6/7/2013 11:54:28 AM
Or how about just stop doing it altogether?Why isn't that an option?
6/7/2013 11:57:30 AM
Sure it's an option, but in Obama's own words just now "You can't have 100% security, 100% privacy, and zero inconvenience. There has to be tradeoffs.". All these programs have been approved and are overseen by congress. If the political will is there to get rid of them entirely, they will be.
6/7/2013 12:24:32 PM
Also Obama's own words:"often the best source of information about waste, fraud, and abuse in government is an existing government employee committed to public integrity and willing to speak out...acts of courage and patriotism, which can sometimes save lives and often save taxpayer dollars, should be encouraged rather than stifled as they have been during the Bush administration."hmmmm.......
6/7/2013 12:41:03 PM
6/7/2013 12:45:00 PM
Yeah, probably. But I mean, the popular will to do much of anything lately has been ignored.
6/7/2013 12:51:28 PM
That graph would be relevant if what the legislature passed actually reflected the public will. Besides, you don't even have to pass laws anymore. Almost anything can be done via executive order nowadays.
6/7/2013 12:58:31 PM
Yeah, that's sort of the point. The Senate couldn't pass a background check bill that was supported by 90% of the nation, and Obama himself went to bat for harder than anything since his first couple years in office. Meanwhile, the House passes a bill to repeal Obamacare every other week, which damn near no one fucking wants to happen at this point. So yeah, we probably can't rely on Congress to scale back surveillance of electronic communications, but that says more about how shitty congress is than anything else.
6/7/2013 1:15:48 PM
6/7/2013 2:53:46 PM
6/7/2013 4:16:41 PM
It's a shame the Boston Bombers weren't on Verizon. We can't even keep people that we are warned about from doing crazy things.
6/7/2013 7:22:59 PM
My favorite part is the FISA court, which only hears from the government and never from the people about whom they wish to collect data about. Furthermore, no one knows what the arguments are or whether anything has ever been denied in one of these court "hearings" so how is this really a check on these monitoring powers?
6/7/2013 8:04:56 PM
Fisa court has been a tragedy for a while, this isn't your first time hearing about it I hope...
6/8/2013 9:16:25 AM
It was just pointed out to me that Echelon had existed well over a decade ago,this type of spying isn't new. FISA was created to add some modicum of legitimacy, the shocking thing is how pervasive it continues to be. Obama gets accused by the right for giving in to terrorists when he talks about ending wars and closing gitmo, but he's a tyrant for maintains spying programs.He's cant simultaneously be too soft and too hard..
6/8/2013 12:59:17 PM
The die hard Obama supporters are saying "but it started because of Bush!". Yeah, perhaps it did but Obama sure as hell didn't put a stop to it. He also signed NDAA and renewed the Patriot Act (still a great Orwellian name for a bill). I think their defense mechanisms are up in finding out we were only given the illusion of choice.
6/9/2013 8:05:31 AM
"But it was Bush!!!"Umm, didn't Obama promise a CHANGE to the policies of Bush?
6/9/2013 4:33:23 PM
Yeah, but only naive idiots believed him.
6/9/2013 7:44:34 PM
A politician not keeping all their promises? Now I've seen everything!(should i switch my cell phone provider, just as an act of protest?)
6/10/2013 9:42:03 AM
No, you should keep pretending it's unimportant.It makes you look cool.
6/10/2013 9:48:19 AM
nm[Edited on June 10, 2013 at 10:39 AM. Reason : i'm dead-serious about changing service providers]
6/10/2013 10:23:26 AM
Well of course that's up to you.You're probably paying too much anyway.
6/10/2013 11:32:00 AM
In regards to the data mining, it's pretty clear now that the WaPo botched the article and there was a ton of misinformation and hyperbole. There is no unfettered access to tech company servers or anything like that. From the follwup NYT article,http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/08/us/mining-of-data-is-called-crucial-to-fight-terror.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hp
6/10/2013 11:32:54 AM
You and I both know you wouldn't be so dismissive of this if it were the previous administration or Romney calling the shots.The whole point of the outrage is that the fisa courts are so secretive that's hard to even understand what checks in balances even exist, let alone whether or not they are effective.
6/10/2013 4:35:21 PM
What was the first thing to call attention to the FISA courts? Were they the ones making decisions on people in Guantanamo Bay? I remember hearing about them during Bush's years, I think.
6/10/2013 4:59:31 PM
6/10/2013 5:12:25 PM
6/10/2013 5:54:56 PM
I'm not contesting anything Snowden leaked, just the hyperbole in the initial media reports of the program. They aren't "tapping directly into the central servers of nine leading U.S. Internet companies" , that's bullshit. At worst, they are pulling from what is essentially a private email box that the companies push requested data into. At least as far as PRISM is concerned.
6/10/2013 6:25:27 PM
I fail to see how that's any less troubling.
6/10/2013 6:40:45 PM
Well it's certainly less susceptible to abuse, for a start.
6/10/2013 6:54:35 PM
6/10/2013 7:40:20 PM
6/10/2013 8:27:33 PM
For Shrike:
6/14/2013 5:29:18 PM
Dude, what are you trying to prove here? It's already been proven that the WaPo and Guardian sensationalized the PRISM story to make it seem more insidious then it is. It's not a dragnet, it's not 24/7 surveillance of every piece of data that goes through Silicon Valley. It's not even as bad as what Google and MS do themselves with the data you willingly give them. It's basically a federated search where after approval, the NSA submits a query that is then consumed by the various tech companies. They run that query themselves over their own servers and return the results back to the NSA. PRISM basically automates the process of submitting, executing, and parsing the results. That's the "direct access". I have some expertise here as I've worked on a similar system that queries various medical databases. You don't have a direct open connection to the databases, your level of access and what you're allowed to query is controlled 100% by the source.
6/14/2013 6:15:11 PM
6/14/2013 6:41:59 PM
No, it's not going to get any bigger. The WaPo and the Guardian botched the original story. The fact they've both walked back from their original assertions is proof enough of that. We've gotten testimony from the tech companies themselves that what they originally claimed is not only not the case, but that it's probably not even possible.http://www.zdnet.com/how-did-mainstream-media-get-the-nsa-prism-story-so-hopelessly-wrong-7000016822/
6/14/2013 6:53:55 PM
nah...I pretty much assumed that was already the case. Ever mounting news of a slide toward authoritarianism doesn't even phase me anymore. I read that article, and the D didn't even move.I do start to swell up whenever I get the chance to call out my fellow "progressives" for being mark-ass bitches and "team players" whenever their guy does the same thing as the guy before him, though. It's always fun to see someone abandon any pretense of their principles just because they don't want to put themselves in the uncomfortable position of realizing they've been duped.
6/14/2013 7:01:10 PM
6/14/2013 7:43:44 PM
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57589495-38/nsa-admits-listening-to-u.s-phone-calls-without-warrants/Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, is a traitor that should be imprisoned for leaking this classified information to the public.
6/16/2013 10:23:15 AM
^ no no, that's not what he meant.http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/305855-house-dem-nsa-cant-listen-to-calls-without-warrantsBack to talking about Syria, citizens.
6/16/2013 10:00:30 PM
GOLO assured me this guy was Carter II and he wouldn't be re-elected.But then I was told he was W II, but everyone switched sides with their opinions and I lost count.So I took a nap, cause I heard the End of The World was nigh.Again.[Edited on June 16, 2013 at 10:58 PM. Reason : And again and again]
6/16/2013 10:57:33 PM
I like how this administration (like the previous and others) justifies such actions by the ol' method of "the ends justify the means". Well, hell if that's the case, let's just scrap the whole constitution. I'm sure police work would be much easier if good ol' government can just come barging through my door anytime to ask for papers and perform a contraband search. And the favorite line of "this program has stopped terrorist attacks!". Oh really? Attacks never heard of outside of your offices? Like the attacks created by the FBI when they lure in extremists and get them to bite the bullet? I'm all about taking out turrrists, but not at the expense of my rights. Oh yeh, and the explanation of "these are just business records of metadata" is complete trash. Firstly, it's data held by a private entity, thus should require a warrant to access; secondly, the acquisition of data, through a warrant, would be targeted and not a wide net that captures all, unrelated data, and lastly the data includes personal information, albeit very little, of private citizens which should require a warrant for government access, even if in the hands of private companies.
6/18/2013 2:34:26 PM
everyone see dirty wars.or i guess read the book if you're really feeling like a douchebag.
6/18/2013 2:38:49 PM
^that's actually on my list. I've seen/heard Jeremey Scahill on a few interviews, and he seems to have a pretty comprehensive understanding of drones/foreign policy issues.
6/18/2013 5:33:53 PM
6/20/2013 4:02:24 PM
^ the 1st and 4th bolded items seem incidental to any surveillance program. They can't determine what's foreign without first analyzing it.The 2 and 4th, particularly the 2nd, seem pretty egregious, but also incidental. It'd be pretty bad if the gov. had information on a crime, and didn't or couldn't do anything about it. The bigger question would be if the suspect were made aware their arrest was in part due to secretly acquired information, on how, if at all, this information were used in court.[Edited on June 20, 2013 at 6:00 PM. Reason : ]
6/20/2013 5:59:09 PM
No....the bigger question is whether or not information should be used against you AT ALL if it is obtained without a warrant and without probable cause.Storing people's communications who are suspected of no wrongdoing for 5 years is a terrible breach of privacy. Who could argue otherwise?
6/20/2013 6:35:03 PM
I mean, if a cop were to search your home without a warrant and without probable cause, only to discover that you had some weed in your cabinet or a bootleg DVD, that would be inadmissible in court.But this is apparently not the case when it comes to surveillance, where the defendant wouldn't even be aware that he or she is being monitored and subject to legal scrutiny.
6/20/2013 6:48:58 PM
^ bingo. And people like Shrike will look the other way, as long as their guy is in office.
6/21/2013 12:09:10 AM
The problem is less the surveillance and more the FISA courts. I don't know much about them, but where do they fit in the judicial branch, and what basis are they making these decisions under? What you're saying is technically accurate, they shouldn't be storing anyone's data, but the whole reason we have a judicial branch is to have oversight of these things, and it looks like for that part they went through the proper constitutional channels. It would be good to know what specific basis, if any, the courts granted this authority under. If I were in charge of the NSA, and I was told to use technology to find bad guys, I would need a large sampling of both guilty and innocent people to build a proper bad guy finding algorithm. All of these court orders seem to be written around that, without giving away exactly why the NSA wanted this information.
6/21/2013 9:53:27 AM
Yawn. Are you guys still on this NSA thing? The rest of the Obama hater train has left that stop and moved on to how he's dealing with Russia. Please keep up at least.
6/21/2013 10:53:18 AM