Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $28,398
35%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 35%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: prism

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • The German PRISM: Berlin Wants to Spy Too

    06/18/2013 12:07:43 AM PDT · by Olog-hai
    Der Spiegel ^ | June 17, 2013 – 01:46 PM | (Spiegel staff)
    Just a few days ago, the man whom many Germans now see as one of the greatest villains in the world visited Berlin. Keith Alexander, the head of the world’s most powerful intelligence operation, the National Security Agency (NSA), had arranged meetings with important representatives of the German government … Why is the German government reacting so calmly to something that it should find alarming? Perhaps because these revelations are nothing new for it? Because the Germans would like to enjoy the same capabilities that PRISM affords the Americans? Or because our friends from the other side of the Atlantic...
  • Seeking Surveillance Safe Search Engines

    06/17/2013 7:01:42 AM PDT · by ShadowAce · 11 replies
    FOSS Force ^ | 14 June 2013 | Christine Hall
    While helping our colleague Dave Bean as he worked to get his essay on Google and the NSA ready for publication, I found myself wondering if any of this latest news on the government’s forcing their nose into everybody-in-the-world’s business would have any lasting effect. Sadly, I figured not–if there was any change, it’d only be temporary. I’ve spent too many years on this planet to expect too much in the way of permanent change for the better. DuckDuckGo’s main page. Click to enlarge.Sadly, I’m of the generation that learned of the advent of global warming way back in the...
  • Opt out of PRISM, the NSA’s global data surveillance program. Stop reporting your online activities

    06/17/2013 4:16:39 AM PDT · by Dallas59 · 20 replies
    EFF Action Center ^ | 6/17/2013 | EFF Action Center
    Free software, browsers, social media, DNS servers etc...
  • A Response to Glenn Greenwald [leftist apologia for Panopticon state barf alert]

    06/16/2013 11:22:07 AM PDT · by oblomov · 10 replies
    The Nation ^ | 14 June 2013 | Rick Perlstein
    The NSA slide that tech experts say Glenn Greenwald misinterpreted. (The Guardian/NSA, US Federal Government.) Glenn Greenwald has posted a response to his critics today, including myself, titled “;On PRISM, Partisanship, and Propaganda”: “In a Nation post yesterday,” he writes, “Rick Perlstein falsely accuses me of not having addressed the questions about the PRISM story.” Actually I didn’t accuse him of not having addressed “the questions,” but instead a single question, which he still does not address: whether, in his claim that corporations have allowed the National Security Agency direct access to their servers, he misunderstands the meaning of...
  • The National-Security Right Goes Silent

    06/15/2013 10:15:34 AM PDT · by kristinn · 31 replies
    National Review ^ | Saturday, June 15, 2013 | Andrew C. McCarthy
    The jihad rages on, but the War on Terror is over. There is no longer a national-security consensus — no longer the political support for wartime defense measures, much less offensive combat operations. While the enemy continues to fight, our will to break the enemy’s will has vanished. After a contentious week, that much is clear. The controversy swirling around shadowy intelligence programs hasn’t gotten to the bottom of those programs, but it tells us everything we need to know about . . . us. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s dog that did not bark is a metaphor worn out by...
  • Edward Snowden and the Selective Targeting of Leaks (Important resource article)

    06/15/2013 10:08:07 AM PDT · by kristinn · 16 replies
    Reuters ^ | Tuesday, June 11, 2013 | Jack Shafer
    Edward Snowden’s expansive disclosures to the Guardian and the Washington Post about various National Security Agency (NSA) surveillance programs have only two corollaries in contemporary history—the classified cache Bradley Manning allegedly released to WikiLeaks a few years ago and Daniel Ellsberg’s dissemination of the voluminous Pentagon Papers to the New York Times and other newspapers in 1971. Leakers like Snowden, Manning and Ellsberg don’t merely risk being called narcissists, traitors or mental cases for having liberated state secrets for public scrutiny. They absolutely guarantee it. In the last two days, the New York Times’s David Brooks, Politico’s Roger Simon, the...
  • On PRISM, partisanship and propaganda (incredible article)

    06/14/2013 8:45:37 PM PDT · by chessplayer · 78 replies
    I haven't been able to write this week here because I've been participating in the debate over the fallout from last week's NSA stories, and because we are very busy working on and writing the next series of stories that will begin appearing very shortly. I did, though, want to note a few points, and particularly highlight what Democratic Rep. Loretta Sanchez said after Congress on Wednesday was given a classified briefing by NSA officials on the agency's previously secret surveillance activities: "What we learned in there is significantly more than what is out in the media today. . ....
  • Do Americans Have Less Privacy Than in George Orwell's Novel, 1984?

    06/15/2013 8:24:10 AM PDT · by pinochet · 19 replies
    George Orwell's famous novel, 1984, was published in 1949, and he predicted that people in the future would have no privacy, as governments would monitor all their activities. The "big brother is watching" phrase became well known. But Orwell could never have predicted the technologies of the future, when he described a fictional system of oppression based on technologies that were available in 1949. In 1949, there were no personal computers, no cell phones, no internet, no satellites, etc. In the communist regimes of 1949, most people did not own telephones, therefore there were no phones to bug. Most people...
  • Secret to Prism program: Even bigger data seizure

    06/15/2013 9:43:10 AM PDT · by TurboZamboni · 5 replies
    pioneer press ^ | 6-15-13 | STEPHEN BRAUN, ANNE FLAHERTY, JACK GILLUM and MATT APUZZO
    WASHINGTON—In the months and early years after 9/11, FBI agents began showing up at Microsoft Corp. more frequently than before, armed with court orders demanding information on customers. Around the world, government spies and eavesdroppers were tracking the email and Internet addresses used by suspected terrorists. Often, those trails led to the world's largest software company and, at the time, largest email provider. The agents wanted email archives, account information, practically everything, and quickly. Engineers compiled the data, sometimes by hand, and delivered it to the government. Often there was no easy way to tell if the information belonged to...
  • VIDEO: LIBERTARIAN RAPPER MOCKS OBAMA’S NSA SPY PROGRAM, PRISM

    06/14/2013 3:18:52 PM PDT · by SaveOurRepublicFromTyranny · 8 replies
    TPNN - TEA PARTY NEWS NETWORK ^ | June 14, 2013 | Matthew Burke
    Hilarious and priceless music video by libertarian rapper (yes, you read that correctly), GoRemy, which slams Obama-style, Big Brother government. Entitled, “Tap It: The NSA Slow Jam,” this surely to go viral masterpiece was done in collaboration with ReasonTV (scroll down for lyrics)...
  • Dianne Feinstein: NSA needs no court to query database [ Sen F just confirmed Snowden's claim ]

    06/13/2013 2:52:23 PM PDT · by NoLibZone · 20 replies
    politico.com ^ | June 13 2013 | Mak
    The NSA does not need a court order to search the database it maintains of the call data surrendered by the nation’s telecommunications firms, Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein told reporters on Thursday. Feinstein spoke to reporters after a briefing on NSA monitoring by top Obama administration national security officials. She echoed an explanation given by NSA Director Gen. Keith Alexander when he appeared before a Senate panel on Wednesday, including the specific legal hurdle NSA says it must clear before it can look into the data it collects.
  • Carney: Obama Has Clearly Explained "Necessity" Of NSA Surveillance

    06/14/2013 9:45:11 AM PDT · by Nachum · 20 replies
    Real Clear Politics ^ | 6/14/13 | Ian Schwartz
    JESSICA YELLIN, CNN: And then finally, on the NSA, Representative Peter King has said that he believes that Glenn Greenwald should be prosecuted for his leaks. Does the President share that view, first of all? And secondly, Speaker Boehner today said that he is surprised the White House has not spoken out more forcefully in defense of the program and explaining more forcefully why it’s necessary. Would you just react to that? JAY CARNEY: Well, I think you heard the President speak about his views on the program and the necessity --
  • Yahoo Reportedly Fought Against NSA’s PRISM Program In 2008 (And Lost) Before Joining

    06/14/2013 8:59:00 AM PDT · by Nachum · 12 replies
    Mediaite ^ | 6/14/13 | Meenal Vamburkar
    Among the recent revelations about the NSA was the PRISM program, which tech companies have denied participating in. According to a New York Times report, one of those companies, Yahoo, fought back in 2008 against the government requests on the grounds that it would be unconstitutional — but failed. Thus, the company became part of the program. “The government had sought help in spying on certain foreign users, without a warrant,
  • So Why Didn't NSA Catch The Tsarnaev Brothers?

    06/13/2013 4:43:22 PM PDT · by raptor22 · 55 replies
    IBD EDITORIALS ^ | June 13, 2013 | IBD EDITORIALS
    Security: With the director of national intelligence defending a program he told Congress didn't exist, the Patriot Act's author says this isn't the targeted surveillance intended and warns of losing needles in a too-big haystack. Edward Snowden is quite possibly a traitor, but we have been caught in a Prism of our own making, outsourcing our national security to 29-year-old unstable contractors, one of nearly 500,000 employees of private firms with access to the government's most sensitive secrets. Perhaps if we were doing the targeted surveillance envisioned by Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., when he wrote the Patriot Act, we wouldn't...
  • MUST WATCH: REP. LOUIE GOHMERT BLASTS OBAMA FBI DIRECTOR: ‘SIR, IF YOU’RE GOING TO CALL ME A LIAR…’

    06/13/2013 3:13:21 PM PDT · by SaveOurRepublicFromTyranny · 30 replies
    TPNN - TEA PARTY NEWS NETWORK ^ | June 13, 2013 | Matthew Burke
    Texas Congressman Louie Gohmert lit-up and clearly irked Obama FBI Director Robert Mueller, who testified under oath before the House Judiciary Committee today. Gohmert specifically focused on the FBI’s handling (i.e., mishandling) of the Boston Bombings. Below is a partial text of the heated exchange...
  • Who Would've Thought Obama Would Give Jay Leno His Best Zinger Ever?

    06/13/2013 12:05:36 PM PDT · by The Looking Spoon · 7 replies
    The Looking Spoon ^ | 6-13-13 | The Looking Spoon
  • Inside the NSA's Ultra-Secret China Hacking Group

    06/13/2013 11:49:34 AM PDT · by Fred · 2 replies
    Foreign Policy ^ | 061013 | MATTHEW M. AID
    This weekend, U.S. President Barack Obama sat down for a series of meetings with China's newly appointed leader, Xi Jinping. We know that the two leaders spoke at length about the topic du jour -- cyber-espionage -- a subject that has long frustrated officials in Washington and is now front and center with the revelations of sweeping U.S. data mining. The media has focused at length on China's aggressive attempts to electronically steal U.S. military and commercial secrets, but Xi pushed back at the "shirt-sleeves" summit, noting that China, too, was the recipient of cyber-espionage. But what Obama probably neglected...
  • The Left’s Phony Defense of Freedom

    06/13/2013 10:04:22 AM PDT · by Fred · 1 replies
    Human Events ^ | 061213 | David Harsanyi
    There are many idealistic progressives who’ve remained opposed to the National Security Agency’s data mining programs regardless of who is in the White House. (We can’t surrender our freedom for safety, you know!) It’s only a shame that these same people have such little reverence for constitutional liberties in other areas of public life. Really, it’s worse than that. Consider the central case of the left these days: “Unfettered” freedom is a tragedy — decadent, unfair and un-American. So if, as liberals like to argue, it’s a moral imperative for Americans to scale back personal liberty to build a cleaner,...
  • NSA Surveillance, If Ungentlemanly, Is Not Illegal

    06/13/2013 3:04:35 AM PDT · by Kaslin · 59 replies
    Townhall.com ^ | June 13, 2013 | Michael Barone
    "Gentlemen do not read each other's mail." That's what Secretary of State Henry Stimson said to explain why he shut down the government's cryptanalysis operations in 1929. Edward Snowden, who leaked National Security Agency surveillance projects to Britain's Guardian, evidently feels the same way. "I can't in good conscience allow the U.S. government," he explained, "to destroy privacy, Internet freedom and basic liberties for people around the world with this massive surveillance machine they're secretly building." Some questions about this episode remain. How did a 29-year-old high school dropout get a $122,000 job with an NSA contractor? How did his...
  • NSA boss tells lawmakers the gov't wants even more data, 'dozens' of attacks thwarted [2nd Amend]

    06/13/2013 1:24:29 AM PDT · by PieterCasparzen · 52 replies
    Foreign Policy ^ | 6/12/2013 | John Reed
    National Security Agency chief Gen. Keith Alexander may be under fire for collecting millions of Americans' phone records and Internet data. But the nation's top electronic spy told a Congressional panel Wednesday that he wants the feds to slurp up even more information - and distribute it more widely throughout the government. ... The NSA, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and the FBI -- a trio Alexander described as the core of the U.S. Federal Cybersecurity Team (a term we haven't heard before) -- are developing an "information sharing environment that will create a cross-governmental shared situational awareness that...