GC: Edward Snowden
By: Cyl Ling
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GC: Edward Snowden - Video
Snowden risked everything, survived, now in #39;safest place on globe #39; - Ray McGovern
The revolt against surveillance has gained enormous support from Internet users and was backed by Edward Snowden himself. Many websites and human-rights groups across the globe have joined...
By: RT
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Snowden risked everything, survived, now in 'safest place on globe' - Ray McGovern - Video
Edward Snowden not the first to leak U.S. secrets
Exactly one year ago, the British newspaper "The Guardian" published its first report about secretive U.S. government surveillance programs. That report and dozens of bombshells that have followed,...
By: Martin B.News
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Edward Snowden not the first to leak U.S. secrets - Video
Daily Tech News Show - June 6, 2014
+Darren Kitchen and +Hockeybuzz Eklund are on the show today to talk about companies responding to the 1st anniversary of the PRISM leaks from Edward Snowden. Also +Len Peralta will be here...
By: Tom Merritt
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Daily Tech News Show - June 6, 2014 - Video
Ex-KGB Major Boris Karpichkov said spies from Russias SVR intelligence service posing as diplomats tricked Snowden into seeking asylum in Russia
Russian spies had whistleblower Edward Snowden in their sights SIX YEARS before he exposed US secrets, reports the Sunday People.
Moscow believed the cyber wizard working for the CIA in Geneva was ripe for defection in 2007 and opened a file on him, says a KGB defector.
But secret agents did not swoop until last year when Snowden, 30, fled to Hong Kong with 1.7 million top secret documents which he leaked to the media.
Ex-KGB Major Boris Karpichkov said spies from Russias SVR intelligence service posing as diplomats tricked Snowden into seeking asylum in Russia.
And when the turncoat went there the information was leaked to provoke the US into cancelling his passport , so restricting his movements, said Karpichkov.
He believes the Kremlin will keep the ex-US intelligence official another three years until he has no more information to give.
Kapichkov revealed that the SVR had a recruitment operational dossier on Snowden, who had diplomatic cover to maintain the CIAs computer network security in the Swiss city.
But they did not approach him until he went to Hong Kong, when agents persuaded him President Putins Russia was the best place for him to seek asylum in a nation of his choice.
Plot: Former KGB agent Boris Karpichkov
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Edward Snowden was targeted by Russian spies 6 years ...
Edward Snowden
Is Edward Snowden a radical? The dictionary defines a radical as an advocate of political and social revolution, the adjective form being favoring or resulting in extreme or revolutionary changes. That doesnt sound like Snowden as far as what has been publicly revealed. In common usage, the term radical usually connotes someone or something that goes beyond the generally accepted boundaries of socio-political thought and policies; often used by the Left simply to denote more extreme than, or to the left of, a liberal.
In his May 28 hour-long interview on NBC in Moscow, Snowden never expressed, or even implied, any thought radical or otherwise about United States foreign policy or the capitalist economic system under which we live, the two standard areas around which many political discussions in the US revolve. In fact, after reading a great deal by and about Snowden this past year, I have no idea what his views actually are about these matters. To be sure, in the context of the NBC interview, capitalism was not at all relevant, but US foreign policy certainly was.
Snowden was not asked any direct questions about foreign policy, but if I had been in his position I could not have replied to several of the questions without bringing it up. More than once the interview touched upon the question of whether the former NSA contractors actions had caused harm to the United States. Snowden said that hes been asking the entire past year to be presented with evidence of such harm and has so far received nothing. I, on the other hand, as a radical, would have used the opportunity to educate the world-wide audience about how the American empire is the greatest threat to the worlds peace, prosperity, and environment; that anything to slow down the monster is to be desired; and that throwing a wrench into NSAs surveillance gears is eminently worthwhile toward this end; thus, harm indeed should be the goal, not something to apologize for.
Edward added that the NSA has been unfairly demonized and that the agency is composed of good people. I dont know what to make of this.
When the war on terrorism was discussed in the interview, and the question of whether Snowdens actions had hurt that effort, he failed to take the opportunity to point out the obvious and absolutely essential fact that US foreign policy, by its very nature, regularly and routinely creates anti-American terrorists.
When asked what hed say to President Obama if given a private meeting, Snowden had no response at all to make. I, on the other hand, would say to Mr. Obama: Mr. President, in your time in office youve waged war against seven countries Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen, Libya and Syria. This makes me wonder something. With all due respect, sir: What is wrong with you?
A radical one genuine and committed would not let such a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity pass by unused. Contrary to what his fierce critics at home may believe, Edward Snowden is not seriously at war with America, its government or its society. Does he have a real understanding, analysis, or criticism of capitalism or US foreign policy? Does he think about what people could be like under a better social system? Is he, I wonder, even anti-imperialist?
And he certainly is not a conspiracy theorist, or at least keeps it well hidden. He was asked about 9-11 and replied:
The 9/11 commission when they looked at all the classified intelligence from all the different intelligence agencies, they found that we had all of the information we needed to detect this plot. We actually had records of the phone calls from the United States and out. The CIA knew who these guys were. The problem was not that we werent collecting information, it wasnt that we didnt have enough dots, it wasnt that we didnt have a haystack, it was that we did not understand the haystack that we had.
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Edward Snowden: No Radical | Dissident Voice
Is the NSA Spying on the Bilderberg Meeting?
THE YOUNG JURKS show on WEMFradio with Restore the 4th #39;s Alex Marthews. Is the NSA spying on The Bilderberg Group Meeting? http://facebook.com/theyoungjurks ...
By: MikeCANN
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Is the NSA Spying on the Bilderberg Meeting? - Video
Anarchast Ep. 131 Andrew Demeter: Anarcho-Teen Takes on Nancy Pelosi
Jeff interviews Andrew Demeter about his recent questioning of Nancy Pelosi over the NSA spying and funding. Topics include: To question a US official is an act of rebellion sparking fears...
By: TheAnarchast
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Anarchast Ep. 131 Andrew Demeter: Anarcho-Teen Takes on Nancy Pelosi - Video
While leading tech CEOs called on Congress to rein in the National Security Agency, one prominent Silicon Valley figure Thursday turned his ire toward a different target, calling former NSA contractor Edward Snowden a "traitor" for leaking government secrets.
"Obviously he's a traitor. ... He stole national security secrets and gave them to everybody on the planet," venture capitalist Marc Andreessen said in an interview with CNBC, while also blasting the Obama administration for not doing more to counter the Snowden leaks.
Andreessen conceded his view of Snowden isn't shared by many in Silicon Valley. But his comments and the tech leaders' call for tougher reforms illustrate how raw the NSA spying issue remains in Silicon Valley -- exactly one year after the first of many news reports appeared that were based on Snowden's leaks about agency efforts to collect phone records and Internet user data.
Top executives at Google, Facebook and other leading Internet companies have previously voiced outrage over programs revealed by those leaks, including NSA efforts to weaken encryption and intercept transmissions between the companies' overseas data centers. This week, the CEOs of nine leading companies published an open letter in several newspapers, urging the U.S. Senate to adopt tougher reforms than those contained in the so-called USA Freedom bill passed by the House of Representatives last month.
While the companies have beefed up security to guard users' data, "the government needs to do more," said the letter signed by Google's Larry Page, Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg and other top CEOs.
The same companies have complained that the NSA revelations will harm their business, which depends on users trusting them with often-sensitive information. The leaks are already having an economic impact, said Dean Garfield of the Information Technology Industry Council, which represents many of the companies, in testimony Thursday at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the California Democrat who chairs the committee, has previously defended the NSA. But she said Thursday that she is open to tightening language in the House bill that tech companies and civil liberties groups have described as a potential loophole for continued bulk collection of Internet user data.
Despite the economic fallout, many in the tech industry see Snowden's actions as heroic. He was warmly received by an audience of tech professionals when he spoke, by video connection from Moscow, at the South by Southwest conference in Austin earlier this year. They applauded when Snowden's attorney read a message from Tim Berners-Lee, a respected computer scientist and Internet pioneer, who wrote that Snowden's leaks were "profoundly in the public interest."
While Snowden's defenders, including the American Civil Liberties Union, view his actions as those of a legitimate whistle-blower, Andreessen disagreed. The co-founder of Netscape, an early Web browser firm, he now leads the prominent tech venture firm Andreessen Horowitz and sits on the boards of Facebook, eBay and Hewlett-Packard.
Speaking on CNBC, Andreessen echoed earlier statements in which he said he wasn't surprised by the NSA spying. "I just thought that's what they were doing," he added. "I thought everybody knew that."
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Andreessen calls Snowden 'traitor,' blasts Obama for not countering leaks
Google Plans Heavy-Duty Email Encryption Add-On
Google has announced an early version of an email encryption tool called End-to-End for users who need a more secure email experience with Chrome. Follow Jam...
By: NewsyTech
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Google Plans Heavy-Duty Email Encryption Add-On - Video