelligence official to leave country over spy row

Move comes in response to two reported cases of suspected US spying in Germany

Diplomatic relations between Germany and the US plunged to a new low after Angela Merkel's government asked the top representative of America's secret services in Germany to leave the country.

While not formally amounting to a full expulsion, the move nonetheless sends a dramatic signal: after a year-long dispute triggered by the revelations of NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, Merkel seems to have finally run out of patience with Washington's failure to explain itself.

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Greenwald: Snowden documents show not just Muslim-Americans are targeted by NSA

According to Greenwald, it isn't just Muslim Americans being targeted for NSA spying. It's also systems administrators, online gamers, and everyone in the Bahamas with a phone. More from Greenwald to come.

http://rt.com/usa/171628-greenwald-nsa-muslims-more/

Greenwald: Snowden documents show not just Muslim-Americans are targeted by NSA

Greenwald

Journalist Glenn Greenwald says he’s not done reporting on the trove of National Security Agency documents provided by Edward Snowden, and that his future work further expose the extent of the NSA’s surveillance.

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