Edward Snowden a ‘uniquely postmodern breed of whistle-blower’

Whistle-blower Edward Snowden gave an extensive interview to Wired magazine, speaking with author and journalist James Bamford over the course of three days in Moscow. The Russian capital is Snowden's home for the foreseeable future following the country's extension of asylum for the next three years.

Wired

The results of Bamford's time with Snowden, published Wednesday, are a fascinating look into the 31-year-old former National Security Agency contractor's deeply-held beliefs and his motivations in unearthing the secrets behind the United States' most controversial surveillance programs of our time. Snowden, who clutches an American flag on Wired's cover, wants us to know this: "I care more about the country than what happens to me." At the moment, the country he's referring to is still desperate to know his whereabouts, to bring him home and prosecute him.

As a former NSA employee himself, Bamford originally blew the whistle on the organization while in law school. He testified before the influential Church Committee, the oversight body that would become the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and led to significant reforms of the intelligence apparatus in the 1970s. Bamford later went on to publish the first book about the NSA, titled "The Puzzle Palace," inciting several threats from the US government of prosecution under the Espionage Act, the very same 1917 law under which Snowden has been charged.

Revelations about the US's sprawling surveillance efforts continue to make their way to publications around the globe, thanks to Snowden's leaked trove of documents currently in the hands of journalist Glenn Greenwald and a small circle of fellow security and privacy reporters. Now, new reports are suggesting that there may be a second NSA leaker, either concurrent with Snowden or inspired by him. Still, the US government continues to grapple with the prospect of reining in its spying as public sentiment has tilted against the NSA -- and as Snowden has emerged, over time, less a traitor and more a symbol for keeping power in check.

Check out the full piece, which is highly recommended reading, over at Wired now. In the meantime, here's some of the fascinating insights from Bamford's interview with Snowden:

"I figured they would have a hard time. I didn't figure they would be completely incapable," Snowden said.

"I used to work for the government. Now I work for the public. Technology is the greatest equalizer in human history. It allows us to try on new faces, join new communities, engage in new conversations, and discover who we are and what we want to become.

Our generation is facing a time where governments around the world are questioning wether or not individuals can be trusted with the power of technology, be left to our own devices and use it creatively and not destructively.

And while I don't know the answer to that question, what I do know is that governments shouldn't be the one's to decide. We should. And what I did was not to benefit myself. I didn't ask for money. I gave this information back to public hands. The reason I did that was not to gain a label, but to give you back a choice about the country you want to live in."

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Edward Snowden a 'uniquely postmodern breed of whistle-blower'

Edward Snowden Embraces American Flag on WIRED Cover

TIME U.S. National Security Edward Snowden Embraces American Flag on WIRED Cover "I care more about the country than what happens to me," Snowden tells magazine

Edward Snowden isnt an easy man to get a hold of. The U.S. government wants to prosecute him, his admirers want to meet him and the media want to interview him. Meanwhile, Snowden is in Russia, and for many of his seekers, inaccessible.

But WIRED managed to interview Snowden for its current issue, however, and in a decision sure to arouse controversy, put on its cover the man some believe to be a traitor draped in an American flag, looking pensively off into the distance.

Snowden tells WIRED that hes willing to go to prison, but not if it means scaring other whistleblowers. I care more about the country than what happens to me, he says. But we cant allow the law to become a political weapon or agree to scare people away from standing up for their rights, no matter how good the deal. Im not going to be part of that.

He also told Wired that he most fears U.S. government, not Russian police: Im going to slip up and theyre going to hack me. Its going to happen. Another interesting tidbit: Snowden wasnt sure anyone would care about his leaks. I thought it was likely that society collectively would just shrug and move on, he says. Despite his fears, however. the U.S. House of Representatives voted earlier this year in a 293-to-123 vote to halt the NSAs practice of conducting warrantless searches of millions of Americans emails and phone calls.

Is Snowden a patriot or a traitor? A whistleblower or a criminal? The questions about Snowdens motives wont be answered anytime soon, but the provocative cover is sure to add some fuel to the debate.

[WIRED]

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Edward Snowden Embraces American Flag on WIRED Cover

Snowden embraces the American flag

Photo: Platon

NSA traitor Edward Snowden, who leaked secret government data that he stole from the agency, has been photographed embracing an American flag while on the lam in Russia.

The image, which appears in the September issue of WIRED magazine, is likely to offend Americans who believe Snowden put lives at risk.

In a softball interview, Snowden told sympathetic reporter James Bamford the US still has no idea how much classified information he swiped and then slammed the NSA for negligent auditing of its massive inventory.

The NSA told The Post that if Snowden has something to say, officials there would he happy to talk to him in the United States.

If Mr. Snowden wants to discuss his activities, that conversation should be held with the US Department of Justice, said NSA spokeswoman Vanee Vines.

Snowden made off with tens of thousands of stored US intelligence documents in 2013, when he boarded a plane to Hong Kong and later made his way to Russia. He has been indicted for violations of the Espionage Act for what has been called the largest intelligence leak in history.

Even as hes ducking American authorities, Snowden claimed, I care more about the country than what happens to me.

Yet, before the interview, he removed the battery from his Russian cellphone, in case it was being monitored.

In one of the few new revelations, Snowden told how NSA hackers trying to tap into Syrias Internet ended up knocking out the countrys entire system.

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Snowden embraces the American flag

Snowden: Clapper comments pushed me to become leaker

AFP Snowden: lies pushed me over the edge

Washington (AFP) - Edward Snowden says dishonest comments to Congress by the US intelligence chief were the final straw that prompted him to flee the country and reveal a trove of national security documents.

In an interview with Wired magazine in Moscow, where he sought asylum after the revelations, Snowden said he had long been troubled by the activities of the National Security Agency (NSA), which employed him as a contractor.

But it was only when Director of National Intelligence James Clapper told lawmakers that the agency does "not wittingly" collect data on millions of American citizens that he was angry enough to act.

The magazine released the article online Wednesday, along with several new photographs of the once-elusive Snowden, including a cover shot of the technician lovingly cradling an American flag.

Snowden says he made his decision to leave his office in Hawaii and head to Hong Kong with secret documents on thumb drives after reading in March 2013 about Clapper briefing a Senate committee.

"I think I was reading it in the paper the next day, talking to coworkers, saying, can you believe this...?" Snowden said.

Following his sensational leaks about the scale of US global surveillance and how the NSA sucks up data on US users' phone calls, Clapper apologized to the Senate for his "erroneous" remarks.

Snowden told Wired that he had already thought about "whistle-blowing" several times over the previous few years.

- Political radicals -

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Snowden: Clapper comments pushed me to become leaker

Does this photo tell us what Edward Snowden stands for?

No matter your political stance, the image is eye-grabbing: famed whistleblower Edward Snowden stares into the distance as he clutches an American flag to his chest, as though protecting the thing he holds most sacred.

That's the picture gracing the current cover of Wired magazine and it's causing quite a stir among supporters and opponents alike of the man who pulled back the curtain on rampant NSA spying programs by fleeing the country and leaking classified documents to journalists just over a year ago.

The photo was taken by world-famous photographerPlaton Antoniou, whose portraits include such notable figures as Vladamir Putin and Barack Obama, and accompanies a lengthy profile of Mr. Snowden by James Bamford.

In a story detailing the context of the photo shoot, Wired editor in chief Scott Dadich writes that while he and the photo staff waited nervously in their hotel room before meeting Mr. Snowden, Snowden himself was calm and at ease throughout the process "Call me Ed" is how he greeted the journalists, an almost comical attempt at repartee.

During the photo shoot in Moscow, where Snowden currently resides in exile, Mr. Dadich describes how Platon (who goes only by his first name) presented Snowden with a series of props to appear in the photos with him a black t-shirt with the word "SECURITY" printed on both the front and back, another black t-shirt featuring a screaming eagle, and, of course, the American flag. The same flag, Dadich notes, that Platon used for his photo of Pamela Anderson that appeared on the cover of George Magazine in 1998.

Dadich writes:

Platon asked him what he'd do with it in a picture. Snowden held the flag in his hands and delicately unfolded it. You could see the gears turning as he weighed his year in exile against the love of country that motivated him in the first place. He said he was nervous that posing with the flag might anger people but that it meant a lot to him. He said that he loved his country. He cradled the flag and held it close to his heart. Nobody said a word, and the hairs on the back of my neck stood up. We all sat there for a long moment, studying him. Then Platon yelled, Don't move! He clicked off frame after frame, making tiny adjustments to both the lighting and Snowden's posture, sometimes asking for him to look into the lens, sometimes just above it.We had our cover.

And yet, reactions to the photo have been mixed. While near-uniform in mentioning the image's power, critics have noted that its message is ambivalent which, of course, may be the point. After all, strong images are typically up for interpretation. As Brian Stelter writes in CNN, the image could be viewed as a major "PR blunder" for team Snowden, presumably because it could be easy to read such a photo as pitting Snowden against the US as opposed to the patriot he purports to be.

"I believe Snowden is a patriot. But the magazine cover is not going to persuade his doubters of that," Mr. Stelter writes.

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Does this photo tell us what Edward Snowden stands for?

Edward Snowden: Dishonest comments by James Clapper pushed me to leak documents

WASHINGTON: Edward Snowden says dishonest comments to Congress by the US chief of national intelligence pushed him over the edge and prompted him to leak a trove of national security documents.

In a wide-ranging interview with Wired magazine over several days from Moscow, Snowden said he had been troubled for years by the activities of the National Security Agency but that national intelligence chief James Clapper's testimony prompted him to act.

The magazine, which published several photographs of Snowden including one showing him cradling an American flag, the former NSA contractor said he made his decision after reading in March 2013 about Clapper telling a Senate committee that the NSA does "not wittingly" collect information on millions of Americans.

"I think I was reading it in the paper the next day, talking to coworkers, saying, can you believe this...?"

Snowden told journalist James Bamford he had been troubled by other discoveries, including NSA spying on the pornography-viewing habits of political radicals.

"It's much like how the FBI tried to use Martin Luther King's infidelity to talk him into killing himself," he said. "We said those kinds of things were inappropriate back in the '60s. Why are we doing that now?"

Snowden also was disturbed by the NSA's effort to massively speed up data collection with a secret data storage facility in Bluffdale, Utah, which scanned billions of phone calls, faxes, emails, computer-to-computer data transfers, and text messages from around the world.

He put off his plan to leak NSA secrets at the time of the election of President Barack Obama, hoping for a more open government. But he became disenchanted with the president, and by 2013 was ready to spill the secrets he had acquired.

After Clapper's testimony to Congress, Snowden said his colleagues did not appear shocked, but he was concerned he was getting in too deep in an "evil" system.

"It's like the boiling frog," he says, in a reference to the fable of a frog placed in cold water who fails to realize the water is heating up gradually, until it is too late.

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Edward Snowden: Dishonest comments by James Clapper pushed me to leak documents

Yahoo, Google Team Up to Fight Email Snoops

By John P. Mello Jr. 08/13/14 6:20 AM PT

Yahoo and Google last week announced they'd be teaming up to secure their Web mail systems with encryption by the end of next year.

"Our goal is to make end-to-end encryption fully available in 2015," Yahoo Vice President of Information Security Alex Stamos said at the Black Hat hackers' conference in Las Vegas.

"Our team is working closely with Google to ensure that our implementations of end-to-end encryption are compatible," he continued. "What this means is that eventually, not only will Yahoo Mail users be able to communicate in an encrypted manner with other Yahoo Mail users, but also with Gmail users and eventually with other email systems that adopt similar methodologies."

Adopting similar methodologies should be easier for those other email systems because Yahoo will be releasing the code for its encryption solution to the open source community.

"We will release source code this fall so that the open source community can help us refine the experience and hunt for bugs," Stamos said.

Opening the code to many eyes means even the NSA, which has been known to sit on software flaws so it can exploit them in the future for its own self interest, can look at it.

That's a risk worth taking, according to Phil Zimmermann, creator of PGP, or pretty good privacy -- the encryption method to be used by Yahoo and Google.

"The benefits of having everyone else look at it far outweigh the problem of having the NSA look at it," he told the E-Commerce Times.

The encryption scheme for Yahoo Mail and Gmail will prevent intermediaries, including Yahoo and other mail providers, from being able to discover or tamper with the content of an email, Stamos explained.

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Yahoo, Google Team Up to Fight Email Snoops

SalesAgility Launches Ground Breaking Open Source SAAS Solution with SuiteCRM:OnDemand

London, UK (PRWEB UK) 13 August 2014

SalesAgility today announced the availability of their Software as a Service (SAAS) platform, SuiteCRM:OnDemand, that heralds the era of CRM as Commodity Computing. SuiteCRM is the fork of SugarCRM that delivers all the core SugarCRM functionality and adds workflow, reports, quotes, products, event management, contracts, reporting and six other modules. SuiteCRM is a completely open source project.

In the world of Commodity Computing, vendors no longer hold the upper hand, customers do. The SuiteCRM:OnDemand service empowers customers by giving them ownership of the entire application and database and enabling them to download both and migrate at any time.

SalesAgilitys CEO, Greg Soper, explained the thinking behind the service. Imagine a world where you had to rewire your entire office if you wanted to change electricity supplier. That's what happens with the major SAAS vendors. They deliver Commodity Computing, at very high price points, and make it very difficult and very expensive for you to leave them. SuiteCRM:OnDemand turns that concept on its head. We believe that it's your data and it's also your application. You own it, we take care of it. If you want a copy to host somewhere else or to migrate, take it, it's yours. There's no catch, no lock-in. It's simple, honest, open source.

Soper believes that CRM is now in the era of Commodity Computing. "If you Google for CRM you'll find thousands of companies offering similar products. CRM has reached a maturity point where all the major applications like SalesForce and Dynamics do the same thing. They may differ slightly in approach and look and feel but the underlying processes that are being modelled are well understood and are the same for all the platforms. What differentiates the major vendors is the quality of their sales operations.

What you're paying for is not software. It's the sales and marketing machines, the expensive advertising, the highly remunerated sales executives. It's estimated that around 80% of SalesForce's revenues goes on Sales and Marketing. That leaves 20% for product development. With open source software, the reverse is true. Most of the money goes into the software and customers can enjoy Commodity Computing at a fraction of the cost of the major vendors. Customers can also access all the source code and modify it at very reasonable costs.

SuiteCRM:OnDemand competes functionally with SalesForce Enterprise and is priced at approximately one-seventh of the cost.

SuiteCRMs client base profile spans diverse market sectors including Agriculture, Government, Manufacturing, Software Development, Distribution, Healthcare, Leisure, Real Estate, Not for Profit, Business Services, Timber & Forestry, Accountancy, Legal, Technology, Solar, Entertainment, Security and Membership/Events. Clients in these sectors include governments, large enterprises and SMBs.

About SalesAgility:

SalesAgility Ltd is an ISO 9001 accredited professional services consultancy engaged in transforming the business needs of its clients into robust and elegant CRM software solutions. SalesAgility are the authors of SuiteCRM and keepers of the vision of enterprise-class open source CRM.

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SalesAgility Launches Ground Breaking Open Source SAAS Solution with SuiteCRM:OnDemand

Attorney, ACLU say Manning not receiving approved gender therapy in prison, threaten lawsuit

Published August 12, 2014

KANSAS CITY, Mo. The American Civil Liberties Union and an attorney say convicted national security leaker Chelsea Manning isn't receiving medical treatment for her gender identity condition as previously approved by Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

The ACLU and Manning's civilian attorney sent a letter Tuesday to the U.S. Department of Defense and the federal military prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas threatening to sue if Manning does not receive treatment for gender dysphoria, the sense of being a woman in a man's body.

Manning, who changed her name from Bradley after her conviction, is serving a 35-year sentence at Fort Leavenworth for giving WikiLeaks classified documents. She has asked for hormone therapy and to be able to live as a woman.

Messages seeking comment were left Tuesday for the U.S. Army and the prison.

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Attorney, ACLU say Manning not receiving approved gender therapy in prison, threaten lawsuit