NSA leaker Edward Snowden joins Twitter – Sep. 29, 2015

"Can you hear me now?" Snowden tweeted at noon ET, 7 pm Moscow time.

Snowden's Twitter profile bears the blue check mark, meaning Twitter has verified that Snowden is the true owner of the account.

Snowden agreeing to join Twitter was particularly notable because of the warnings he has given about how much the government can learn about individuals from their private and online communications.

Snowden is following only one account - @NSAgov.

"I used to work for the government. Now I work for the public," Snowden's profile reads.

His occupation: Director at Freedom of the Press Foundation, a non-profit "dedicated to helping support and defend public-interest journalism focused on exposing mismanagement, corruption, and law-breaking in government."

Snowden has lived in Russia, where he has been granted asylum, since leaking classified NSA documents to reporters in 2013.

In a second tweet, Snowden noted that water was discovered on Mars and wondered if they check passports at the border. "Asking for a friend," he joked.

Within 45 minutes of his first tweet, Snowden amassed more than 110,000 followers, and Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey had written a personal welcome: "Yes!" Dorsey tweeted. "Welcome to Twitter."

Snowden, a hero to some, a traitor to others, was hired by NSA contractor Booz Allen Hamilton in 2013. Shortly thereafter he leaked thousands of classified NSA documents to the journalists Glenn Greenwald, Laura Poitras and Evan MacAskill, which were published in The Guardian and The Washington Post.

Snowden fled to Hong Kong and then Moscow, where he stayed for one month before being granted asylum.

Related: Is online privacy a lost cause?

Related: John Oliver lands Edward Snowden interview from Russia

CNNMoney (New York) September 29, 2015: 12:57 PM ET

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NSA leaker Edward Snowden joins Twitter - Sep. 29, 2015

Edward @Snowden, Twitter celebrity: How will he use his …

Given that your technology-challenged uncle managed to finally figure out Twitter last year, the long delay before the abrupt arrival of mad genius/anti-totalitarian savior/ enigma Edward Snowden on the social media platform on Tuesday is a bit of a head scratcher. And given what Snowden managed to do the last time around, a lot of us are wondering, Whats he doing here, now, suddenly? And, most acutely, What does this guy have in mind this time?

Describing himself in his profile asI used to work for the government. Now I work for the public, Snowden announced himself with an inaugural Can you hear me now? (Its a reference, as some picked up, to an old Verizon commercial.)

So far, Snowden has only followed the National Security Agency, a group hes been acquainted with in the past and whose Twitter following he quickly outstripped. (Snowden also made a joke about a thousand people at Fort Meade just opened Twitter.) Jesse Ventura, the show Mr. Robot, the ACLU, and TED guru Chris Anderson have all welcomed him.

As for the question of why now, some speculate that the science geek in Snowden was jolted by the news of water on Mars and wants to follow it better. One of the tipping points appears to be a recent interview that Snowden conducted with celebrity astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson, Matt Pearce writes in the Los Angeles Times. Pearce quotes from the radio interview:

I tried to find you on Twitter, and I couldnt find your handle you kind of need a Twitter handle, so like, @Snowden, maybe, is this something you might do? Tyson asked Snowden.

That sounds good, I think we gotta make it happen, Snowden replied, laughing. You and I will be Twitter buds your followers will be the Internet, me and the NSA, itll be great.

Snowden tweeted to Tyson when the Mars news broke:

But, on second thought, they could have probably just exchanged emails or something.

The more important question is what Snowden is up to. Maybe he just got lonely in Russia and wanted to send out photos of what he eats at restaurants. (He made a joking reference to cat photos.)

For a guy who once set the world on fire,Snowden has kept a pretty low profile lately. Hes talked about not wanting to be one of the many whistleblowers destroyed by the system they try to take down. Despite the intense focus and risk and egoism that his work required, he has not been relentless or ubiquitous since his 2013 revelations about widespread NSA spying on civilians.

For me, in terms of personal satisfaction, the missions already accomplished, he told the Washington Posts Barton Gellman, near the end of 2013. I already won. As soon as the journalists were able to work, everything that I had been trying to do was validated. Because, remember, I didnt want to change society. I wanted to give society a chance to determine if it should change itself.

Hes not a hero to everyone: Some, and not just patriotic wack-jobs, consider him a traitor or a reckless egomaniac. The New Yorkers Jeffrey Toobin described him as willfully nave about what the NSA, which once employed him, does for a living, calling Snowden a grandiose narcissist who deserves to be in prison.

Whats the role for Snowden these days? We no longer need to be woken up to the fact that the United States security apparatus has become scary and invasive, and journalists on the left, right, and center have begun to pay attention.

But maybe we can take him at his word: That as the director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, a group co-founded by Daniel Ellsberg, hed dedicated to support and defend public interest journalism focused on exposing mismanagement, corruption and law-breaking in government.Government surveillance is likely no better than it was when Snowdens famous leaks broke.

At the very least, Snowden can keep a steady supply of Stupid Government Tricks coming. With Jon Stewart (and David Letterman) offstage now, maybe Edward Snowden is the guy who can keep us simultaneously amused and terrified?

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Edward @Snowden, Twitter celebrity: How will he use his ...

Edward Snowden is now @snowden / Boing Boing

The exiled whistleblower signed up for Twitter today, using @snowden.

Twitter turned the three-years-dormant userid over to Snowden, who is operating his own account (which has only one entry to it, to date: "Can you hear me now?").

The signup was prompted by Snowden's Snowden's interview with Neil deGrasse Tyson:

You kind of need a Twitter handle. So like @Snowden, maybe? Is this something you might do? Tyson asked.

That sounds good, I think weve got to make it it happen, Snowden replied.

You and I will be Twitter buddies, Snowden told Tyson. Your followers will be: the Internet, me, and the NSA.

Edward Snowden Is On Twitter: @Snowden [Dan Froomkin/The Intercept]

Update: He's following the NSA

James writes, A blend of fact and fiction, players take on the role of an NSA agent tracking down the source of the leaks. Theyll discover the journalists involved, and the real messages sent by Snowden to them at the time.

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Edward Snowden is now @snowden / Boing Boing

Edward Snowden Joins Twitter, Trolls The NSA | ThinkProgress

Edward Snowden joined Twitter on Tuesday and immediately amassed tens of thousands of followers, so far with just one tweet announcing his arrival on the social media platform, and another responding to astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson.

Tyson encouraged Snowden to start a Twitter account in part two of a long interview on Tysons Star Talk program that came out Friday, in which the two discussed data collection, privacy, the internet, and U.S. agencies like the National Security Agency (NSA) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

You kind of need a Twitter handle. So like @Snowden, maybe? Is this something you might do? Tyson asked.

You and I will be Twitter buddies, Snowden told him. Your followers will be: the Internet, me, and the NSA.

The Twitter account lists Snowden as the director at the Freedom of the Press Foundation, an organization that promotes transparency and exposure of government mismanagement, corruption and law-breaking. This represents a new public role for Snowden, who stayed largely quiet in the months after the NSA leaks, and has been giving intermittent interviews since. The fact that the only account Snowden follows is the NSA, and that his background image is a collection of newspaper headlines about bulk phone data collection being ruled illegal, shows this may be a combative side of Snowden the public has not seen much of.

Snowden became famous over two years ago when he left his job contracting for the NSA and took a large number of top secret documents with him, which he provided to journalists Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras. Greenwald, Poitras, and others extensively reported from the documents, revealing an unprecedented network of electronic surveillance that shocked the nation and the world.

Snowdens revelations included the mass collection of metadata from phone calls, government backdoors installed in software by some of Silicon Valleys biggest companies, and mass recording of phone calls made to foreign countries. His leaks resulted in a wave of anger against government spying around the world, as well as the USA Freedom Act, intended to reform the NSA.

The leaks accomplished this all without causing any documented harm to Americans in the military or intelligence. Snowden even says he tried to raise concerns with the NSA before resorting to whistleblowing. But several Republicans and Democrats clamored from the beginning for Snowden to be tried for treason, which would potentially result in his execution if found guilty.

Snowden currently has asylum in Russia. He intended to fly to Latin America before the U.S. revoked his passport and stranded him, charging him with three felonies, two of which are under the Espionage Act, a World War I-era law used to prosecute pacifists for publishing newspapers and giving speeches.

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Edward Snowden Joins Twitter, Trolls The NSA | ThinkProgress

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

Julian Assange: Why the world needs WikiLeaks – YouTube

http://www.ted.com The controversial website WikiLeaks collects and posts highly classified documents and video. Founder Julian Assange, who's reportedly being sought for questioning by US authorities, talks to TED's Chris Anderson about how the site operates, what it has accomplished -- and what drives him. The interview includes graphic footage of a recent US airstrike in Baghdad.

TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes, Pattie Maes on the "Sixth Sense" wearable tech, and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at http://www.ted.com/translate. Watch a highlight reel of the Top 10 TEDTalks at http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/top10

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Julian Assange: Why the world needs WikiLeaks - YouTube

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 ...

WikiLeaks – Cablegate

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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 ...