NSA Director Defends Surveillance To Unsympathetic Black Hat Crowd
Trailrunner7 writes "NSA director Gen. Keith Alexander's keynote today at Black Hat USA 2013 was a tense confessional, an hour-long emotional and sometimes angry ride that shed some new insight into the spy agency's two notorious data collection programs, inspired moments of loud applause in support of the NSA, and likewise, profane heckling that called into question the legality and morality of the agency's practices. Loud voices from the overflowing crowd called out Alexander on his claims that the NSA stands for freedom while at the same time collecting, storing and analyzing telephone business records, metadata and Internet records on Americans. He also denied lying to Congress about the NSA's capabilities and activities in the name of protecting Americans from terrorism in response to such a claim from a member of the audience."
The NSA scandal has been so earth-shattering with regards to raising awareness of government surveillance that concerns over civil liberties now outweigh concerns over protecting the country. The shift is across party lines as well. It's no wonder politicians of either party have been decrying a rising trend of libertarianism. Whether or not it's accurate to classify today's anti-government fears as such, the fact that the U.S. has become the kind of country to seek asylum from is staggeringly insane. The "trust us" defense isn't good enough.
they didn't just string him up.
Alexander's defense seems to amount to "See? We stopped terrorist plots using these programs!"
That's not really much of a defense, since it doesn't claim that these programs are the ONLY way to stop the terrorist plots in question. At least FTA, it seems he did not make any attempt to argue that a less invasive program would have been unsuccessful.
There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
Agree or disagree with what the NSA is doing, Alexander has some set of cojones to speak in front of an unfriendly mob. Hell hath no fury like a room of sweaty nerds!
“There are allegations [the NSA] listen to all our emails; that’s wrong. We don’t,” Alexander said, adding that of 54 different terrorist-related activities identified through PRISM, 42 [...] were disrupted
“We’re talking about future terror attacks and the success we’ve had the last 10 years. What will we have in the next 10? What if the 42 of 54 [terrorist attacks] were executed, what would that have meant to our civil liberties and privacy?” Alexander said; a response that was met with loud applause.
Just reminds me of this.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
More lies from the king of liars. Their "oversight" consists of them lying to the congressional committees on the scope of their surveillance. The author of the act they claim gives them this authority say it was never designed to do anything of the kind. When they are caught, they scream about how they can't talk about classified stuff, and what did you expect them to say? Don't believe the lies and half truths coming from these people. They are just trying to placate the masses now that our eyes are finally opening up to what has really been going on the last 12 years and how badly they've shredded our constitution.
And yet they still want to hang Snowden from the highest tree they can find.
What's really happened is that Congress, which has spent the last decade after the Patriot Act was passed jacking off and doing piss all to keep the Executive in check, is now suddenly been embarrassed by the revelations, and wants to look all huffy-and-puffy. But make no mistake, they want Snowden disemboweled just as much as the Administration, if for no other reason than having the audacity to interrupt that partisan circle jerk with some meaningful and critical to the national interest.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
I don't care what our corrupt government officials say. The US Constitution is the corner stone defining the limits that our government must operate under and no amount of secret laws and secret courts can supersede those rules. But unfortunately the American people are too busy watching reality TV to care about reining in our government's corruption.
They don't have a record of the data, just the meta-data, supposedly. Just plot using texting, maybe using pagers? Are they around still?
Snowden hurt america, now the terrorist know they can txt to chat about plots... g-damn u snowden!
> The "trust us" defense isn't good enough
It's not, because we are unsatisfied.
But it is enough, because what do they even need a defense for? What threat must they defend themselves from?
Congress? If Congress does anything, it will expand NSA powers, not reduce them.
SCOTUS? Somebody has to sue the gov first and prove harm. But it's all secret, so nobody can do that. If anyone managed to get proof, they'd end up in a jail cell with Bradley Manning.
I guess it's true they don't listen to our emails. They read them.
Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
...has got some massive balls to show up at a black hat hacking conference.
Or hanging out in a Moscow airport waiting for the President to offer the appropriate bribe to Vladimir Putin to have your ass sent back to the United States for the crime of causing the Surveillance State a little trouble.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
call yourself a free country anymore, please?
It sounds so silly these days.
Do those who defend these programs understand that they're crippling the country's immune system? The tools they deploy are extremely efficient at subverting, nipping in the bud 'undesirable' popular movements (indispensable tool for keeping US democratic). Given well documented (COINTELPRO) things FBI tried to pull against civil rights and untiwar movements, argument that they are not doing it now does not wash - they did it before and they WILL do it again.
With a nice friendly search engine!
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
meh. They collect the metadata, not the contents:
oodaloop emailed wonkey_monkey on July 31st, 2013... etc,etc..
Oh please. If this country we more libertarian in nature the spying would just be done in backroom deals.
Libertarianism is a disease of immature minds desperate to cling to the certainty of selfish and conformation-biased concepts. It's like you can't or don't want to admit that the world doesn't work in stark theoretical extremes. That you wont admit that something like a government can be both oppressive and beneficial at the same time.
It's not regulation vs free market, tyranny vs freedom. Effective society is the product of moderation and wisdom. The problems we face are multifaceted, and so are the solutions. You need every bit of theory from communism to libertarianism to truly make something work. And even then, it will be imperfect.
Grow up, bonch. How many years have you been spewing this kind of immature shit like you just read Atlas Shrugged. Enough already. Your iPhone trolling was bad enough.
This is just the beginning. Tracking technology is revolutionizing civilization. Automated cars will be a big one, they'll require constant tracking and monitoring by sophisticated AI networks. Healthcare is another one; with an aging society, people will voluntarily hook their bodies up to persistent remote monitoring by automated healthcare systems, essential in an age of ever increasing healthcare costs. Every aspect of our individual movements and activity will require monitoring if our connected, wired society is to function. With persistent monitoring of all public (and many private) spaces, crimes will plummet. Smart homes will provide essential consumer services, monitor energy usage, and ensure government mandated standards are followed. The key here is automation. Human eyes will not be peering into our private lives, it will be sophisticated AI. In an increasingly crowded planet pushing nine billion humans in thirty years, adopting these systems is not just essential, but the only viable solution to tackle many of our current problems. With the pace of cost reduction, advancements in the technology, accelerated adoption is assured. The information wants to be free. Privacy may be dead, but we need only redefine the nature of privacy.
Aren't NSA blackhats too? Didn't we figure out that they had a hand in STUXNET?
(Please don't tell me it's arbitrarily defined as "whitehat" if you do it for the government.)
The "trust us" defense isn't good enough.
It never was, and shame on you for every thinking it was!
Unfortunately, most voting Americans have political memories compared to that of goldfish, and a social perspective that only reaches their city limits.
Listen folks, WE did this to ourselves. By all means, WE didn't ask for it, but we sure as hell deserve some of the blame for letting politicians thinking an appropriate response to 9/11 was the Patriot ACT, FISA expansion, and widespread NSA surveillance.
Come on!!! It was right there in front of us all. Right there in the cards. Some of you HAD to know that this was where it was all going. It was that small voice in the back of your head that kept nagging you every time the US response to terrorism came up on TV, radio, friendly discussion... It was there telling you it would get worse. You didn't listen to it though. There was no way things would get this bad you said. That was impossible. This is America after all. We stand for Truth, Liberty, and Justice, right? RIGHT?
I'm certain I don't know which way all of this is going, but I sure as hell know my distrust of Government started long before I was allowed to vote. Why everyone else thinks the next crop of electees will be any better is beyond me. I'll state for the record, the next lot will probably be worse, as whatever attempts are made to 'redirect' the country, or 'fix things', will go horribly in the wrong direction. And in all likelihood, innocent American lives will be lost on US soil. AGAIN! And it won't be who we all think it would have been. It will be someone we least expected doing the damage. Not some foreign agent, body, or intercept. It will be a homegrown American.
And then after that? Well, I don't want to think that far ahead. Down that road lies a darkness that only fictional authors dare.
Knowing their average IQ, i bet that most blame Snowden for having no privacity now. Shooting the messenger should be the next american sport.
What is being protected with so much money,power, justification ?
I am sure it is not - freedom,democracy,constitution.
What is coming to light after the leaks are - rights abuses,war crimes,criminal acts.
That's nice, General. I have this rock that keeps me safe from all terror attacks! I've never been attacked by a terrorist since I started carrying it.
How do we know there were really 42 such attacks prevented?
And yes, I'd rather have my civil liberties than be spied on by my government. Even assuming that you are one of the "good guys", how do we know that the next guy to hold your position isn't a power-hungry megalomaniac?
Posting AC, even though they can probably track my IP.
http://yro.slashdot.org/story/13/07/14/1248244/what-medical-tests-should-teach-us-about-the-nsa-surveillance-program
Another first post from bonch.
Fuck off. Go use one of your sockpuppets like Gr8pes or noh8rz.
I really did - until I caught wind of that xKeyScore deal going on too!
Man... that did it for me, don't know about the rest of you guys.
* :(
(Yes - I openly "shot my mouth off" MORE than a few times here, & I am NOT "hiding behind" any handle/nickname either etc.-et al... imo, probably risky to do, but I am a HUGE FAN of truth, & those guys weren't telling it!)
I don't understand them - I really don't:
They're given this GIGANTIC position of trust by the people, & they're outright telling us bullshit about "DIRECT" intercepts (when Narus devices + discrete math directed graphs pretty much tell them what-is-what ANYHOW... then that xKeyScore deal came out today too, completely making me realize that what I've been spewing here all week was correct, that "absolute power, corrupts absolutely").
Someone PLEASE, convince me otherwise! I would like that, since we're THE greatest nation on this planet, that proves the planet CAN live as one nation, achieving levels of excellence that are unparalleled in history!
(I mean, hey: For Pete's sake - This crap's right up there with when you find out your woman's screwing around on you - you DON'T want to believe it, even when it's staring you in the face!)
---
1.) Clapper & Alexander outright LIED to congress (twisting words using DIRECTLY! Well, might as well be, using directed multigraph discrete math work & NARUS devices set @ the "choke point" nexus of communique.
2.) Just like how they CLAIM there is no easy CENTRAL way to query their own mail but they do it to everyone else - I found that hilarious & disgusting, since mail is really DBMail and to select/insert/update/delete into those, you NEED to have abilities for that... What they told us, unless someone can show me otherwise, is total bullshit. Hypocritical bullshit). I.E.-> We can do it to you, but nobody can to us @ the NSA... that's bullshit.
3.) Screwing with protesters was from the FEEBS http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/dec/29/fbi-coordinated-crackdown-occupy [guardian.co.uk]
4.) The IRS used against political opponents of the current regime in office http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_IRS_scandal [wikipedia.org] & got caught - nobody lost their job.
Same with Clapper & Alexander... WTF!
Heck, they lied to Congress, nothing was done. The head of the IRS didn't lose her job either. I suspect that Clapper, Alexander, & the IRS head told Obama "Pal, you fire me? I will let the dogs out on the FACT you gave ME THE 'GO-AHEAD' to do these things and I will take you down with me. Try it!". That's how "politicians" operate. Thuggery, bribery, etc.!
Then - again: Out came xKeyScore! So much for not "directly" tapping us!
---
This guy had it RIGHT, as far back as 1997 imo:
Why shouldn't I work for the NSA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrOZllbNarw
Prophetic... what's below is as well.
APK
P.S.=> Why was I so "bent outta shape"? This: I was told decades ago by a history professor of mine in collegiate academia this:
"Totalitarian regimes start with 'little laws' they pass, getting an inch, & reaching for a mile: Before you know it, you are Nazi Germany/Soviet Russia USA: DO NOT THINK IT CANNOT HAPPEN HERE" & what's going on fits that pattern, & imo @ least, the "ROI" on it being effective vs. "terrorists" is FAR OUTWEIGHED by the potential for misuse (especially by "mortal men").
and
Then this http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/07/money-nsa-vote/ (the "infamous they" say "talk is cheap"? Not when it's OUR tax monies in the BILLIONS it isn't & when it's clearly being used against us)...
... apk
That's the way I see this ending, pretty much.
It's amazed me that he hasn't been "accidentally" killed in a plane crash, or other public disaster; it's not like the Russian Govt cares.
It Does amaze me that America is now a place to seek asylum From. :facepalm:
Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
The United States is not it's boarders. It's we, the people. Protecting our rights is something every government employee took an oath to do, above all else. It's their Oath of Office. Nation Security IS protecting our rights.
-- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
The man lied to Congress and is participating in illegal unconstitutional mass surveillance and seizure of every American's private data, all for the very limited success of saving less lives than that lost by slipping in the tub during a bath/shower. He's a criminal. He's abused the people's trust and has flat out lied to every American as well as those American's that sit in Congress. He needs to be in jail for a very long time along with all his compatriots.
You can't debate the goodness of violating the Constitution. We can't have our government (and the associated military) making decisions of what part, and when, to uphold the Constitution. No, the Executive Branch is not responsible for determining what should or should not be upheld nor are they even responsible for defending the American people. The President's primary duty is to defend and uphold the Constitution.
You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
Short of video communications there's no reason to believe they're NOT recording email, IM, voice, and textual web contents.
None of that stuff is high bandwidth, and it's exceedingly rare that anybody is actually recieving it at more than an average 128Kb/s transfer rate (Obviously it may burst over the line faster, but the amount of information that needs to be stored rather than simply having the first block of data fingerprinted is exceedingly low)
Even just assuming they have current top of the line COMMERCIAL GRADE equipment puts them at a level where recording off the tier 1 ISP hubs would probably only result in a few (hundred?) terabytes of stored data per hour. Combined with a deduplicating filesystem and dedicated compression processors that could no doubt be done in real-time on some of the larger SSI systems currently available.
Assuming they have tech that won't make it to the market for another 5-10 years? They could be doing even worse.
Think about what China's surveillance state has been capable of with 5-10x the population of the US, and at best current generation networking tech.
Then imagine you put america's brightest on the same task for domestic purposes.
Unfortunately Obummer is a lame duck and doesn't have to care.
What I'm amazed about is the fact that private corporations have access to this data and no one seems to care. Snowden wasn't even a member of the NSA he was just a contractor. I highly doubt that private security companies are above reproach in using tools only for the intended purposes. I can't even imagine what Blackwater would have gotten up to with access to such tools.
And since a case like this doesn't fall under SCOTUS original jurisdiction Congress can simply pass a law disallowing them to hear any cases.
If the cost of protecting us from the terrorists is to live in a police state, then I would prefer to take my chances with the terrorists. The odds of me being a target are minimal while the risks of a corrupt government using this total awareness system to oppress my freedom are that much greater. Fact is, you are more in danger from your own state security apparatus that any foreign terrorist. Iraq never attacked the US. Saddam Hussein was a puppet president installed by the CIA and an ally of the US, at least until he invaded Kuwait and threatened to stop trading his Oil in petrodollars. Al-Qaeda was formed from the remnants of a guerilla army armed and financed by the CIA to oppose the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. As such, US state security would have been aware of their capability, ideology and intentions. As such the state security apparatus didn't need the NSA to know this as they - state security - helped create it. What this lawful intercept program is really about is silencing political dissent, such as the Occupy Wall St movement.
27:25 "We comply with the court orders and do this exactly right", Gen. Keith Alexander
There are NO court orders !
NSA Director General Keith Alexander at Blackhat 2013
AccountKiller
All 54, even if there were 5 or 4 really, really, I mean, pretty please REALLY dangerous plots, how many of them were a direct reaction to our own terrorist attacks on so many countries? A kind of broken window fallacy come to mind, listening this low life scumbag.
the only think that matters is stopping terrorism a la 9/11 against the 1%
They weren't jacking off, they were raking in billions of dollars in "campaign contributions" from the corporations that have been getting all of the contracts these agencies need.
A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
Why shouldn't I work for the NSA? That's a tough one. But I'll take a shot. Say I'm working at the NSA, and somebody puts a code on my desk, somethin' no one else can break. Maybe I take a shot at it and maybe I break it. And I'm real happy with myself, cus' I did my job well. But maybe that code was the location of some rebel army in North Africa or the Middle East and once they have that location, they bomb the village where the rebels are hiding... Fifteen hundred people that I never met, never had no problem with get killed. Now the politicians are sayin', "Oh, Send in the marines to secure the area" cus' they don't give a shit. It won't be their kid over there, gettin' shot.
Just like it wasn't them when their number got called, cus' they were off pullin' a tour in the National Guard. It'll be some kid from Southie over there takin' shrapnel in the ass. He comes back to find that the plant he used to work at got exported to the country he just got back from. And the guy who put the shrapnel in his ass got his old job, cus' he'll work for fifteen cents a day and no bathroom breaks. Meanwhile he realizes the only reason he was over there in the first place was so that we could install a government that would sell us oil at a good price. And of course the oil companies used the little skirmish over there to scare up domestic oil prices.
A cute little ancillary benefit for them but it ain't helping my buddy at two-fifty a gallon. They're takin' their sweet time bringin' the oil back, of course, maybe even took the liberty of hiring an alcoholic skipper who likes to drink martinis and fuckin' play slalom with the icebergs, it ain't too long 'til he hits one, spills the oil and kills all the sea life in the North Atlantic. So now my buddy's out of work. He can't afford to drive, so he's walking to the fuckin' job interviews, which sucks because the shrapnel in his ass is givin' him chronic hemorrhoids. And meanwhile he's starvin' cus' every time he tries to get a bite to eat the only blue plate special they're servin' is North Atlantic scrod with Quaker State. So what did I think? I'm holdin' out for somethin' better. I figure fuck it, while I'm at it why not just shoot my buddy, take his job, give it to his sworn enemy, hike up gas prices, bomb a village, club a baby seal, hit the hash pipe and join the National Guard? I could be elected President. Good Will Hunting (1997)
AccountKiller
While I doubt that's true, it really wouldn't cost much in mainstream media to make that true.
Snooper talking to what sounds like a sympathetic audience.
How does that jibe with the recent story NSA Can't Search Its Own Email
the fact that the U.S. has become the kind of country to seek asylum from is staggeringly insane
Not as insane as the fact that the U.S. executive is determined to prevent sovereign nations from providing asylum.
When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
Like the Honey Badger, the NSA Director don't give a damn.
The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
.... for the crime of causing the Surveillance State a little trouble.
NSA chief says leak damage 'irresponsible and irreversible'
National Security Agency chief Keith Alexander said Thursday the damage from recently leaked information is "irresponsible and irreversible" because it has given terrorist groups the intelligence community's "playbook."
Snowden leaks give edge to U.S. rivals, officials say
Among the disclosures from Snowden that were published in the Washington Post and the Guardian was that Skype, the Internet calling service, was among the systems that provided data to the NSA's secret PRISM database. That disclosure contradicted a widespread belief that calls made via Skype were difficult or impossible to intercept.
Some suspected terrorists the NSA was tracking are no longer using Skype, U.S. officials said. Others have stopped using email, said one U.S. official who has been briefed on the damage.
"The Skype thing was really bad," the official said.
You don't think you're downplaying this just a little, do you?
much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
Sir, we have all this data that we are storing forever, and we had a little extra time. So we wrote a program that collated the data (ie , shows they watched on netflix, sites they browsed, stuff they've said) we now have this list that we can call "interesting people". Great work son! I needed something to justify another datacenter and this just could be it!
Did anyone record and upload a video of this?
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
Of course, that *should* be irrelevant. Last I read, there was no "unless people piss their panties, then fuck all the shit on this piece of lamb skin" clause.
http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4038323&cid=44441857
* :)
(Been posting it here ALL week, & it's pretty much WHY I wouldn't join the masonic order too (been offered it 3x, & anyone that's NOT fully divulging what they're up to, aren't for me... sound like anyone else from this article?)).
APK
P.S.=> If you've never seen that film "Good Will Hunting"? Do... it's great!
... apk
I think the general is just sad his access to being able to jack off to anyone's nudes he pleases in his database on a whim is going to end soon. It's like a spoiled child being told no, only to be told by the child their outburst is completely justified. Now the pool general is going to have to jack off to normal porn like the rest of us, instead of anyone he likes. Bummer.
AC, I'd like to buy your rock.
Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
The story left out the part about when General Alexander said that all of this NSA civilian surveillance was to protect American freedom, and somebody in the audience shouted, "BULLSHIT!"
It got a bit lively after that...
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
Is it really that hard to understand? Seems pretty clear to me. You fuckers are not allowed to search through or gather any info about me without probable cause and a warrant. The warrant has to name the person and place to be searched after probable cause is established. Threat of terrorism is not probable cause. Writing into your federal laws and saying that it is ok does not make it ok. The Constitution is the preeminent law of the US and writing laws that violate it is illegal and is grounds for treason. Especially when you take an oath to protect it from all enemies foreign and domestic.
That oughta get me on the list...
Who gives a rats butt about the polls? The house and senate are the ones keeping this whole thing alive and breathing. Polls mean nothing and your vote means nothing. Your senator and congressman make those decisions for you so next time a poll comes up about something you really care about don't bother responding to the poll, call your congressmen and/or senator.
That being said, to anyone who has been paying attention for the last DECADE, none of this "scandal" is new. It is just the MSM is now paying attention. The MSM don't keep dragging issues in front of the masses unless there is a reason. So, one can assume that Snowden is a partial hangout, and the whole point of the exercise is so that the powers that be have now officially informed you and everyone else that you are being watched, 1984 style and you will comply.
Snowden is a limited hangout. Don't be fooled into the MSM drivel
As far as the US government is concerned nothing is sovereign but themselves.
So, the convention told Feds to stay away this year and simultaneously let the NSA director give the keynote speech? Does not compute...
I don't know why the NSA is so angry at Snowden, or why they are saying he is doing so much damage, after all, he isn't releasing data about these data collection programs, he is only releasing metadata about these programs, that they actually exist. He hasn't released any information about exactly how they work. For example, how *with precision and detail* does THIN THREAD work? That would be interesting.
The man lied to Congress and is participating in illegal unconstitutional mass surveillance and seizure of every American's private data
It seems clear that they're doing it to us non-Americans even more. While that might be no immediate problem to US representatives who only have their own electorates to worry about, the damage to the US reputation abroad has already started. I imagine it will only get worse as people start to realise how much control and monitoring of the Internet and the wider technology industry one country has been allowed to have for so long. The catalyst for this might have been Snowden, and the fall guy might be the NSA, but no organisation could have achieved all of this alone.
The persistent trivialisation of the US spying abroad, even in public statements by very senior officials, is not going to do any favours for allied governments who are found to have been complicit in the whole deal or whose own questionable monitoring practices come to light, either. Angela Merkel could be in a lot of trouble, with Germany for obvious reasons being culturally more sensitive about this sort of thing than most. I'm a little surprised there hasn't been a more overt backlash against it here in the UK, particularly given the key role of The Guardian in recent disclosures, but I wonder how much of this is just the chilling effect at work and/or the media here taking a bit longer to realise that the tides of public opinion are shifting and playing their collective cards close to their chests after some rough arguments with government in recent years.
Ultimately the US government can defend that mass surveillance of foreign citizens as if it's somehow defending its people. Maybe in a few cases that is even true; after all, there obviously are some actually bad people in the world, and security services were formed for a reason, so it's important to keep a level head and not to lose context and perspective when debating these issues. However, I think we can all imagine what the same US officials would be calling it if the tables were turned, though I suppose they might flip between "cyber-terrorism" and "act of war" depending on the strength of the other party.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
The President's primary duty is to defend and uphold the Constitution.
Wait, wut? That can't be true. He keeps saying "My first job is to keep the American people safe"!
"Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
--- Jerry Garcia
NSA, White House, Congress and Supreme Court find themselves in a End Game.
1) Nullify the Authorization for Use of Military Force
2) Repeal Patriot Act
3) Abolish United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
4) Arrest Director of National Intelligence Office
5) Arrest Director of National Security Agency and Director of Central Intelligence Agency
5a) Abolish National Security Agency and Central Intelligence Agency
6) Arrest all employees of DNI, CIA and past and present members of US FISC
7) Arrest President of United States of America and Vice President of United States of America and White House Staff and aids
8) Arrest 217 Members and aids of the US House of Representatives, attention to Rep. Nancy Patricia D'Alesandro Pelosi and Rep. John Boehner.
9) Arrest Senate members and aids of the Senate Subcommittee of National Intelligence, attention to Senator Dianne Goldman Berman Feinstein
10) Arrest Cabinet Members and Aids of
10a) Department of Defense
10b) Department of Homeland Security
10c) Department of Treasury
10d) Department of Justice
10e) Department of Transportation
10f) Department of Health and Human Services
10g) Department of Energy
10h) Department of Commerce
10i) Department of Interior
10j) Department of State
10j-a) Ambassadors, Staffs and Aids to all U.S. Embassies to Foreign Counties and the U.N.
10k) Supreme Court Justices', Staffs, and Aids.
11) Abolish the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
All personages who survive arrest will be held for a period not to be shorter than 45 years from day of survival of arrest at Guantanamo Bay detention camp, Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba.
All personages surviving arrest will be designated Persona Non Gratis. Citizenship, rights and freedoms of USA citizenship will be null and void. All monetary instruments and real estate held by all personages surviving arrest will be confiscated and held in escrow for dispensation to the citizens of the United States of America in equal amounts per citizen.
Justice will be delivered.
the government really has.
what if the government was using this technology to spy on us to gain the upper hand, for a mass conspiracy of manipulation?
what if.. right now, there were also other systems in place, besides just Internet and phone monitoring systems. what if I told you, the NSA has deployed all over, global satellite and electromagnetic monitoring systems that don't just monitor radio and WiFi and cellular and satellite communications, but also monitor the human mind and neurons directly? I know people find this hard to believe, but your neurons are no different than radio transmitters. the energy they release can be remotely monitored, complete signals can be decoded by the government. they can see the exact signals going on inside your brain, what you see, images, what you hear, sounds, .. video.. emotions, motor coordination and control, subliminal and conscious thought, motivation, memory, long-term, short-term, visual, auditory, passwords, conversations, everything as it's happening and as it's stored. your mind is the greatest electromagnetic recording device out there, and they have secret back door access right now. not just the NSA either, the CIA, FBI, US DOJ, DoD, local state and federal officials. And their ease of access is insane, because no one is doing anything to regulate or monitor this - they are doing it all automatically with complete secrecy, their system records and tracks human movement and behavior, and thought all automatically for them. It also does remote nerve and atomic manipulation, for remote human sabotage and control. They call all this Remote Neural Monitoring and Electronic Brain Link, and I've seen the police using it all over Oregon. CIA, FBI Agents, local police and sheriff agencies. It facilitated the Lane County DA in my recent court case in secretly spying on and abusing me in court, including the monitoring of everyone in court, watching us in jail, ignoring attorney/client confidentiality, watching what everyone was thinking and saying about things in private. In court, the sheriffs and DA are secretly linked up, a computer automatically tracks the thought of jurors, the judge, attorney's, and inmate. They are fed information that helps them introduce illegally acquired information, and helps them conceal their method of spying. They learn how to manipulate the jury, judge, and attorney's involved, and basically can be used to set up and frame a person. It is a pretty sophisticated system. The DAs/police use it for mind to mind communication, and can have information beamed directly into their mind. Images, sound, feeling, thought of others, or the thought of the computer. All this can be used an a weapon against individuals, including simulation of psychosis, doing things to them to discredit or set them up, etc. They can push/pull/flood tissue with photons, heat, chill, and move tissue through the walls, as well as manipulate your environment and nervous system in secret. This is remote human sabotage capability, and no one is the United States is safe from it's use.
When is someone going to investigate this more? 2006 NSA Whistleblower Russell Tice says they using these systems without oversight all over (see the videos and audio interviews on my website), they don't do it just for criminal investigations. They spying on us as easy as just typing in our name, email address, phone number, looking us up, they got access to our thoughts, profiles, recordings of passwords, data, Internet, and phone records. And they do it just to control society, they don't really care about national security or criminal things. They can order taps and targeted bullying with this technology, and monitoring of our homes or personal lives with this system. There is no court oversight, and no one is safe from it's use. There are tons of public officials, police, and judges involved, and they are keeping this hidden from the public. They would rather have a person set up, or secretly executed rather than
Yes, it's a real damned shame that everyone now knows that Skype is a porous platform that allows the United States government (and likely any other government that asks) to spy on you.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
btw, the NSA security director is a lying piece of shit. he's one of the guys in direct control of this system. he has control over my health, and secret rape and mutilation. I am sure he's covering up the same incidents on hundreds to thousands or hundreds of thousands of other individuals. he hasn't even come clean about the real capability of the NSA, they are never going to admit to having energy weapons systems, or the ability to remotely peer into peoples minds, houses, or other private locations. remote electromagnetic imaging and weapons systems are the true backbones of their intelligence and spy networks. and that hasn't even been talked about. Secret NSA program ECHELON also exposes more of their global capabilities, some of which probably include the undisclosed and secretive Remote Neural Monitoring system. ECHELON encompasses years of development and deployment of secret spying on all electromagnetic signals, Internet, and communication systems monitoring, and satellite spy programs. It is being used to monitor every square inch of earth, every signal, every communication, in every possible way. ECHELON may be one part of their network, it is quite vast.
because they too good to have their poo exposed. the US is full of a bunch of corrupt bitches, with literal skeletons buried in their backyards.
http://www.obamasweapon.com/
They're farming for Slashdot karma by first-posting comments pandering to known Slashdot biases for now. It's so they can resume shilling for their clients sometime soon.
It seems clear that they're doing it to us non-Americans even more. While that might be no immediate problem to US representatives who only have their own electorates to worry about, the damage to the US reputation abroad has already started.
Already started? The US's reputation in the rest of the world has been taking considerable damage for years now. This recent stuff has certainly been doing a lot more damage, but their reputation being damaged isn't exactly a new development.
They're farming for Slashdot karma by first-posting comments pandering to known Slashdot biases for now. It's so they can resume shilling for their clients sometime soon.
So in short you see no harm whatsoever in warning terrorists to avoid means of communication that leave them vulnerable and help to protect the rest of us?
Precisely. Who watches the watchers? Life is inherently risky, and freedom requires risk.
The insane part is that we have built this surveillance state in response to the deaths of 0.001% of our population. I would far rather run the risk of me and my family being killed by terrorist action than to have our country destroyed by our own twisted government (as they seem hell-bent upon accomplishing in the shortest possible time).
Let PRISM proceed to log this for future reference / character assassination purposes.
Ultimately the US government can defend that mass surveillance of foreign citizens as if it's somehow defending its people.
And the American people would go right along with that. Which just illustrates how fucking inept these assholes are, they got caught red handed spying on the American people and lied about it -- If they had any actual competency they could have avoided all of the flack. All it would have taken is not biting the hand that feeds them.
That they couldn't even do that is reason enough to oust them all. I'm a realist. I realize corrupt crap goes down. However, it would be insane to let folks this brain damaged continue operating with such power. Godwin be damned, Hitler was just such an overreaching moron too.
Stop being such a frightened coward. Be a man and accept that there are risks in life. You simply cannot stop suicide bombers. Most of them don't have a Facebook page for your friends to monitor. They may not have an internet connection at all and certainly don't have a smartphone.
Some of us value liberty, value not being watched by law enforcement agents every second of our lives to see if we might be breaking some law or might secretly be planning to blow up the white house. Do you have no understanding of the sort of freedom this country was founded on?
Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
“There are allegations [the NSA] listen to all our emails; that’s wrong. We don’t,” Alexander said.
Words matter.
What he said is almost certainly true - these spokes holes are trained how to deceive without lying. Sometimes they use performatives in deceitful ways, but this one is easy: They don't listen to your emails - he didn't say they don't read them.
"Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
--- Jerry Garcia
Quite right. Wish I had mod points for you. This is another instance of "follow the money".
Life is full of risks. I suspect more lives could be saved by increasing highway patrols or passing laws requiring rubber tread on bathtubs or increasing funding for CPR training than will be saved by spying on who I talk to on Skype.
Let me turn your question on its head. Is there are any level of surveillance you would be unable to tolerate in the quest for safety?
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
It isn't that he sees "no harm whatsoever", it's that he sees a worthwhile benefit for the price paid.
For example, our American predecessors decided that the benefit of requiring the state to prove guilt outweighed the detriment of actual criminals' escaping punishment. Doubtless if we reversed the burden of proof and put it on the defendant to prove innocence, we'd jail more criminals. I'm willing to pay the price of doing as we do. Our nation is better for it. Ditto regarding teh terr'ists and panopticon surveillance.
And the American^Hworld's people would go right along with that.
FTFY
this is not american. this is every single country that has the ability to wiretap and spy.
its a human power trip thing. nothing about one country, really; its more about how people will abuse their power at every chance, if not kept in check.
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
This.
The NSA's activities are not reviewed by publicly accountable parties who do not share the NSA's incentives. There's no review the public can trust.
To pick another important accountability issue, would you deposit your savings in a bank that wasn't independently audited? Would you take that bank's management's word that everything was ok with your money?
Can't see any persuasive argument for trusting the NSA's unaudited self-report.
known troll is troll.
Good-bye
As an outsider, I don't read it that way at all. I don't see monitoring of traffic on corporate, government networks to be a violation. From the way it's even worded, it looks like it's intended to prevent inconvenient searches and seizure and since monitoring online traffic doesn't effect you at all like a physical search would. You wouldn't even notice it, the search it self is not even done on your systems or premises, therefore it's not unreasonable. I feel that Americans have been twisting the meaning and interpretation of the 4th Amendment for decades and are hypocritical when it comes to demanding government follow the constitution.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
If Congress passed a law and it appears to conflict with the Constitution, a suit _would_ be under SCOTUS for ruling. Yes Congress can pass a law, no they can not prevent the determination of legality by the Supreme Court.
That said, we have a bunch of douche bags in the Supreme Court that don't care about the US Constitution. "Citizens United" is a prime example showing their complete disregard, but there are countless others.
Your answer is kind of correct, but the logic you used to get there is incorrect.
at least in the bay area, the majority who live here are not born here.
I had a few lunchtime conversations with people in my group (I'm the only guy who was born/raised in the US in my extended group) and it was difficult to convince my co-workers about the motivations and principles that our founding fathers had in mind when they created this country.
this is a real issue. people who grew up in the US have at least some feeling for 'right to privacy', even if some criminal goes free; its better to preserve the assumption of innocence and have to prove guilt, than to work things the other way around.
my co-workers are fine with having cameras on every street corner. they are fine with TSA goons invading our privacy. they are happy that 'we are being kept safe'. the countries they came from have much less freedom than the US and so they don't quite 'get' my frustration at the way things are going, here.
parts of the US are losing their soul and it disturbs me to see such mass acceptance of our surveillance 'culture'. I can understand why our liberty is fading, but I don't have to like it. and I speak up about it when the topic comes up at lunchtime. I'm not sure if I'm getting thru to them, but at least I'm trying to educate them about what america used to be and what it stood for. once upon a time.
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
Who in this solar system was still under the impression that skype calls were uninterceptible after the last few years of news stories in regards to skype? Sure, perhaps your average politician was under that impression, but most anyone worth watching was being careful enough to assume that a Microsoft owned system that left a p2p structure in favor of the supernodes yet was claiming "uninterceptible encrypted video chat" was pretty full of shit. This is the kind of shit Jitsi and other ZTRP p2p clients exist for...their market ALL falls into the "skype surveillance is obvious or safer to assume" crowd.
"The price of freedom is eternal vigilance." - Winston Churchill (1942)
"The price of vigilance is your eternal freedoms." - [paraphrased] NSA Director Keith Alexander (2013)
The United States Bill of Rights has come full circle and no we stand at a crossroads where civil liberties clash with domestic security. One thing is certain. No amount of surveillance can guarantee your safety. So how far this rabbit hole goes is a measurement of how much these people believe they can pursue this crusade. They might not like where it ends.
Shooting the messenger is the current sport. Taking down whistleblowers and troublemakers like Swartz gets you promoted big-time in the Justice Dept.
Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
But isn't that the point? If I can't notice it, so how would I know that I am being searched? To do a physical search, You actually need to show a warrant, or it is illegal, and any evidence collected without a warrant is inadmissible. Now show me the warrants, signed by a judge in a transparent (i.e. not secret) judicial process, for that monitoring. Show me something my lawyer can check for me, show me that whatever the search was for, it was actually deemed necessary, and what kind of a case I'm being involved with.
As it stands now, it is rather ther other way around: it's like throwing a net into an ocean, to catch one particular kind of fish, dragging every other type with it, sorting the unwanted kinds but still keeping them because they might someday be useful. Or sellable in the harbor.
He's a criminal.
Yes he is, and he was surrounded by hundreds of people who know he's a criminal, and somehow nobody stood up and arrested him.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
USA cloud providers are going to feel the hurt of this for a long time in the future. Even if they promise to keep your data outside of the USA, they'll still not be trusted, since there is no way to be certain data isn't handed over anyway.
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
Man - ever feel like you don't know WHAT to believe anymore? http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/08/01/xkeyscore_leak_challenged/
APK
P.S.=> Is that truth, is that misinformation/disinformation by some paid for 'shill', or is it straight-up? It's getting to the point I don't know WHAT the heck to think! apk
Exactly; the issue is the "kept in check" part isn't working these days.
All your ghosts are just false positives.
It certainly makes US based cloud services a lot less appealing to all non US based businesses - and surely that will then put pressure on service providers who in turn should start lobbying so maybe there will be a response to this in time.
How do you breathe, what without having a brain and all? The traffic search doesn't affect you like the physical search -- it's the bit where you annoy someone (say the boyfriend of the girl you just chatted to) and you get put on the "list" (no oversight, no reason why) and you can no longer fly, and your credit gets refused so you can't buy a car/house, and you can just no longer find a job....... And if you're unfortunate, one of your Facebook buddies once messaged someone who is buddies with someone who spent 6 months in Yemen -- now you are definitely linked to terror, so you can even be watched explicitly, and picked up for observation/interrogation if required.
Go watch the "Life of the others", go visit the Stasi museum in Leipzig, go read 1984, research what it's like to live in a police state, where you are always fearing "the knock on your door".......
I much rather be murdered by a suicide-bomber, than to live my entire life with severely limited freedoms.
I attended both this morning's keynote with the general and he also spoke at the blackhat executive summit.
This morning there were a few thousand people in the ballroom for his presentation. There were at most 2 vocal 'hecklers' - though really I think it was just one person. The heckling was met with very limited support, maybe a dozen or two people clapped. However, when the general countered the heckler(s), his comments were met with applause from most of the crowd.
For the record, I'm not commenting on either side of this debate. I am just arguing against the artistic license taken by the author of the story. As I said, I was there for both talks and the alleged tension and heckling was dramatically overstated.
"Omnis tuus capsa sunt inesse nos"
+1 interesting video, thanks. Note he also says "our emails" - considering that there is a good chance most at black hat are working or informing for some three letter agency or another, this could also be the truth. They claim they cannot read their own (NSA/FBI) internal emails... can't be watching the watchers.
All the NSA is talking about is the phone metadata.
He's standing up there and saying "Look, this thing we do with phone data isn't that terrible... Why are you so mad?" while conveniently omitting the fact that the NSA is bulk capturing internet traffic and has some sort of direct access to FB/MS/Google's data stores!
They're trying to deflect the public anger about this and turn it into a debate about the phone record data, which, while still very troubling, is far more defensible and less of a 4th amendment overreach than all the other programs that they're not talking about. Its a total smokescreen.
Really? How many people have you ever met who have refused to use a Google service (e.g. gmail) because of the international reputation of the US? I realise anecdotes are not data, but I hadn't met any until a couple of weeks ago, and now I've met several...
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
As an outsider, I don't read it that way at all.
As an outsider, you should learn the history of the constitution before using modern meanings of words (you know, that whole 'twisting the meaning') to judge it.
The 4th amendment dealt with the problem of general Writs of Assistance which the royalty on the other side of the pond used as weapons against the colonists.
Writes of Assistance: Legacy
In response to the much-hated general writs, several of the colonies included a particularity requirement for search warrants in their constitutions when they established independent governments in 1776; the phrase "particularity requirement" is the legal term of art used in contemporary cases to refer to an express requirement that the target of a search warrant must be "particularly" described in detail. Several years later, the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution also contained a particularity requirement that outlawed the use of writs of assistance (and all general search warrants) by the federal government. Later, the Bill of Rights was incorporated against the states via the Fourteenth Amendment, and writs of assistance were generally proscribed.
The problem isnt the monitoring of traffic on corporate networks. The problem is that corporations must allow them to do it involuntarily and indiscriminately. Its the Generat Writ all over again. Now get your fucking ass schooled up before making fucking ignorant "I'm just an outsider" comments.
"His name was James Damore."
The man lied to Congress and is participating in illegal unconstitutional mass surveillance and seizure of every American's private data, all for the very limited success of saving less lives than that lost by slipping in the tub during a bath/shower. He's a criminal. He's abused the people's trust and has flat out lied to every American as well as those American's that sit in Congress. He needs to be in jail for a very long time along with all his compatriots
That's a tad unfair. "Lied to congress", perhaps. "Participating in an illegal[sic] unconstitutional mass surveillance." Illegal, No. It was authorized by Congress and granted access to continue multiple times by the courts. That makes it legal. "Unconstitutional?" Maybe. Sure would like to see what the Supreme Court has to say about this. "He's a ciminal." No, he hasn't been convicted of any crimes. And Congress sure doesn't seem to interested in pressing charges on perjury.
Agreed that we need to hold dear our Constitution though. But if we also look back onto history, every time our country has come under major attack, we've veered away from the Constitution. And each time that has happened, a scandal erupted, a congressional hearing took place, and policies changed. Snowden's leaks were premature. There was no scandal. So whether or not policies change, that's unknown. If enough public support is gained, then it won't matter. .... And our elected politicians who made this possible will be re-elected and the world will move on... With an "illegal[sic] unconstitutional mass surveillance"
Here's the way I would do it if I was them - and I would be surprised if they didn't. I'm simplifying a bit but include the pieces like "without a court order" and such for yourself.
MI6 isn't allowed to spy on British citizens.
The NSA isn't allowed to spy on Americans.
But Britain and America are allies.
So MI6 let's the NSA spy in Britain and looks the other way.
The NSA lets MI6 spy in America and looks the other way.
Afterwards, like good allies, they "share intelligence" and now MI6 has all the surveillance data the NSA gathered in Britain, and the NSA has everything MI6 gathered in the USA.
Repeat for all US allies (and any other government they can strong-arm).
Result: massive world-wide surveillance of all citizens in virtually all countries -all without a single agency every breaking the "do not spy on your own citizens" rules if they have them.
Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
Here's the hour speech:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvVIZ4OyGnQ
Set your bullshit detector on 10 and,
let the propaganda bullshit flow...
Yeah well it's one thing to say that "everybody does it", though I haven't seen nearly as many reports on other countries as I have about the US. Maybe they are just less incompetent, rather than less morally corrupt.
But even so, given that the US spends about as much on defense (sic) as the rest of the world combined, the picture isn't really very symmetric, now is it? To the extent that figures are even known, that is -- under Rumsfeld the DOD became officially unaccountable, if I remember correctly. So even if it's true that everybody does it, it is nowhere near the same scale.
Besides, if everybody takes the lowest common denominator for their moral compass, we'll just have a race to the bottom -- which of course nobody wins.
Gosh, thanks. That must be why the other ships call me Meatfucker -- GCU Grey Area (Eccentric)
Just as a reminder: It has long been known that the US monitors international banking transactions (as a minimum, all transactions over the SWIFT system, probably others as well). This is long known, and hence "accepted", even though there is no possible justification for it.
So: they have your telecommunications, your internet records and your financial records. For countries that actually have privacy laws (the US doesn't, but many other countries do), this is clearly illegal. I would love to see some criminal cases filed against prominent figures in the US government...
Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
The man lied to Congress and is participating in illegal unconstitutional mass surveillance and seizure of every American's private data, all for the very limited success of saving less lives than that lost by slipping in the tub during a bath/shower.
Just out of interest, how much would it cost to give a free non-slip bath tub to every home in the country compared with the cost of spying on every home in the country?
No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
You accept the situation too easily. Yes, governments have always run intelligence services. What these services have done has often been illegal, and for that reason their actions have always been hidden from view.
The difference today is that the US is claiming that these vast programs are legal. That they have the right to gather personal information on hundreds of millions of innocent people: communications, internet records, financial records and who knows what else. All of this despite the clear restrictions enumerated in the US Constitution. No need to skulk in the shadows, the US government is proud to have realized George Orwell's nightmare.
That is the difference.
Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
Or hanging out in a Moscow airport waiting for the President to offer the appropriate bribe to Vladimir Putin to have your ass sent back to the United States for the crime of causing the Surveillance State a little trouble.
A few year ago I would have been inclined to agree, but in this case it is Russia that is worried about returning a 'political asylum seeker' to their country of origin which would likely result in their torture and death. Authentic or not in this case Russia may actually be the morally higher ground. Another sad day for the US.
Did he died?
I am surprised they never had some lynch mob ready to get him, they have made a lot of people pissed.
Remember when working for NSA used to be cool? Pfft not any more. Long gone are those days of "glamor".
Just another standard employee at the three-letter agency. No glory, no dreams, just life.
The USA already has an overly high incarceration rate. Raising it to 100% doesn't seem like a sensible approach.
When citizens heard that foreign governments were aiding the US spy network, politicians in Australia started asking questions. As usual, they were silenced and silent within 48 hours. It is disturbing how quickly anti-American news disappears from my TV. The Snowden revelations are an exception but that is a US-ian problem. In Australia, the censorship is very subtle.
This keynote speech was 100% public relations crap.
The fact that the audience was supporting the speaker so enthusiastically means that Black Hatters are the cream of the moron crop. The good little kids in math class who took shit from the jocks and found 'love' from their teachers and applied that model throughout their adult lives. Authoritarian followers all. With the keys to the freakin' kingdom.
Of course they're going to cling to the words of a fatherly spin doctor putting on a show of doing his conservative best for all the 'right' reasons.
That guy was punching all the critical emotional buttons, keeping his statements specifically to things which he was probably telling the truth about, ignoring the VAST backdoor truths. -Which he MUST know about. (You don't get to have his job by being an ignoramus). Those doors include the non-government controlled, utterly enormous private contractor spectrum and corporate interests, NONE of which fall under any congressional oversight.
And Snowden... Fuck Snowden. Snowden is the controlled, "Fake Moon Landing" jerk. Read up on his history and his comical actions, none of which make any rational sense if he was real. Snowden is an asset who revealed NOTHING new, nothing we didn't already know, built up by the press in a big crescendo of orchestrated public outrage, (which was clearly artificially managed; ask yourself why we saw none of the same thing over the umpteen dozen other big stories about this same exact shit?), specifically to be shot down by Daddy Knows Best types like the compliant jerk at this conference for the purpose of creating wide scale population compliance.
We need only one law, everywhere: a total ban on state secrets.
States don't exist for themselves anymore, their sole purpose is as a service to their people. States should not be allowed to hide anything from their citizens.
I did not read Atlas Shrugged. I did not perform iPhone trolling. I am libertarian. I have different priorities than you. Just because my priorities are different does not make them wrong. It makes them different. It's like having a different religion from you - in the US we recognize that it's OK to be different, and that it doesn't make either of us wrong or evil or immature. Life is not black and white overly simplified views of people based on your stereotypes to make it easier to hate. It is a continuum of various shades of gray, where people have different needs, desires, life experiences, and priorities based thereon. And they're not wrong. They're just dofferent.
And there is no need to name call. Name calling doesn't help the conversation. It prevents communication. It offends some of the people who agree with you, so that they start simply disagreeing wih you because of the insults. It creates a wall that prevents those with whom you disagree from listenig to you, so that you will never be able to convine them you are right. Please try to add to the conversation, not detract from it.
He also denied lying to Congress about the NSA's capabilities and activities in the name of protecting Americans from terrorism
He lied in the name of protecting his job from congress. That's a very different thing.
Time to revoke Obama's fake prize and give to a real hero: Eric Snowden.
I don't really get why you need to know your name is being searched to check if you're on the sex offenders list. Nor do I see you needing to know if the police decide to call in your plates to do a quick ownership, insurance, stolen vehicle checks before deciding to pull you over if they find something.
Which is an inconvenience when performed and can deny a person's mobility, work, whatever etc. Looking at data in a database? Not really.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
I keep getting told that the only thing that matters is the constitution and that the government isn't interpreting correctly or abiding by it. If that's the case, then one must look at the constitution alone and not what legalese, government, common law and various influential parties try to change meanings of.
Then go argue this point on your own thread instead of trying to hijack this one.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
bathtub rubber-tread monitoring surveillance cameras...?
If we're worse off because we did something and it was exposed, perhaps the idea would be to not do something?
But the real damage was to people's faces, and that, my friends, is something that Americans cannot abide. Culturally, people here have no concept of shame, and if exposed, their feelings will turn into anger.
He violated the Constitution, sure, but he did so legally. Not one bit of the spying has been done illegally. If anything, you should point your finger at those who made it legal(Congress, and George W. Bush)
"Or hanging out in a Moscow airport waiting for the President to offer the appropriate bribe to Vladimir Putin to have your ass sent back to the United States for the crime of causing the Surveillance State a little trouble."
You're wrong, Snowden is much too valuable.
Remember Russia calling for internet autonomy because the US has too much power on these networks? That guy hanging around on Moscow airfield is their smoking gun. I'm pretty sure mister Putin understands this too.
Don't worry, it will shift back come the next terrorist attack (or, more likely, a conveniently-timed fake "foiled" terrorist attack, that in the end turns out to be two stoners talking about the plot of a movie on their cellphones).
Its starting to seem like the *only* reason politicians get involved in politics is so they can rake off the cash from political contributions and "favors" done by lobby groups, then when they retire, get a massively profitable position on a board of directors for some company that bought and for them while they were in politics.
Maybe the first thing that should happen when you get elected to any office is that your bank records and financial statements become a matter of public record, updated on a daily basis...
"The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
The bathtub is cheap, installing it on the other hand....
When I have mod points, the posts like this are few and far between.
The liberty we've traded for "security" in this country is a f'ing joke, and a sad one.
Since he has nothing to hide, I'm sure he won;t mind a camera and microphone mounted in his body for 24/7 monitoring....
Green tech won't fix this. Countries will just start fighting over the rare earth minerals and other commodities needed for green tech. The fighting will shift slightly, but it won't stop.
The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
How many people have you ever met who have refused to use a Google service (e.g. gmail) because of the international reputation of the US?
I work for a company that won't let its employees even access gmail, Google+, etc. from inside the network. And we don't even deal with particularly sensitive data.
CPR? You wanna go with that as a big life-saving percentage?
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=cpr+success+rate
It's important to note that there is a certain encouraging trend in the fact that for once, libertarianism is enough of a threat to the establishment that they are actually addressing it.
The truly stunning thing is that despite our nation's alleged enshrining of liberty and the principles thereof, our government and elected officials seem to feel like they can get away with demonizing a philosophy that supports those very principles. And unfortunately, with a complicit media, they very well could get away with it.
In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
I hear all the people here on /. 'blah blah blahing' about how bad this crap is, and it IS bad, but what are you DOING about it?
Passive-aggressive does shit in government. Complaining does shit, unless you get motivated enough to DO something about it.
Remember this when you VOTE, OR if you are lucky to have money enough to run for election do so!
I would love to see more engineers of all sectors, software, hardware, civil, etc run for office. We need more people that actually DO stuff rather than what we currently have in office. Hell, we need more people in a variety of positions who actually WORK for a living getting involved and voted into our government to take it BACK from the wealthy.
What do we have in office? Lawyers, Politicians and business people. That really hasn't worked very well has it. Wealthy people protecting their wealth and personal interests and controlling the masses (us). Oh and since when has being a politician become a vocation? That's pretty sick.
In NY state and many others, Legislators work PART-TIME for the state and get paid well over $80K a year!!! That's one hell of a gig.
Let me highlight that again. PART TIME gig making $80K with benefits.
I haven't run because I don't have the money. However, I am VERY active in my local (county and town) politics and hope to move forward from there.
We need more 'people' (citizens, people that make up this country, dare I say 99%) getting more active and voting these enormous leeches and ticks out of office.
'Nough said.
C-Ya
.
The obvious solution is to repeal the 22nd amendment so that he has to care again. /sarcasm
The more I "dig into this"? The more I don't know WTF to think per my last post here http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4038323&cid=44443845
You're correct that the presses are owned, & further the agenda of those controlling them - it's human nature. Everyone wants to survive, & do better... only thing is, sometimes, it's done by nefarious + less than 'straight up means'. I figure they screw up bit, and have to pull shit to try to make it up only to find they bury themselves even more (been there, done that myself - only human). Bad part is it can stir folks the wrong way, for the wrong reasons, & for bogus self-centered reasons.
I know, & am learning MORE and MORE that I have been WRONG about people (until I "got to know them better" either in person, the best way, OR by taped interviews). I suppose the 'best analogy' is the film (I like to use film this way, since it's a common-ground to most folks, vs. say, quoting scripture OR quoting classical literature for instance) "ENEMY MINE"...
Case in point? My initial views on Steve Jobs... @ first, & I am STILL correct on it to an extent, was how he largely got by using Mr. Steve Wozniak... but in the end? They COMPLIMENTED one another's strengths.
I watched many videos today on Jobs on YouTube... the man had it TOTALLY RIGHT on education for 1 thing. He also had a hell of a grasp of certain principles like "don't be afraid to fuckup, you learn by it if you fail, and if you succeed, you can change the world". He also knew how to use language & passion to motivate not only himself, but also others (sometimes in a 'bad way' but then again, WE ALL HAVE OUR 'bad days' (I certainly do)).
Anyhow - sorry for going off on a tangent, but all of this stuff, the ONLY reason I got so "passionate" about it was what my history prof. stated, & that yes, the ROI on this set of programs is low vs. the potential for misuse imo.
That's all.
What DOES scare me, is the I see these FEMA camps going up, I read about the DHS buying up 450 (thousand or million??) rounds of ammo too. I see & hear about surveillance cameras going up everywhere as well etc./et al, & reactions tell you much about people + their motivations. Do I sometimes *think* there's a body of people out there that WANT the shit to hit the fan? Sure. Make the US gov't fall (or have somekind of civil war for example) would OPEN THE DOOR for say maybe China, or the USSR (or other 'competing nations' for the top dog spot) to strike. When you're STRONG & your opponent is weak or on 1 knee. that IS the time to do so (to further YOUR agenda - may even be the right one, but is it for everyone, longterm? That's the big question - are any of the possible folks/groups behind things SMART ENOUGH to do such a thing right, by humanity itself).
I know another thing: You put a person, or a nation, into a corner? They fight like a cornered rat... because they aren't fighting only for themselves then (Vietnamese military commanders even know that - attach yourself to your enemies' belt strap/keep your friends close but your enemies closer etc., but always leave him an out, an escape route, or you WILL really have a problem if you create that "cornered rat").
That includes organizations (since like societies, they're composed of their constituent parts, hence sociology the "psychology of societies" having quite a few parallels with individual psychology - imo, one of the most inaccurate + incomplete 'sciences' there is but when it is accurate, it can be dangerous, & misused too... I'll leave that, @ that, & to your imagination/interpretation).
Mortal men. We all are. We make mistakes, We get misled by others, even ourselves. Power goes to folks heads too. That is the real danger... & some of what I am seeing, along with what appears to be lies? Spooks me. Not so much for me, but the young kids in my family for example. What kind of WORLD are we cr
You think you can change the system from the inside. Forget it. That's not possible anymore. It's too corrupt. There's too much money involved. Try to change the system, and they'll find your body floating in the Potomac. Or they'll just corrupt you, or you'll suddenly be accused of "rape", and they'll even provide a woman to testify against you.
That system cannot be changed by one guy at a time. In order for it to work, there'd have to be a massive overturn of people in congress, all at once, and that's not likely to happen, since the people with the money and connections always stay in office.
Remember that in D.C., there are no republicans or democrats, just millionaires. Republicans are Red, Democrats are Blue, and neither of them give a shit about you.
If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
Who *precisely* is Eric Snowden???
If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
I have to nitpick a little here. The Executive can always in practice pick and choose which laws it will enforce. Despite the size and funding of the Executive branch the resources are still limited and as such they end up with a lot of leeway in selective enforcement. Just as a police officer can choose to give a reckless driver a simple verbal warning or arrest and cite them for every singe minor infraction they can find. Even for things like Drunk Driving in practice an officer can just give a warning, and I've seen it happen. That Officer might have to face repercussions from his own superiors and the community if the incident became public enough, but they are frequently given a lot of room to manuever when making those kinds of decisions.
Much like Jury Nullification this can be both a good and bad thing. I'm pretty sure the majority of people in states where weed has been legalized would appreciate it if the feds would lay off the prohibition laws within their state. The important thing when it comes to the Executive branch picking and choosing the laws they will enforce is that we hold them responsible as an electorate, and that we do so swiftly.
The "trust us" defense isn't good enough
It's not, because we are unsatisfied.
But it is enough, because what do they even need a defense for? What threat must they defend themselves from?
The one written into the Second Amendment.
For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
He was also no doubt surrounded by a dozen people with large guns who wouldn't hesitate to shoot anyone who tried to arrest him as a criminal.
This quote reminds me of the old adage, If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?. Just because nobody is reading the emails doesn't mean it isn't being recorded and can't be read at a later date. Gotta love the subtle way Gen. Alexander phrases things.
My logic is not correct in the least. Original jurisdiction if SCOTUS only applies to cases involving ambassadors, ministers and consulates and those involving a state. Everything else is appelette jurisdiction which Congress has Constitutional authority to regulate and has done so in the past. The only way such a case could fall under SCOTUS original jurisdiction is if a state government filed a case against the Federal government.
To add from Article III Section 2:
In all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, and those in which a State shall be Party, the supreme Court shall have original Jurisdiction. In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.
Incorrect, that is,
That's a tad unfair. "Lied to congress", perhaps. "Participating in an illegal[sic] unconstitutional mass surveillance." Illegal, No. It was authorized by Congress and granted access to continue multiple times by the courts. That makes it legal. "Unconstitutional?" Maybe.
To nitpick your nitpick: If it's unconstitutional, then it's illegal, doesn't matter who authorized it.
Although I'm not denying that Gen. Alexander has not spoken the truth, at the same time some of his "lies" may just come down to his lack of technical knowledge and the sheer vastness of the programs and bureaucracy that have been instituted over the years.
As another poster pointed out, if they have a program where they are recording raw IP packet information, then they are in effect able to read the emails of every person that flows through their system if and when software is written to process this information in that fashion. Perhaps this program's intention was not SPECIFICALLY to read the emails of every person, but it can happen INCIDENTALLY and Gen. Alexander may have not thought of or fully comprehend the capabilities of his own NSA programs. I think Gen. Alexander makes very large sweeping generalizations and poorly informed statements in response to people's concerns because he is answering questions based on what the intent of the programs are rather than what they actually are capable of doing.
I personally am less disturbed by the recording of information and more disturbed by the complete lack of due and chain of command approval processes when anybody from a high official to a simple contractor has access to these systems. As the article surmises about his talk, there are minimal protections to prevent an agent from accessing information and instead the NSA is being reactionary and instituting disciplinary actions AFTER the incident has occurred, been audited, and some process he did not identify has hopefully detected this breach and notified the agent's superiors. That leaves a VERY long period of time for an agent to view confidential information and take action upon it for personal gain well before any disciplinary action occurs. In addition, no disciplinary action can remove that knowledge now gained by the agent and prevent future exposure.
We should investigate anyone who doesn't have an internet connection or a smartphone? ;)
those American's that sit in Congress.
Slashdot, news for greengrocers, stuff that matters to aliterates*. Sorry, son, I can't take a high school dropout seriously. When you graduate junior high let me know. Read a fucking book once in a while, you uneducated redneck. Sheesh, this used to be a nerd hangout, where did all you uneducated morons come from?
* Not a misspelling, look it up.
When they decide to look through the last 5 years of data in the database and round up anybody with Fox in their online name because that has been deemed the new scary communist thing then it becomes a problem. The data being collected only helps to look back in the past after acts have been done to see where connections are made. If they have suspicions of someone they can get a warrant. When they just grab everything it can be used later for anything they want to find and you can then be sent off to the concentration camps and disappeared.
-- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
I'd guess that would have to do with the citizens of the UK already being so used to being under surveillance ...with all the cameras everywhere.
They've been there awhile too...and remember:
"What one generation accepts, the next generation embraces."
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
They already do this...have been for awhile.
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
What you're saying is that they don't have sufficient controls in "new scary communist thing". Sounds like a different problem to me.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
<sarcasm>
Oh! Didn't you know? The Guardian is no longer on-line from the UK -- it turned out that www.theguardian.com was a porn site (*) and has now disappeared behind the Huawei HomeSafe Filter Wall.
(*) well, I'm sure it's a porn site according to some people, or at least a self-harm website; you wouldn't like to get harmed because you surfed government-critical websites, NOW WOULD YOU?
</sarcasm>
Warning: message may contain sarcasm and even not be completely true at the moment.
To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
We know they don't have sufficient controls. Everything they are doing is secret and illegal. Anybody with access can look up the phone calls and emails of anyone they want to without any permissions or warrants. I would say that is a severe lack of sufficient controls.
-- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
Who are you going to shoot?
Before there was a 2nd amendment there was a concept of Natural Law, that held that all men had an inalienable right to self-determination. Government got its authority from the will of the governed.
What We The People brought into this world, We The People can redesign or dissolve. Peacefully. The States can convene a Constitutional Convention and amend or rewrite the federal charter as we see fit. If congress doesn't go along, states can recall the critters and replace them.
This idea of shooting our way into a better world is the stupidest idea I've ever heard. Nobody says anything about what's supposed to happen when the smoke clears.
Honestly, I don't see these mass scale "new scary communist thing" happening over there. There is always a few incidents of abuse that can be found in any legal system, so I hope you're basing your arguments on some massive thing that applies to a good chunk of people instead of one of these incidents that happens in some really low statistic of 0.000001% incidents.
So far, you haven't convinced me.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
Rare earth minerals aren't very rare, just expensive to purify. Neodymium (which you're probably referring to because it's used for wind turbine supermagnets) has about the same abundance as Lithium, and more then Gallium and Indium (which also occur only in trace amounts in bulk ores).
But when a wind turbine breaks down, you don't chuck its turbine house and massive supermagnets on the city dump, you re-use them. Reduce, Re-use, Recycle in that order.
To give an indication of Neodymium abundance: Cerium, which is the most common rare earth, 50% more than Neodymium, is used in disposable cigarette lighters as the flint (that grey metal rolling thingy). Probably because for lighting cancersticks the purity doesn't matter whereas for producing the exact Neodymium-Iron-Boron compound that maximizes magnetic field strength it does.
Some countries will just start fighting anyway, because... well... they just are like that.
To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
I think you are way to trusting. Power like this has been abused in the past and will continue to be abused. If I ran a bus load of nuns off a cliff, all I have to do is make it top secret information and nobody can do anything to me. Children being given radioactive drinking water in schools, woman having the uterus removed without their knowledge, injecting large numbers of black men with syphilis, all these things and more have been done by the US government. I am so glad you trust them, I don't.
-- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence_quotient != https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_quotient
Casteism
Hmm. A job creation scheme too? We could be onto a winner here.
We had something like that for a while, the truth is people don't give a damn and nobody is willing (or able, these days) to run against them.
A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
"Effective society is the product of moderation and wisdom."
Well, define "effective society" in a way that is not just your own personal opinion. If youre trying to imply that effective society is something planned, the result of people with "moderation and wisdom" coming up with solutions, that is absolutely absurd.
"The problems we face are multifaceted, and so are the solutions."
In a country with 300 million people, there are going to be 300 million (and more) views of what the problems are, and 300 million (and more) possible solutions.
Arch Conservative vs. Anarchists. Who did this general piss off?!
The President's primary duty is to defend and uphold the Constitution.
Apparently you haven't been paying attention. Politics is the business of getting paid to do no more than lie to people. When you get caught lying, you actually get paid more to stop talking altogether...
I'll take a page from Elon Musk's playbook: Debate points I stated validly! Consider it an opportunity to "enlighten me" if anything - 'set me straight' (IF you can). It's all I asked after all, originally.
(No, not attacking me, but my points & NOT just "hit & run" downmodding me (effete: too many here browse WELL below the default bogus moderation threshold which is easily cheated via sockpuppets & such + logouts) - prove me wrong,or rather, my concept!
(Whic is probably not even mine or original thought (there's not much of that out there ala "What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun" - Ecclesiastes Chapter 1, Verse 9 iirc))
That's all!
* Downmods are for whimps... Especially "hit & run" ones - period.
APK
P.S.=> You're NOT showing me any differently & I'm pretty much sure not to anybody else here either... apk
Oh look, new article out about how the feds are using the data without warrants to harass people who look online to buy a pressure cooker. What a wonderful use of police resources. But I guess we can just write that off as not enough proof that the system is being abused by those in power. Since it is secret we cannot prove anything. But they don't have to prove anything to harass innocent citizens.
-- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
Even if the NSA doesn't read your emails, it doesn't mean they haven't read my emails or say, Nancy Pelosi's emails or more likely, John Boehner's emails or Rand Paul's e-mails. And, taking that a step further, just because it hasn't been abused so far doesn't mean it's not going to be abused in the future. In fact, the secrecy around the program means that we'd have no way of telling whether it was abused or not, now, and in the future.
There are so many things wrong with this entire affair, at so many levels, you can start anywhere and get there by aimlessly wandering around.
"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
With a built in mic and you've got justification.
With all the info they gather, why haven't they been able to shut down phishing and spam sites?
To be honest I've always found the British "bobbie" to be reasonable, unlike American trigger-happy cowboys. So long as you don't get in his face and disrespect him in my experience he won't be in a hurry to escalate the situation. Of course I've never participated in a riot.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
I have been telling people that our communications have been monitored for over a decade. And back then most people just though I was crazy and paranoid. It turns out I was right, I wish I wasn't. We need to open our minds and hearts to fight the ignorance in our society.
But isn't that what this ultimately comes down to? Turning the whole country - indeed, the whole world - into a giant panopticon?
Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.
If you were referring only to the "share intelligence" bit - then yes, I know. I am sure I didn't intend THAT line to be speculative.
If you mean the whole idea - if you have proof that they do I would not be surprised but I haven't seen any conclusive claims to this effect. But then, i'm neither American nor British - I live in a small country in Africa. I cannot be expected to read EVERY American headline.
Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
Unfortunately, not using gmail doesn't mean gmail won't spy on you -- thanks to your helpful correspondents who use gmail themselves, or send a CC to a gmail address. Same with the social networks -- even if you vehemently ignore all the invites, all those helpful enthusiasts that use the networks' spam-invite feature also betray your social graph to whoever mines it.
VKh
Most of the invitations I get from social networks are from people I've never heard of (most of my friends know not to send me spam), so if someone's using this for datamining they'll get a very strange view of my social graph...
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
In Soviet America, the internet searches you!
"... I dabbled with such PUNY tricks when I was but a child" - The Dread Dormammu http://www.supermegamonkey.net/chronocomic/entries/scans2/ST127_vsDormammu.JPG (yer trollin skillz = weak, while mine are limitless like my fav.villain, what with yer 'twitter trap' crap trying to confuse who is who here - that shit's weak/old/stale, like you).
Try this on 4 size instead http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4045497&cid=44455997 since everyone else wussed out on it. Good intellectual exercise. Ya need it.
(Take a good read all the way through the 3 replies beneath it. They complete it. Last post gives away the game but best of the lot though. Hey - Ya might even learn something. Imagine that: A troll actually learning something, lol! Hope ya like music. I wager you do. It's very easy to make puny trolls dance, n yer a puny troll)
Dullards here couldn't handle it. Does do a far better job of 'obfuscating issues' than ya ever could. Is yer fav. color "transparent" because "I see you" n right through ya as well as yer facile twtter style childish puny tricks attempts now to try to confuse the issue!
See?! Marvel at the sense of humor that is on display!
Will I choose to write certain lines in bold?
How long will the accusations fly? Curse you, APK!
Either way, we (or is it I?) desperately want you to read what we write.
Stop being such a frightened coward. Be a man and accept that there are risks in life. You simply cannot stop suicide bombers. Most of them don't have a Facebook page for your friends to monitor. They may not have an internet connection at all and certainly don't have a smartphone.
Some of us value liberty, value not being watched by law enforcement agents every second of our lives to see if we might be breaking some law or might secretly be planning to blow up the white house. Do you have no understanding of the sort of freedom this country was founded on?
Pff, shows what you know! The NSA/TSA/DHS have already stopped hundreds of thousands of terrorist plots based on monitoring our communication!
Stop! Dremel time!
I *totally* agree with this!
Being a politician should be a **involuntary, random, volunteer job** (just like a jury) where for 2 years you give up your life. You have to go to basic political school for, say, a month or three to learn the basics, then you get thrown into a huge group with a bunch of other neophyte politicians.
Wages should be good, to minimize the damage of having to give up one's life and/or move (if you don't already live in the capital you're assigned). There would be assigned houses for each position, just like the White House, so that relocation will be cheaply provided.
Oh! And their houses, cars, and political staterooms will all be recorded and broadcast for the entire world to see. Most of it will be livecasted on the Internet. I think every single room should be recorded, some rooms / sessions can be encrypted with a time of expiry 1 day after the existing politicians will have their tenure end. This will ensure proper law enforcement against every politician, as well as keeping them completely ethical.
Then you'd only really have to worry about malfeasants rigging the election, but they'd have to have a huge pool, since consecutive terms won't be allowed.
This is the solution to almost all of every democratic republic's political ills.
Slashdot Valentines Beta Massacre: iT WORKED! The boycotts killed Beta!!