I think the scope of spying on German citizens is worth making a fuss about
7/2/2013 3:35:55 PM
I feel like Russia was the guy's last good chance. I was really surprised that he leaked more documents and that he suggested in fairly certain terms that he would leak more. He has a much less of a sense of self-preservation than myself.I can see somewhat how he might have seen it as a politically expedient leak. If Germany was going to take him then that could work out great. But he's made himself a political liability.
7/2/2013 8:16:06 PM
looks like the US is ordering its allies to deny airspace to Bolivian president Evo Morales because of fears that Snowden might be on board (he wasn't):http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jul/03/edward-snowden-asylum-live
7/3/2013 12:05:48 AM
Yes YES YES
7/3/2013 1:13:20 AM
Army Blocks Entire Guardian Website For Troops In Middle East And Asiahttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/02/army-guardian-blocked-troops_n_3533036.html
7/3/2013 9:49:20 AM
In case you didn't know, the President of Ecuador was detained in his plane while he refused to let them search it because permission to fly across airspace had been denied. Because they thought Snowden was on a plan with him. http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20130703/01030723701/bolivian-presidents-jet-rerouted-moscow-suspicions-snowden-could-be-board-south-american-nations-outraged-affront.shtmlHere is an account from the Argentine President:http://gawker.com/the-argentine-presidents-riveting-account-of-tuesdays-657792469Also, Ecuador found a bug in its London Embassy http://news.sky.com/story/1111127/ecuador-finds-bug-in-its-london-embassyAlso, Snowden is not stateless since is passport was cancelled. Apparently cancelling passports as a way to penalize someone is against recognized international rules and the Supreme Court wrote in Trop v. Dulles that "The civilized nations of the world are in virtual unanimity that statelessness is not to be imposed as punishment for a crime.
7/3/2013 1:24:37 PM
I bet the keep following the wrong planes because of intentional misinformation by people who know they are bugged.
7/3/2013 2:29:04 PM
^^^ This has little to do with censorship: if the government was truly trying to block any access to Snowden or the reports, they would black out any website that had his name or even block out all news sites and blogs. No, this is purely bureaucratic procedure. Here's the thinking:1. Government regulations say you can't have classified materials on an unclassified machine.2. If classified materials get onto an unclassified computer, then bureaucratic policy requires you to go through a whole process of scrubbing it, involving lots of man-hours and stacks of paperwork.3. The material leaked is, from a bureaucratic perspective, still classified because it never went through the declassifying process.4. Therefore, if the actual classified material posted by the Guardian gets onto an unclassified computer, bureaucratic policy dictates you go through and scrub the machine.5. Mid-level bureaucrat is unhappy because he loses his machine for a few hours when IT whisks it away; IT bureaucrat unhappy because of the paperwork he has to do.This is not about censorship; a government employee can simply go to CNN, BBC or al-Jazeera. No, this is about a bureaucrat who doesn't want to go and scrub a thousand machines that may have accidentally downloaded a file that is considered "contaminated" by the bureaucratic machinery.
7/3/2013 2:47:13 PM
I get the logic, but it still seems dumb. Once the information its out there, its out there. Seems pretty self defeating.Did they block YouTube when the collateral murder video leaked?Anyway, back to Morales..... I can't think of a worse diplomatic decision than intentionally preventing a foreign head of state from flying back to his home country.
7/3/2013 4:53:37 PM
I assume the Army heavily filters the internet all the time, similar to any large employer. I don't think its a big deal.
7/3/2013 5:31:13 PM
Pretty stupid and rather petty I agree to block Morales' plane like that.As for the Army, it's stupid, but I view it more as a bureaucracy that's flailing to adapt to a paradigm shift.
7/3/2013 5:59:20 PM
7/4/2013 12:04:27 AM
No doubt, but I don't think the Guardian profited that much from a US Army readership, and again, if the Army truly were trying to run a real censorship campaign, they would have gone much, much further (think Wikileaks).
7/5/2013 2:32:54 PM
the traitor is going to wind up in a socialist country run by a dictator who is trying his damnedest to get his country lower than the 168th that they are on the global "freedom of the press" rankingsLOL
7/5/2013 9:30:50 PM
Thanks to blocking the Bolivian plane, now Snowden has multiple offers of asylum in Central and South America. South American nations are also filing a complaint with the UN for blocking the plane of a head of state. The EU has also passed a deep investigation into US spying on EU nations.
7/6/2013 6:35:41 PM
Pretty sure countries are allowed to delegate who gets access to their airspace without the UN's approval
7/7/2013 1:15:21 AM
No. It falls under diplomatic immunity that heads of states have free airspace rights. I'd love to see someone try to detain air force one.
7/7/2013 11:23:59 AM
Haha, no it really doesn't.
7/7/2013 12:18:08 PM
bbehe is right. While commercial air travel does not need pre-approval to cross airspace because of international agreements, diplomatic and state air travel have to get permission. However this is basically a technicality and no one denies it... well at least not when the US doesn't convince them to.
7/7/2013 3:31:10 PM
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/07/07/us-brazil-espionage-snowden-idUSBRE9660ER20130707?feedType=RSSspying on citizens in Brazil as wellour government blocked contracts from a Chinese firm because of concerns about spying, do you think we will start seeing anyone blocking contracts with American firms (or more likely just threatening)?
7/7/2013 9:49:42 PM
7/8/2013 9:59:48 PM
Your wish is our command.
7/8/2013 10:29:31 PM
http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/08/us-reportedly-uses-security-agreements-to-intercept-data-from-un/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=EngadgetFCC strong arms foreign fiber operators into letting the US monitor undersea fiber directly
7/8/2013 11:09:20 PM
^^^It's obviously in the best interests of american citizens for our governments to spy on other countries. Just like it's in the best interest of Saudi citizens for it's government to spy on other countries.Don't be naive.
7/9/2013 9:58:08 AM
Plenty of Americans are not happy with blanket spying on citizens of other countries
7/9/2013 12:08:57 PM
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2013/07/so-you-want-hide-nsa-your-guide-nearly-impossible/66942/
7/12/2013 3:06:21 PM
Someone posted this on FB, is this for real?http://therebel.org/environment/666018-snowden-uncovers-shocking-truth-behind-chemtrailsIt quotes snowden, but how come no one else is reporting it? Yes, I can see what kind of site it is, but still, is this documented anywhere else?
7/13/2013 8:45:27 AM
lol are you/they really that dumb?your link sources The Internet Chronicle, which is a satire site. Their #2 article right now has the lede "Edward Snowden unveiled documents identifying God as Wilbur Mercer, a mechanic in Georgia."the 3rd article? "The Dome of the Rock was captured by Vatican Forces and Pope Francis named Saint Snowden Messiah upon the Rock."[Edited on July 13, 2013 at 10:51 AM. Reason : .]
7/13/2013 10:50:43 AM
Lol sorry i didn't click on the source link, even though I saw it. Was going to, but got busy with something.Haha, thanks. The guy (conspiracy type) who posted it in FB was/is lapping it all up... gonna have to bust his wet dream.He also said this:
7/13/2013 10:59:33 AM
the comments on that article (the one you linked) are hilarious. people saying things like "while I believe the government controls the weather to force states to pay in to a dying economy, i don't believe this" or "snowden was on the korean plane that crashed in SFO"i love conspiracy theorists. their mental gymnastics are the bestest
7/13/2013 11:11:56 AM
How to Be a Rogue Superpower: A Manual for the Twenty-First Centuryhttp://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175725/
7/18/2013 4:48:19 PM
Looks like the US finally figured out what to do with dissidents:Assange is stuck in an Ecuadorian embassy, and Snowden is still stuck in a Moscow Airport:http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jul/24/edward-snowden-moscow-airport-spyProbably a lot cheaper to have other countries hole these dudes up in limbo, unlike that pesky Bradly Manning who has to be fed by US authorities every now and then.
7/24/2013 4:12:39 PM
The traitor Snowden is harmless anyway.
7/24/2013 5:54:20 PM
He had the keypad passwords to the bathrooms.
7/26/2013 12:50:50 AM
7/26/2013 4:40:27 PM
Public Opinion vs. Corporate influence vs. http://www.people-press.org/2013/07/26/few-see-adequate-limits-on-nsa-surveillance-program/http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/07/money-nsa-vote/winner = Corporate influence.
7/29/2013 4:11:49 PM
Possibly the best article i've read on this whole NSA thing:http://www.edge.org/conversation/nsa-the-decision-problem
7/29/2013 4:22:50 PM
here we are:More domestic spying (this one goes into a LOT of detail):http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jul/31/nsa-top-secret-program-online-data[Edited on July 31, 2013 at 3:25 PM. Reason : ]
7/31/2013 3:13:17 PM
7/31/2013 5:05:04 PM
7/31/2013 5:33:30 PM
I find it curious that they have built this entire infrastructure to record every communication in the known civilized world yet they only have enough storage space to hold onto it for 5 days.I know they have ways of tagging the important communications and saving them in a different database, but you have to imagine they are working to expand this capacity problem.
7/31/2013 6:06:50 PM
^^herpity derp! The technology exists. No shit.
8/1/2013 7:52:55 AM
^^The 5 day thing is almost assuredly a lie.And they are building new facilities:http://www.defenseone.com/technology/2013/07/nsas-big-dig/67406/
8/1/2013 8:38:43 AM
8/1/2013 9:33:05 AM
8/1/2013 12:08:53 PM
^there's even a picture of the "description" the analyst needs to fill out for justification.It's literally a one line form, similar to tww's "edit response" line. It's hardly a warrant.Here:[Edited on August 1, 2013 at 12:16 PM. Reason : justification]
8/1/2013 12:14:41 PM
i'd love to see some of the justifications they've given
8/1/2013 12:18:07 PM
probably lots of "a" or ";" or "." just like w/ tww edit reasons
8/1/2013 4:11:32 PM
We must invade Russia. Snowden is a more dangerous target than Osama Bin Laden. We should send a special forces team into Moscow and assassinate him. Russia's borders are no more sacred than Pakistan. Putin will publicly condemn the attack but secretly be glad that Snowden is dead and he didn't have to order the execution.[Edited on August 1, 2013 at 6:26 PM. Reason : .]
8/1/2013 6:24:26 PM
????Snowden is a hero. He exposed the illegal activities of the federal government.
8/2/2013 8:21:29 AM