Shocking Edward Snowden Interview That American Media Blacked-Out – Video


Shocking Edward Snowden Interview That American Media Blacked-Out
Shocking Edward Snowden Interview That American Media Blacked-Out, Barack Obama and His People Have Dirt On Every Damn One http://whateverhappentocommonsense.com/?p=4764 http://newsninja2012.com...

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Shocking Edward Snowden Interview That American Media Blacked-Out - Video

The Fix: Welcome to the post-Edward Snowden era

We're now just 15 months removed fromEdward Snowden's first bombshell revelation about the United States' massive surveillance apparatus. But with Islamic extremists putting down roots in Syria and Iraq, Americans are very much reverting to a pre-Snowden attitude towardcivil liberties.

Or perhaps we should call it "post-Snowden."

While the Snowden revelations led to a lot of American soul-searching when it came to just how much of our civil liberties we want to yield in the name of protecting ourselves from terrorism, the soul-searching has largely come to an end, according to a new poll.

The Pew Research Center poll shows 50 percent of Americans say the government has not gone far enough to protect the country, while 35 percent are more concerned about the government going too far to restrict civil liberties. That's the most pro-security postureAmericans have had on this question since 2009 and one of the highest on record since Sept. 11, 2001.

In contrast, 10 months ago, in the midst of several big Snowden leaks, significantly more Americans favored the civil liberties emphasis (47 percent) over taking additional steps to secure the homeland (35 percent).

The reason for the shift? People are scared.

An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll this week showed fearsofAmerican vulnerability to an attack is at its highest level since 9/11. Fully 47 percent of Americans think we're less safe than we were before 9/11 -- a scary thought if there ever was one. Only 26 percent say we're more safe.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll, meanwhile, showed 91 percent of people view the Islamic State as a serious threat to the United States' vital interests (not the same as a direct threat, I would note). About six in 10 (59 percent) say the extremist group is a "very serious" threat.

Given that very real fear, it's perhaps not surprising to see people willing to cash in some of their civil liberties in exchange for peace of mind when it comes to their safety.

But it also suggeststhe shift toward civil libertarianism and the criticism of the National Security Agency in the aftermath of all the Snowden revelations -- of which more could certainly come and change things again -- were very temporary. Kind of like the GOP's brief flirtation with non-interventionism.

Original post:
The Fix: Welcome to the post-Edward Snowden era

Welcome to the post-Edward Snowden era

We're now just 15 months removed fromEdward Snowden's first bombshell revelation about the United States' massive surveillance apparatus. But with Islamic extremists putting down roots in Syria and Iraq, Americans are very much reverting to a pre-Snowden attitude towardcivil liberties.

Or perhaps we should call it "post-Snowden."

While the Snowden revelations led to a lot of American soul-searching when it came to just how much of our civil liberties we want to yield in the name of protecting ourselves from terrorism, the soul-searching has largely come to an end, according to a new poll.

The Pew Research Center poll shows 50 percent of Americans say the government has not gone far enough to protect the country, while 35 percent are more concerned about the government going too far to restrict civil liberties. That's the most pro-security postureAmericans have had on this question since 2009 and one of the highest on record since Sept. 11, 2001.

In contrast, 10 months ago, in the midst of several big Snowden leaks, significantly more Americans favored the civil liberties emphasis (47 percent) over taking additional steps to secure the homeland (35 percent).

The reason for the shift? People are scared.

An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll this week showed fearsofAmerican vulnerability to an attack is at its highest level since 9/11. Fully 47 percent of Americans think we're less safe than we were before 9/11 -- a scary thought if there ever was one. Only 26 percent say we're more safe.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll, meanwhile, showed 91 percent of people view the Islamic State as a serious threat to the United States' vital interests (not the same as a direct threat, I would note). About six in 10 (59 percent) say the extremist group is a "very serious" threat.

Given that very real fear, it's perhaps not surprising to see people willing to cash in some of their civil liberties in exchange for peace of mind when it comes to their safety.

But it also suggeststhe shift toward civil libertarianism and the criticism of the National Security Agency in the aftermath of all the Snowden revelations -- of which more could certainly come and change things again -- were very temporary. Kind of like the GOP's brief flirtation with non-interventionism.

Read the rest here:
Welcome to the post-Edward Snowden era

Head of US Diplomatic Mission Summoned in Ankara Over Snowden-Leaked NSA Spying Documents

MOSCOW, September 1 (RIA Novosti) - Turkeys foreign ministry summoned one of the most senior US diplomats in Turkey in order to explain reports on Washingtons spying activities in the country, Turkeys Deputy Prime Minister, Bulent Arinc, said Monday.

"For reasons that the United States' name was mentioned, and such claims were made ... the charge d'affaires [the head of the diplomatic mission] has been called to the foreign ministry and information has been received from him, Arinc told the press.

On Sunday, Der Spiegel released an article, based on classified US documents, leaked by former NSA contractor and whistleblower Edward Snowden, disclosing US National Security Agency (NSA) activities in Turkey.

According to the newspaper, in 2006 the NSA launched an operation aimed at hacking the computers of Turkeys top officials. Turkish diplomats, operating in Washington and in the UN headquarters in New York were also tapped. Some of the intelligence gathered was shared with the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, as part of the so-called Five Eyes program.

Turkish Energy Minister Mehmet Simsek has also been subject to surveillance by the UK's GCHQ (Government Communications Headquarters) intelligence agency, despite the fact that he had dual Turkish-British citizenship, Der Spiegel reported with reference to the secret documents released by Snowden.

However, according to the leaked documents, Turkey was not only the subject of extensive Western surveillance activities; it also enjoyed plenty of intelligence sharing. The papers, examined by Der Spiegel, point to large amounts of eavesdropping data concerning the separatist Kurdistan Worker Party (PKK) leaders handed over to Ankara by the NSA.

Geolocations data and voice recordings from Kurdistan Worker Party (PKK) communications which were passed to Turkey by the NSA yielded actionable intelligence that led to the demise or capture of dozens of PKK members in the past year, one of the documents reads.

Edward Snowden, a former NSA contractor, fled the United States in 2013, after leaking data concerning the NSA surveillance programs around the world. Washington accused Snowden of theft and the unauthorized communication of classified data. During 2013, Snowden lived in Moscows Sheremetyevo airport international zone for over a month, and then received one-year's temporary asylum in Russia, which was prolonged for another 3 years this August.

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Head of US Diplomatic Mission Summoned in Ankara Over Snowden-Leaked NSA Spying Documents

TorrentLocker unpicked: Crypto coding shocker defeats extortionists

Providing a secure and efficient Helpdesk

Crooks have borked the encryption behind the TorrentLocker ransomware, meaning victims can avoid paying the extortionists and unlock their data for free.

TorrentLocker was regarded as the demonic spawn of CryptoLocker and CryptoWall which made killings last year by encrypting valuable data owned by individuals and organisations.

Research trio Taneli Kaivola, Patrik Nisn and Antti Nuopponen of Finnish consultancy Nixu said victims could break the ransomware if they had a plaintext backup of any of their now encrypted files.

"In practice this means that if you have both the original and the encrypted version of a single file that is over 2MB in size, the entire keystream can be recovered which makes it possible to recover all your files encrypted by TorrentLocker," the trio write.

"As the encryption was done by combining the keystream with the plaintext file using the XOR operation, we were able to recover the keystream used to encrypt those files by simply applying XOR between the encrypted file and the plaintext file.

"We tested this with several samples of the affected files we had and realised that the malware program uses the same keystream to encrypt all the files within the same infection. This was a cryptographic mistake on the malware author's part, as you should never use the keystream more than once."

TorrentLocker appended 264 bytes of junk data to encrypted files and only locked down the first 2Mb of the files.

The researchers suspected the 2Mb limit was a deliberate strategy to make TorrentLocker faster, which the malware's developers may not have known would also weaken its security.

The mystery 264 bytes was unique for each infection meaning the researchers could write a tool to recognise the encryption keystream and decrypt the affected files.

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TorrentLocker unpicked: Crypto coding shocker defeats extortionists

Islamic State jihadists planning encryption-protected ‘cyber caliphate’

Islamic State boasting of its plans to create a sophisticated cyber army Plans to use 'cyber caliphate' to launch attacks on banks and governments British hacker once jailed for cyber attack on PM thought to be involved Comes as President Obama announces air strikes will extend into Syria

By Corey Charlton for MailOnline

Published: 05:41 EST, 11 September 2014 | Updated: 06:17 EST, 11 September 2014

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Islamic State militants are planning the creation of a 'cyber caliphate' protected by their own encryption software - from behind which they will launch massive hacking attacks on the U.S. and the West.

Both Islamic State and Al Qaeda claim to be actively recruiting skilled hackers in a bid to create a team of jihadist computer experts capable of causing devastating cyber disruptions to Western institutions.

They are now boasting it is only a matter of time before their plan becomes a reality.

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Islamic State jihadists planning encryption-protected 'cyber caliphate'

VMware lays out four-part growth strategy

As hypervisors move toward commodity status and competitors Microsoft Azure and open source KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine) gain market share, VMware presented a vision of its future at the VMworld conference last week based on four initiatives: the software-defined data center (SDDC), open source including Docker, hybrid cloud, and virtualized desktops.

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The most obvious opportunity for VMware is SDDC. It builds directly on top of vCenter, with VSAN in storage and NSX network virtualization, which came from the Nicira acquisition in 2012. The dam broke six months ago, and weve arrived with a $100 million run rate and wins in every vertical, said Martin Casado, Nicira co-founder and VMware Networking SVP and general manageron theCUBE. He said the turning point came when VMware released an NSX version that supports vSphere and has most of the bells and whistles users want nine months ago. Since then it has announced partnerships with several industry players including Hewlett-Packard Co.and Arista Networks, Inc.

NSX faces stiff competition from Cisco Systems, Inc., whoseApplication Centric Infrastructure (ACI) takes a different approach to network virtualization, and the competition may be slowing market acceptance of bothsystems. Network virtualization is lagging behind server and storage virtualization, said Howie Xu, senior director of engineering for Ciscos Cloud Networking and Services Groupon theCUBE. Scott McIsaac, CTO of Secure 24 said the fight between Cisco and VMware over software-defined networking is freezing the market.And during the final wrap-up of theCUBEs coverage, Wikibon Principal Research Director Stuart Miniman said he had talked to a CIO whoseshop used both VMware and Cisco and who said, I wont buy software-defined networking until they stop throwing stones at each other.

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VMware also advanced its embrace of open source software with the announcement that itwould support Docker, an open-source application container. Docker is sometimes portrayed as a potential disruptor for VMware and the virtualization market in general. However, spokespeople for both companies portrayed the technologies as complimentary. VMware is focused on traditional stateful applications, while Docker works with the new stateless, Web-based applications, said Wikibon CEO David Vellante. VMwares decisions to support Docker was a smart move, he said, allowing containerized stateless applications to run on premise in enterprises on top of VMware.

Third-generation developers see containers as a cool way to package applications over time, said VMware CEO Pat Gelsinger on theCUBE.If that is how people want to deliver applications, then we want to be there: Containers without compromise on top of VMware.

The move is also good for Docker, said Chris Wolf, Americas CTO for VMware and a former Gartner analyst. Docker focuses on the application and does not touch the underlying infrastructure. With stateless applications running on the public cloud, the underlying IaaS platform supplies those services. The same applies on-premise, where VMware can provide those underlying services and shield the container from the infrastructure, he said. This can also allow developers to use Docker with on-premise stateful applications.

Regarding the larger issue EMCs and VMwares somewhat reluctant embrace of open source technology, Wolf said customer defection isnt a worry. Our SDDC value proposition is so compelling we will win that stack on merit, he said. Customers wont pull out of SDDC because they wont want to, not because they cant.

Ed. Note: This is the first of a two part series on VMwares transition plan as outlined at VMworld 2014 on theCUBE. The second part covers vCloud Air and VMware Horizon Desktop-as-a-Service.

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VMware lays out four-part growth strategy