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Live Q and a with Snowden on the Guardian
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Whoa....
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Did they target a US Citizen and read his email without a warrant? No. They targeted a non US citizen outside of the US, and in the process came across information about a US Citizen. It's no different than tapping a phone line - "they" can get a warrant to tap "Bob's phone line" but if I call that phone line they still get to listen in - even though they don't have a warrant to tap my phone line. When they start targeting US citizens without a warrant and reading all of their email, then we have a problem. Then we have a huge problem. BTW, did anyone read the comment FB made about this? They said they've received ten thousand requests to release information. Most of it was local police departments with local crimes, not the Federal Government. |
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lots are. they have legal justification to 'keep an eye on you', and it be exactly what they're meant to do, paid to do, etc you do business all day with people off shore maybe a few got some ideas? |
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I do business all day long with people in foreign countries. I am pretty confident none of them are suspected by the US Government as being terrorists. And if the NSA wants to monitor the conversions I have with a programmer in Israel about his dating site, well, honestly I'm okay with that. |
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About Facbook, Google, and so on... Quote:
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I, sitting at my desk, certainly had the authorities to wiretap anyone, from you, or your accountant, to a federal judge, to even the President if I had a personal email. No, I don't think he did. Someone, somewhere, at the end of the day has to be able to do this. I think Snowden was that person. He had the ability, but not the authority. The authority had to come from a warrant. Without it, he was breaking the law. |
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Of course the law is being broken, that is part of the point of all of this. Warrants are no longer needed. If this was all on the up and up, he wouldn't be a "whistle blower" as there would be nothing to blow his whistle about. |
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especially from someone who talks about being in the marines so much i hope you didn't kill anyone 'protecting freedoms'.. cause that justification is a little moot now, eh? |
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The National Security Agency has acknowledged in a new classified briefing that it does not need court authorization to listen to domestic phone calls, a participant said.
Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, disclosed on Thursday that during a secret briefing to members of Congress, he was told that the contents of a phone call could be accessed "simply based on an analyst deciding that." If the NSA wants "to listen to the phone," an analyst's decision is sufficient, without any other legal authorization required, Nadler said he learned. "I was rather startled," said Nadler, an attorney and congressman who serves on the House Judiciary committee. Not only does this disclosure shed more light on how the NSA's formidable eavesdropping apparatus works domestically, it also suggests the Justice Department has secretly interpreted federal surveillance law to permit thousands of low-ranking analysts to eavesdrop on phone calls. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57...s-phone-calls/ |
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However, I suppose the odds that he is lying are just as great as some of you being in denial. Flip a coin. I guess we will see how much he is telling the truth by how hard they go after him. |
nadler's backtracking on what he heard in the closed door super secret hearing
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I wonder if the qualifications to become an analyst are tougher than becoming a TSA agent? |
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i had an article pulled up around here somewhere going over the intell community's hiring practices but crap, this is all coo coo stuff, i'll see if i can track it down. |
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Years ago I worked for the phone company, and was in charge of a 24 hour operator center. The building was also the switching hub. When the FBI came to put a tap on the line, they didn't come with a warrant - all of that was done way above me by attorneys. Instead, I was told by my bosses they were coming. If every NSA sub contractor stopped and demanded to see a warrant every time nothing would get done. It's entirely possible Snowden had no idea when a warrant was issued or not. |
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Don't you people understand how this works? They don't need a warrant to kill someone outside of the country. Hell, the CIA at once point had bugged the Russian embassy in Berlin - just dug right up under it and tapped all of their lines. Did they need a warrant for that? |
rochard, the word domestic is in my comment you quoted.
don't you understand the difference between foreign and domestic snooping? |
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I don't know how much more cut and dry you need it to be. He said he had the authority to do it. Go read his Q&A. |
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i can't believe we have a congressman that flips flops so blatantly, walking out of a closed-door hearing stating categorically he heard testimony that no authorization is required, coming back and saying he didn't hear that. wtf!! this is a member of the house judiciary committee. fuck that shit man. |
i mean that is the fucking fundamental point of all this and dude wasn't listening?
fucking right. now the news cycle is flush with stories of all the threats averted that we were never told about as a result of the snooping. jfc. |
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It is also quite disgusting that most members went home for a long weekend rather than sit and get answers to a lot of things that were not previously told to them. Just shows you how complicit Congress is in all of this. Snowden addressed each criticism (which were not many to begin with) and I do not doubt his credibility, especially with the response he's been receiving from the government. Not only that, he promises that there is more to come. Even with the slideshow outing PRISM, the journalists withheld something like 40 slides because they went too far and exposed too much. What they released was just a teaser to show it/he are legit. |
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We have corporations releasing vague statements with very similar language saying they didn't participate. Most of the PRISM slides were not released as they were deemed too sensitive. We have a Congressman saying that he was disgusted at what he learned during the secret briefing last week -- that his worst fears were pretty much confirmed. At what point does Snowden become creditable? |
I bet this is only the tip of the iceberg.
If **low level** staff have this kind of access, imagine what the tippy top of the heap can do. |
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Our govt as a whole needs a good bitch slap from the citizens of this country. Too bad it will never happen. |
If all of this is true to the word, lets talk about auditing.
DoD has approximately one auditor per $2 billion spent in contracts. Oversight is lax at best, which is why there is so much waste. The intelligence contractors have sucked the institutional memory out of NSA as private pays more. They were so far behind on clearance investigations that they had to outsource the process. How much oversight do you really think there is? Even if they need a "warrant," how many people are responsible for the oversight? Also, the few laws that people keep mentioning are the ambiguously worded public ones. Nobody is privy to the DOJ interpretations of such laws, nor are they privy to any of the rules set by the secret intelligence committees in Congress. Much more is done behind closed doors than in public. Sunlight is the best disinfectant. |
When they announce it imagine how many people are going to blow their brains out
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