Edward Snowden, American Hero

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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby beeline » Sun Jun 16, 2013 8:36 am

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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby Col Quisp » Sun Jun 16, 2013 8:38 am

You know what "they" say...once CIA, always CIA...

Facebook, the CIA, DARPA, and the tanking IPO
by Jon Rappoport

Tuesday, August 21, 2012 by: Jon Rappoport

(NaturalNews) The big infusion of cash that sent Mark Zuckerberg and his fledgling college enterprise on their way came from Accel Partners, in 2004.

Jim Breyer, head of Accel, attached a $13 million rocket to Facebook, and nothing has ever been the same.

Earlier that same year, a man named Gilman Louie joined the board of the National Venture Capital Association of America (NVCA). The chairman of NVCA? Jim Breyer. Gilman Louie happened to be the first CEO of the important CIA start-up, In-Q-Tel.

In-Q-Tel was founded in 1999, with the express purpose of funding companies that could develop technology the CIA would use to "gather data."

That's not the only connection between Jim Breyer and the CIA's man, Gilman Louie. In 2004, Louie went to work for BBN Technologies, headed up by Breyer. Dr. Anita Jones also joined BBN at that time. Jones had worked for In-Q-Tel and was an adviser to DARPA, the Pentagon's technology department that helped develop the Internet.

With these CIA/Darpa connections, it's no surprise that Jim Breyer's jackpot investment in Facebook is not part of the popular mythology of Mark Zuckerberg. Better to omit it. Who could fail to realize that Facebook, with its endless stream of personal data, and its tracking capability, is an ideal CIA asset?

But now the Facebook stock has tanked. On Friday, August 17, it weighed in at half its initial IPO price. For the first time since the IPO, venture-capital backers were legally permitted to sell off their shares, and some did, at a loss.

Articles have begun appearing that question Zuckerberg's ability to manage his company. "Experts" are saying he should import a professional team to run the business side of things and step away.

All this, despite the fact that Facebook's first posted revenue as a public company has exceeded analysts' predictions, according to the LA Times.

This has the earmarks of classic shakeout and squeeze play. It's how heavy hitters gain control of a company. First, they drive down the price of the stock, then they trade it at low levels that discourage and demoralize the public and even semi-insiders. As the stock continues to tank, they quietly buy up as much of it as they can. Finally, when the price hits a designated rock bottom, they shoot it up all the way to new highs and win big.

And they hold enough shares to exert more control over the company itself.

That is how Facebook will survive. Zuckerberg's grip on Facebook will loosen.

The company is too important as a data-mining asset of the intelligence community to let it fall into disrepair and chaos. The CIA and its cutouts will save it and gain more power over it. It's what they've wanted all along.

From the time Mark Zuckerberg was a child and attended the summer camp for "exceptional children," CTY (Center for Talented Youth), run by Johns Hopkins University, he, like other CTY students, Sergey Brin (co-founder of Google), and Lady Gaga, have been easy to track.

CTY and similar camps filter applications and pick the best and brightest for their accelerated learning programs. Tracing the later progress of these children in school and life would be a standard operation for agencies like the CIA.

When Zuckerberg founded an interesting little social network at Harvard, and then sought to turn it into a business, the data-mining possibilities were obvious to CIA personnel. Through their cutouts, as described above, they stepped in and lent a helping hand.

Now it's time for Zuckerberg to pass the baton to his handlers, so they can maximize the economics of Facebook and utilize it to spy even more extensively.

The media will play along, pretending the eventual upswing-recovery of Facebook stock happens for fundamental reasons connected to the company's "better level of performance." The media take this approach to every stock and every company, to avoid letting the public know how massive manipulation actually runs these trading markets.

Sources:

http://www.crunchbase.com/person/jim-breyer

http://www.investigatemagazine.co.nz/In ... te/?p=1601
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby Col Quisp » Sun Jun 16, 2013 8:57 am

AN FRANCISCO, June 11 (Reuters) - Facebook Inc Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg faced a barrage of questions on Tuesday about the company's slumping stock price during the No. 1 social networking company's first shareholder meeting since its rocky initial public offering last May.

Zuckerberg, who has presided over a 37 percent decline in the stock since its debut at $38, said he believed Facebook was on the right path toward long-term success, even though he was disappointed with its performance on Wall Street.

,,,
Zuckerberg also reiterated previous comments that Facebook does not give the National Security Agency direct access to its servers or user data. This was in response to reports in the Guardian and the Washington Post last week about a secret government program to collect data from leading Internet companies.

"No one has every [sic] approached us to do anything like what was reported," Zuckerberg said.

Shares of Facebook closed 1.2 percent lower at $24.03 on Nasdaq amid a broad decline in the market.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/sharehol ... z2WNoTJcez


No one ever approached FB to do anything like what was reported...they did not HAVE to approach them. It was part of the deal. Today, I have left FB although I know it is a minor gesture. I rarely tweet. The least I can do is stop dipping my beak into these honey pots. Everyone should get off Facebook NOW.
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby brainpanhandler » Sun Jun 16, 2013 9:18 am

JackRiddler » Sun Jun 16, 2013 12:40 am wrote: But to know exactly how they are doing it, with the documentation, so that it cannot be denied, so that everyone's talking about it and outrage is building? Hell no. That's not in their interest.

You have more faith in the American populace to sustain outrage than I do.
Jack wrote:The only question is whether Snowden's delivering the real goods. All else - who is he really? - tends to distraction.

I don't often disagree with you so completely.
Wombaticus Rex » Sun Jun 16, 2013 2:25 am wrote: The possibility must be considered that Snowden is engaged in high-level hijinks.

Yes.
justdrew » Sun Jun 16, 2013 2:43 am wrote:and also that possible high-level hijinks have good intent

Hmm?
"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." - Martin Luther King Jr.
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Jun 16, 2013 9:42 am

Image

After Profits, Defense Firm Faces Pitfalls of Cybersecurity

Mary F. Calvert for The New York Times

Image
Mike McConnell, vice chairman of Booz Allen Hamilton, was a director of national intelligence.
By DAVID E. SANGER and NICOLE PERLROTH
Published: June 15, 2013 109 Comments

WASHINGTON — When the United Arab Emirates wanted to create its own version of the National Security Agency, it turned to Booz Allen Hamilton to replicate the world’s largest and most powerful spy agency in the sands of Abu Dhabi.
Multimedia

It was a natural choice: The chief architect of Booz Allen’s cyberstrategy is Mike McConnell, who once led the N.S.A. and pushed the United States into a new era of big data espionage. It was Mr. McConnell who won the blessing of the American intelligence agencies to bolster the Persian Gulf sheikdom, which helps track the Iranians.

“They are teaching everything,” one Arab official familiar with the effort said. “Data mining, Web surveillance, all sorts of digital intelligence collection.”

Yet as Booz Allen profits handsomely from its worldwide expansion, Mr. McConnell and other executives of the government contractor — which sells itself as the gold standard in protecting classified computer systems and boasts that half its 25,000 employees have Top Secret clearances — have a lot of questions to answer.

Among the questions: Why did Booz Allen assign a 29-year-old with scant experience to a sensitive N.S.A. site in Hawaii, where he was left loosely supervised as he downloaded highly classified documents about the government’s monitoring of Internet and telephone communications, apparently loading them onto a portable memory stick barred by the agency?

The results could be disastrous for a company that until a week ago had one of the best business plans in Washington, with more than half its $5.8 billion in annual revenue coming from the military and the intelligence agencies. Last week, the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, whom Mr. McConnell regularly briefed when he was in government, suggested for the first time that companies like Booz Allen should lose their broad access to the most sensitive intelligence secrets.

“We will certainly have legislation which will limit or prevent contractors from handling highly classified and technical data,” said Ms. Feinstein, a California Democrat. Senior White House officials said they agreed.

Yet cutting contractors out of classified work is a lot harder in practice than in theory. Booz Allen is one of many companies that make up the digital spine of the intelligence world, designing the software and hardware systems on which the N.S.A. and other military and intelligence agencies depend. Mr. McConnell speaks often about the need for the private sector to jolt the government out of its attachment to existing systems, noting, for example, that the Air Force fought the concept of drones for years.

Removing contractors from the classified world would be a wrenching change: Of the 1.4 million people with Top Secret clearances, more than a third are private contractors. (The background checks for those clearances are usually done by other contractors.)

Mr. McConnell himself has been among the most vocal in warning about the risks to contractors. “The defense industrial base needs to address security,” he said in an interview with The New York Times last year, months before Booz Allen hired Edward J. Snowden, its young systems administrator who has admitted to leaking documents describing secret N.S.A. programs. “It should be a condition for contracts. You cannot be competitive in the cyber era if you don’t have a higher level of security.”

Booz Allen is saying little about Mr. Snowden’s actions or the questions they have raised about its practices. Mr. McConnell, once among the most accessible intelligence officials in Washington, declined to be interviewed for this article.

“This has to hurt Mike’s relationship with the N.S.A.,” said a business associate of Mr. McConnell’s who requested anonymity. “He helped set up those contracts and is heavily engaged there.”

Indeed, few top officials in the intelligence world have become greater authorities on cyberconflict than the 69-year-old Mr. McConnell, who walks with a stoop from a bad back and speaks with the soft accent of his upbringing in Greenville, S.C. He began his career as a Navy intelligence officer on a small boat in the backwaters of the Mekong Delta during the Vietnam War. Years later he helped the American intelligence apparatus make the leap from an analog world of electronic eavesdropping to the new age of cyberweaponry.

President Bill Clinton relied on Mr. McConnell as director of the N.S.A., a post he held from 1992 to 1996. He then moved to Booz Allen as a senior vice president, building its first cyberunits. But with the intelligence community in disarray after its failure to prevent the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the fiasco of nonexistent weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and the toll of constant reorganization, President George W. Bush asked him to be the second director of national intelligence from 2007 to 2009.

That was when he made his biggest mark, forcing a reluctant bureaucracy to invest heavily in cybercapability and overseeing “Olympic Games,” the development of America’s first truly sophisticated cyberweapon, which was used against Iran’s nuclear enrichment program. When Mr. Bush needed someone to bring President-elect Barack Obama up to speed on every major intelligence program he was about to inherit, including drones and defenses against electronic intrusions from China, he handed the task to Mr. McConnell.

But Mr. Obama was not interested in keeping the previous team, and Mr. McConnell returned to Booz Allen in 2009. He earned more than $4.1 million his first year back, and $2.3 million last year. He is now vice chairman, and the company describes him as the leader of its “rapidly expanding cyberbusiness.”

In Washington he is often Booz Allen’s public face, because of his ties to the intelligence agencies and his extensive and loyal network of federal intelligence officials who once worked with him.

Two months ago, the company announced the creation of a Strategic Innovation Group, staffed by 1,500 employees who are pursuing, among other projects, one of Mr. McConnell’s favorites: the development of “predictive” intelligence tools that its clients can use to scour the Web for anomalies in behavior and warn of terror or cyberattacks. He has also hired a senior counterterrorism official to market products in the Middle East. This year, the company began working on a $5.6 billion, five-year intelligence analysis program for the Defense Intelligence Agency.

The company’s profits are up almost eightfold since it went public in late 2010. Its majority shareholder is the Carlyle Group, which matches private equity with a lot of Washington power, and its executives, chief among them Mr. McConnell, drum up business by warning clients about the potential effects of cyberweapons.

“The digital capabilities are a little bit like W.M.D.’s,” Mr. McConnell said in the interview last year. The good news, he said, is that countries like China and Russia recognize limits in using those weapons, and terror groups have been slow to master the technology. “The people that would do us harm aren’t yet in possession of them,” he said.

As director of national intelligence, Mr. McConnell kept a giant world map propped up in front of his desk. Countries were sized by Internet traffic, and the United States ballooned bigger than all others — a fact that he told a visitor was at once “a huge intelligence advantage and a huge vulnerability.”

The advantage was that the United States’ role as the world’s biggest Internet switching center gave it an opportunity to sort through the vast troves of metadata — including phone records, Internet activity and banking transactions — enabling analysts to search for anomalies and look for attacks in the making. But he chafed at the legislative restrictions that slowed the process.

So in 2007, as the intelligence chief, he lobbied Congress for revisions to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to eliminate some of the most burdensome rules on the N.S.A., including that it obtain a warrant when spying on two foreigners abroad simply because they were using a wired connection that flowed through a computer server or switch inside the United States.

It made no sense in the modern age, he argued. “Now if it were wireless, we would not be required to get a warrant,” he told The El Paso Times in August of that year.

The resulting changes in both law and legal interpretations led to many of the steps — including the government’s collection of logs of telephone calls made in and out of the country — that have been debated since Mr. Snowden began revealing the extent of such programs. Then Mr. McConnell put them into effect.

In 2007, “Mike came back into government with a 100-day plan and a 500-day plan for the intelligence community,” said Stephen J. Hadley, Mr. Bush’s national security adviser. “He brought a real sense of the private sector to the intelligence world, and it needed it.”

The new technologies created a flood of new work for the intelligence agencies — and huge opportunities for companies like Booz Allen. It hired thousands of young analysts like Mr. Snowden. The intelligence agencies snapped them up, assigning them to sensitive, understaffed locales, including the Hawaii listening station where Mr. Snowden downloaded his materials.

Only last month, the Navy awarded Booz Allen, among others, the first contracts in a billion-dollar project to help with “a new generation of intelligence, surveillance and combat operations.”

The new push is to take those skills to American allies, especially at a time of reduced spending in Washington. So while the contract with the United Arab Emirates is small, it may be a model for other countries that see cyberdefense — and perhaps offense — as their future. The company reported net income of $219 million in the fiscal year that ended on March 31. That was up from net income of $25 million in 2010, shortly after Mr. McConnell returned to the company.

But the legal warnings at the end of its financial report offered a caution that the company could be hurt by “any issue that compromises our relationships with the U.S. government or damages our professional reputation.”

By Friday, shares of Booz Allen had slid nearly 6 percent since the revelations. And a new job posting appeared on its Web site for a systems administrator in Hawaii, “secret clearance required.”
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby coffin_dodger » Sun Jun 16, 2013 10:45 am

Everyone should get off Facebook NOW.


I admit to being shocked that RI had initiated a FB page. It was the first in a series of events that made me question my presence here. That and the increasingly lively debates amongst prominent members that potentially render each thread a slanging match, but crucially a recent intensely personal 'spiritual' experience (there is, in fact, no word to adequately explain it), leads me to politely request that a kindly moderator delete my account - assisting me to drown the urge to have my own ego-ridden voice heard on matters that I have little or no direct experience with.

As a lurker, then contributor, RI has undoubtedly, over the last nth years, opened up an enormous world of intriguing, shocking and wonderful pathways for me to follow and I sincerely thank so many here, current and past. You're probably thinking 'why is this dickhead making such a big thing of leaving? - we hardly know him!' - he can just not visit the site any more, not log in and not comment. No big deal. But RI has been a large part of my life since The Coincidence Theorist's Guide to 9/11 was published in '04 and I want to acknowledge the gift that Jeff gave so freely of. Without RI, I would not have experienced the depths of despair at what our species' collective actions have led to, and ultimately, thankfully, what appears to be a deeper understanding of the reality in which we participate - and amazingly, to some light at the end of the tunnel. I have so little time to achieve so much, stuff that can't be achieved hunched over a machine, gnashing and grinding my senses to pieces at the injustices of events in which I play no part.

I sincerely wish you all well in whatever path life leads you down and will always consider my 'RI years' as those of an immensely rewarding journey that have led me to who I am now. Thank you.
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby Col Quisp » Sun Jun 16, 2013 11:28 am

Hey Coffin Dodger --- you can't leave us! But, and I don't mean to derail this thread, I've spent the morning deleting old posts and photos from FB (even though I know they already have them, I just don't want other people looking at them). And I have come to detest myself. I am so boring and shallow-thinking. How could anyone bear to be around me? Well, anyway, sorry to see you go. Best of luck on your new path. -
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby JackRiddler » Sun Jun 16, 2013 1:22 pm

Getting off Internet won't change a thing. (As if leaving Facebook makes a difference?) This needs a movement, not personal panics. There is no escape, there is only a possible way forward.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby Project Willow » Sun Jun 16, 2013 4:11 pm

coffin_dodger » 16 Jun 2013 06:45 wrote:I admit to being shocked that RI had initiated a FB page. It was the first in a series of events that made me question my presence here. That and the increasingly lively debates amongst prominent members that potentially render each thread a slanging match, but crucially a recent intensely personal 'spiritual' experience (there is, in fact, no word to adequately explain it), leads me to politely request that a kindly moderator delete my account - assisting me to drown the urge to have my own ego-ridden voice heard on matters that I have little or no direct experience with.


Understandable, but I hope you give it some time, see how you feel later. I don't want to see you go. Also, I haven't figured out exactly how things work yet, but I think the only way to do the total removal thingy it is to pm Jeff.

Col Quisp wrote:Hey Coffin Dodger --- you can't leave us! But, and I don't mean to derail this thread, I've spent the morning deleting old posts and photos from FB (even though I know they already have them, I just don't want other people looking at them). And I have come to detest myself. I am so boring and shallow-thinking. How could anyone bear to be around me?


:( Not true, and please be kind to yourself, and take this: :hug1:
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby justdrew » Sun Jun 16, 2013 4:58 pm

brainpanhandler » 16 Jun 2013 06:18 wrote:
justdrew » Sun Jun 16, 2013 2:43 am wrote:and also that possible high-level hijinks have good intent

Hmm?


well, none of this is going to get reigned in and it's only going to get worse, without a big heaping dollop of public outrage. So if you wanted to limit this shit, generating that outrage would be essential.
By 1964 there were 1.5 million mobile phone users in the US
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby JackRiddler » Sun Jun 16, 2013 5:14 pm

Project Willow » Sun Jun 16, 2013 3:11 pm wrote:
coffin_dodger » 16 Jun 2013 06:45 wrote:I admit to being shocked that RI had initiated a FB page. It was the first in a series of events that made me question my presence here. That and the increasingly lively debates amongst prominent members that potentially render each thread a slanging match, but crucially a recent intensely personal 'spiritual' experience (there is, in fact, no word to adequately explain it), leads me to politely request that a kindly moderator delete my account - assisting me to drown the urge to have my own ego-ridden voice heard on matters that I have little or no direct experience with.


Understandable, but I hope you give it some time, see how you feel later. I don't want to see you go. Also, I haven't figured out exactly how things work yet, but I think the only way to do the total removal thingy it is to pm Jeff.

Col Quisp wrote:Hey Coffin Dodger --- you can't leave us! But, and I don't mean to derail this thread, I've spent the morning deleting old posts and photos from FB (even though I know they already have them, I just don't want other people looking at them). And I have come to detest myself. I am so boring and shallow-thinking. How could anyone bear to be around me?


:( Not true, and please be kind to yourself, and take this: :hug1:


Seconded!
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby brainpanhandler » Sun Jun 16, 2013 5:34 pm

justdrew » Sun Jun 16, 2013 3:58 pm wrote:
brainpanhandler » 16 Jun 2013 06:18 wrote:
justdrew » Sun Jun 16, 2013 2:43 am wrote:and also that possible high-level hijinks have good intent

Hmm?


well, none of this is going to get reigned in and it's only going to get worse, without a big heaping dollop of public outrage. So if you wanted to limit this shit, generating that outrage would be essential.


I was misunderstanding you. You meant something straightforward.

I agree that public outrage is essential to have any chance. But at a minimum public outrage would need to be sustained and organized. In my lifetime I've never seen that out of the American populace. Americans are easily distracted. And I believe a disheartening percentage of Americans are not only simply passive on the issue of unconstitutional surveillance, but actually welcome it. Maybe some of this can get resolved in the courts and made better than all out digital fascism.

And maybe I'm just too cynical to post much here anymore on these sorts of issues. It's not my intent to drag anyone down, especially those so ardently seeking the light, but I know that's an effect I possibly have on others sometimes.
"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." - Martin Luther King Jr.
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Jun 16, 2013 5:39 pm

GCHQ intercepted foreign politicians' communications at G20 summits
Exclusive: phones were monitored and fake internet cafes set up to gather information from allies in London in 2009

Ewen MacAskill, Nick Davies, Nick Hopkins, Julian Borger and James Ball
The Guardian, Sunday 16 June 2013 15.46 EDT

Documents uncovered by the NSA whistleblower, Edward Snowden, reveal surveillance of G20 delegates' emails and BlackBerrys. Photograph: Guardian
Foreign politicians and officials who took part in two G20 summit meetings in London in 2009 had their computers monitored and their phone calls intercepted on the instructions of their British government hosts, according to documents seen by the Guardian. Some delegates were tricked into using internet cafes which had been set up by British intelligence agencies to read their email traffic.

The revelation comes as Britain prepares to host another summit on Monday – for the G8 nations, all of whom attended the 2009 meetings which were the object of the systematic spying. It is likely to lead to some tension among visiting delegates who will want the prime minister to explain whether they were targets in 2009 and whether the exercise is to be repeated this week.

The disclosure raises new questions about the boundaries of surveillance by GCHQ and its American sister organisation, the National Security Agency, whose access to phone records and internet data has been defended as necessary in the fight against terrorism and serious crime. The G20 spying appears to have been organised for the more mundane purpose of securing an advantage in meetings. Named targets include long-standing allies such as South Africa and Turkey.

There have often been rumours of this kind of espionage at international conferences, but it is highly unusual for hard evidence to confirm it and spell out the detail. The evidence is contained in documents – classified as top secret – which were uncovered by the NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and seen by the Guardian. They reveal that during G20 meetings in April and September 2009 GCHQ used what one document calls "ground-breaking intelligence capabilities" to intercept the communications of visiting delegations.

This included:

• Setting up internet cafes where they used an email interception programme and key-logging software to spy on delegates' use of computers;

• Penetrating the security on delegates' BlackBerrys to monitor their email messages and phone calls;

• Supplying 45 analysts with a live round-the-clock summary of who was phoning who at the summit;

• Targeting the Turkish finance minister and possibly 15 others in his party;

• Receiving reports from an NSA attempt to eavesdrop on the Russian leader, Dmitry Medvedev, as his phone calls passed through satellite links to Moscow.

The documents suggest that the operation was sanctioned in principle at a senior level in the government of the then prime minister, Gordon Brown, and that intelligence, including briefings for visiting delegates, was passed to British ministers.

A briefing paper dated 20 January 2009 records advice given by GCHQ officials to their director, Sir Iain Lobban, who was planning to meet the then foreign secretary, David Miliband. The officials summarised Brown's aims for the meeting of G20 heads of state due to begin on 2 April, which was attempting to deal with the economic aftermath of the 2008 banking crisis. The briefing paper added: "The GCHQ intent is to ensure that intelligence relevant to HMG's desired outcomes for its presidency of the G20 reaches customers at the right time and in a form which allows them to make full use of it." Two documents explicitly refer to the intelligence product being passed to "ministers".


One of the GCHQ documents. Photograph: Guardian
According to the material seen by the Guardian, GCHQ generated this product by attacking both the computers and the telephones of delegates.

One document refers to a tactic which was "used a lot in recent UK conference, eg G20". The tactic, which is identified by an internal codeword which the Guardian is not revealing, is defined in an internal glossary as "active collection against an email account that acquires mail messages without removing them from the remote server". A PowerPoint slide explains that this means "reading people's email before/as they do".

The same document also refers to GCHQ, MI6 and others setting up internet cafes which "were able to extract key logging info, providing creds for delegates, meaning we have sustained intelligence options against them even after conference has finished". This appears to be a reference to acquiring delegates' online login details.

Another document summarises a sustained campaign to penetrate South African computers, recording that they gained access to the network of their foreign ministry, "investigated phone lines used by High Commission in London" and "retrieved documents including briefings for South African delegates to G20 and G8 meetings". (South Africa is a member of the G20 group and has observer status at G8 meetings.)


Another excerpt from the GCHQ documents. Photograph: Guardian
A detailed report records the efforts of the NSA's intercept specialists at Menwith Hill in North Yorkshire to target and decode encrypted phone calls from London to Moscow which were made by the Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, and other Russian delegates.

Other documents record apparently successful efforts to penetrate the security of BlackBerry smartphones: "New converged events capabilities against BlackBerry provided advance copies of G20 briefings to ministers … Diplomatic targets from all nations have an MO of using smartphones. Exploited this use at the G20 meetings last year."

The operation appears to have run for at least six months. One document records that in March 2009 – the month before the heads of state meeting – GCHQ was working on an official requirement to "deliver a live dynamically updating graph of telephony call records for target G20 delegates … and continuing until G20 (2 April)."

Another document records that when G20 finance ministers met in London in September, GCHQ again took advantage of the occasion to spy on delegates, identifying the Turkish finance minister, Mehmet Simsek, as a target and listing 15 other junior ministers and officials in his delegation as "possible targets". As with the other G20 spying, there is no suggestion that Simsek and his party were involved in any kind of criminal offence. The document explicitly records a political objective – "to establish Turkey's position on agreements from the April London summit" and their "willingness (or not) to co-operate with the rest of the G20 nations".

The September meeting of finance ministers was also the subject of a new technique to provide a live report on any telephone call made by delegates and to display all of the activity on a graphic which was projected on to the 15-sq-metre video wall of GCHQ's operations centre as well as on to the screens of 45 specialist analysts who were monitoring the delegates.

"For the first time, analysts had a live picture of who was talking to who that updated constantly and automatically," according to an internal review.

A second review implies that the analysts' findings were being relayed rapidly to British representatives in the G20 meetings, a negotiating advantage of which their allies and opposite numbers may not have been aware: "In a live situation such as this, intelligence received may be used to influence events on the ground taking place just minutes or hours later. This means that it is not sufficient to mine call records afterwards – real-time tip-off is essential."

In the week after the September meeting, a group of analysts sent an internal message to the GCHQ section which had organised this live monitoring: "Thank you very much for getting the application ready for the G20 finance meeting last weekend … The call records activity pilot was very successful and was well received as a current indicator of delegate activity …

"It proved useful to note which nation delegation was active during the moments before, during and after the summit. All in all, a very successful weekend with the delegation telephony plot."
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby justdrew » Sun Jun 16, 2013 6:00 pm

brainpanhandler » 16 Jun 2013 14:34 wrote:
justdrew » Sun Jun 16, 2013 3:58 pm wrote:
brainpanhandler » 16 Jun 2013 06:18 wrote:
justdrew » Sun Jun 16, 2013 2:43 am wrote:and also that possible high-level hijinks have good intent

Hmm?


well, none of this is going to get reigned in and it's only going to get worse, without a big heaping dollop of public outrage. So if you wanted to limit this shit, generating that outrage would be essential.


I was misunderstanding you. You meant something straightforward.

I agree that public outrage is essential to have any chance. But at a minimum public outrage would need to be sustained and organized. In my lifetime I've never seen that out of the American populace. Americans are easily distracted. And I believe a disheartening percentage of Americans are not only simply passive on the issue of unconstitutional surveillance, but actually welcome it. Maybe some of this can get resolved in the courts and made better than all out digital fascism.

And maybe I'm just too cynical to post much here anymore on these sorts of issues. It's not my intent to drag anyone down, especially those so ardently seeking the light, but I know that's an effect I possibly have on others sometimes.


well, I'm considering my rosy scenario less likely now that the whole china aspect is coming to light. Although I find it hard to believe China is not already well aware of the disclosed info.
By 1964 there were 1.5 million mobile phone users in the US
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Re: Edward Snowden, American Hero

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Jun 16, 2013 7:18 pm

Edward Snowden Had a Breaking Point, Where He Decided to Risk It All to Fix This Country -- What's Yours?
Change starts with action, and each of us has a way to contribute.

June 14, 2013 |
When Edward Snowden reached his breaking point, the world saw the truth about the vast extent of spying by the NSA on Americans and people around the world. In an act of conscience, Snowden released secret information, saying “My sole motive is to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them.”

Snowden sparked protest, lawsuits, criticism of the administration and US intelligence. His action shows the power that comes when someone inside the system break ranks and tells the truth. Successful movements depend on people breaking ranks: questioning, demurring, disobeying, defecting and withdrawing support. As Ken Butigan writes in Waging Nonviolence, the impact can start a metamorphosis for all of us:

“the individual conscientious objector, the abstainer, and the resister — the one who, as Gandhi said, pits ‘one’s whole soul against the will of a tyrant.’ Not only do the Edward Snowdens of the world help the rest of us see more clearly the realities we are up against — in this case, the institutionalization of unfettered, massive data collection on and profiling of the population — they can shock us into realizing that part of our job description as human beings is our obligation to withdraw our passive or active consent from such policies.”

What is your breaking point? This is the question we must all ask ourselves, especially those who have not yet taken action. As whistleblower Sibel Edmonds wrote this week, the inaction and apathy of people is our greatest enemy: “Apathy is a must ingredient for any police state, authoritarian regime, dictatorship, for abuses of power, for corruption, national atrocities, genocide. . . .”

This week, we read the sad story of Brandon Bryant, the 27 year old who served as a drone operator from 2006 to 2011 at bases in Nevada, New Mexico and Iraq and who helped to kill 1,626 people. He now suffers from PTSD. Bryant told NBC News “I don’t feel like I can really interact with that average, everyday person. I get too frustrated, because A, they don’t realize what’s going on over there. And B, they don’t care.”

Imagine how better off he would be if he had taken action years ago and told the truth about drone killings then. We hope he will continue to speak out about his experience. He will find that many people do care and may inspire other drone killers to stop what they are doing and help spur an end to US militarism.

One or a few people can make a tremendous difference. Sam Smith, the editor of Progressive Review, reminds us of the unpredictable power of action, recalling: “there was the time in early 1960 when four black college students sat down at a white-only Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro, NC. Within two weeks, there were sit-ins in 15 cities in five southern states and within two months they had spread to 54 cities in nine states. By April the leaders of these protests had come together, heard a moving sermon by Martin Luther King Jr. and formed the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. Four students did something and America changed. Even they, however, couldn’t know what the result would be.”

Just as we are seeing in Turkey, it is often the response to an act of conscience that betrays the regime, shows the regime for what it is, and in a reversal, all of the power of the state boomerangs against itself. Prime Minister Erdogan issued threats followed by extreme police violence, but the result has been more people joining the protests. Yesterday, thousands of lawyers joined the protests and Erdogan issued another threat. And when Erdogan called for parents of children who are protesters to take them home, their mothers formed a human barricade to protect them from the police instead.

Another result has been people joining protests around the world and asking what can I do for Turkey? In the United States, people crowd sourced the funds for a full-page ad in the New York Times. Photo journalist Jenna Pope tells Acronym TV Turkey is part of a global revolution, “Everything is connected,” Pope says, “people all over the world are fighting against these governments who are only interested in making the very rich even richer.”

We are seeing the same type of solidarity with whistle blowers. Up to a thousand people are expected to protest in support of Snowden in Hong Kong this Saturday, showing that he may have been right in picking Hong Kong. Protests in support of Snowden and against the NSA’s Internet spying and collection of phone records are also being held in the United States. Scores of civil liberties groups, Internet companies and others (including Popular Resistance) are demanding an end to NSA spying. Sign up at StopWatchingUs.org to get involved.

The ACLU has filed suit against the program. But we need to rely more on our own actions than the security-state friendly courts to stop this attack on democracy. And, Snowden also exposed, once again, how the New York Times and other corporate media report from the perspective of the security state.

Another high profile whistle blower, Bradley Manning, is also garnering support from many people. His court martial, which Chris Hedges describes as a ‘judicial lynching,’ began with the perfect symbolism: supporters of Manning wearing a shirt that said “Truth” had to hide that dangerous word on the first day of his trial. They were ordered to turn their shirts inside out.

Though the corporate media continues its inadequate reporting, there is lots of citizen’s media writing about the case and you can keep up with details at http://www.BradleyManning.org. Many of Bradley’s supporters are veterans who explain their support for exposing the war crimes of US Empire.

Veterans are also among those leading the protests against the Guantanamo Bay prison camp. Three veterans are on a solidarity hunger strike in support of Guantanamo prisoners being held in indefinite detention without trial. We are impressed with many Americans who put their lives on the line to challenge militarism, especially nuclear weapons, and those are seeing through the sham of ‘humanitarian war’ in which military attacks kill innocent people and destroy countries.

This week, we continue to report on the escalation actions of front-line environmentalists who are challenging the extraction economy. The clarity of thought of those on the front lines, compared to the big environmental groups, was evident recently in Illinois. While some applauded the regulation of hydro-fracking, others who are more clear in their thinking said, we need to ban hydro-fracking because it cannot be done safely.

The solidarity of “Fearless Summer” with its epic protests against radical energy extraction is taking shape and promises to help end the silence on dirty energy. Activists continue to protest at Obama fundraisers. We’ve reported on actions in New York and San Francisco, and now in Los Angeles climate change protesters and immigrants who called for an end to deportation protested Obama.

The reaction of the extraction industry shows their fear of organized militant resistance. TransCanada, the corporation seeking to profit from the tar sands pipeline, is telling the police that protesters should be treated as terrorists. They are calling Nebraska ranchers aggressive and abusive. And, protest also helps people take actions of conscience, a TransCanada whistle blower has come forward to report on the shoddy pipeline practices describing the company as “organized crime” that is “a “culture of noncompliance” and “coercion,” with “deeply entrenched business practices that ignored legally required regulations and codes” and carries “significant public safety risks.”

Another big area of continuing and escalating activism is around labor. The week began with the Walmart shareholders meeting where a Bangladesh activist addressed shareholders about unsafe working conditions and Janet Sparks, a Louisiana worker, pointed out “our CEO Mike Duke made over $20 million last year more than one thousand times the average Walmart associate, with all due respect, I have to say, I don’t think that’s right.” Then she quoted Walmart founder Sam Walton: “Listen to the Associates!” Activists say the campaign is working – building consciousness among workers and consumers; and affecting sales at Walmart which have been stagnant. The number two retailer, Costco is seeing rising sales and rising stock values while paying employees good wages. On the contrary, Walmart workers need government services to get by.

Labor struggles are not only at Walmart. Target contract janitors announced they would be going on strike in Minneapolis. Photographers at the Chicago Sun-Times are picketing the newspaper after it laid them off. Labor leaders are calling for a boycott of Labatt beer as scabs have been working in place of workers on strike since April at the St. John’s brewery. General Motors workers in Colombia have been striking due to unfair working conditions. They literally sewed their mouths closed in hunger strikes and occupied in front of the US embassy as well as bringing their concerns to the Detroit shareholders meeting. More than ever, it is an imperative to rebuild an aggressive labor movement that is independent of the Democrats and stands for working people. In Europe labor unions are rallying on Juneteenth against austerity and for tax justice.

Like many cities, Baltimore has a problem with abandoned homes. In Baltimore, MD there are 40,000 of them. An activist group, Slum Lord Watch, is using an interesting tactic, artwork. They teamed up with an artist, Nether, to beautify the buildings and call out the owners in what they are calling the Wall Hunters: the Slumlord Project. They have 15 murals so far and each includes a QR Code which links people to information about the owner of the vacant building.

Another protest people may want to emulate is the Carnival Against Capitalism. This event began with the WTO protests in 1999, and is being used this year in the run-up to the G8 meeting in London. Activists worked in several sections of the city including taking over an abandoned police station.

More and more people are becoming active. What holds others back? Perhaps their breaking point has not been reached or they do not have the time or resources to understand what is going on. One of our jobs in building a mass movement is to educate people in several areas. We can start by listening and bringing facts to explain their feelings about how bad our situation has become.

Right now an issue that is driving some people is their concern about the security state. Conor Friedersdorf’s article explains that Presidents Bush and Obama have put in place all the infrastructure that a tyrant would need. The author says that his article “is an attempt to grab America by the shoulders, give it a good shake, and say: Yes, it could happen here.”

It also helps to show people that protest and campaigns of resistance work. There are so many examples throughout history. Harvey Wasserman provides a recent example, showing how the anti-nuclear movement worked to stop nuclear power plants and how the recent closure of San Onofre is part of an ongoing movement in the United States and around the world. And Bill Moyer wrote about the eight stages of a successful social movement.

Finally, we have to show people that we have a strategy that can win. There are now 100 years of history of civil resistance, so we know what is more likely to work and what is less likely. This week we wrote an article laying out this history and describing a strategy to create a mass movement that can succeed, including what groups in the power structure we need to divide and pull to the movement to build our strength and weaken the status quo.

Carl Gibson, founder of US Uncut, recently spoke to Dennis Trainor, Jr. about the uprising in Iceland as a model for a mass movement in the US. Many of the ingredients are in place in the US such as growing wealth inequality and a government corrupted by big finance. Though it seems we are up against a powerful opponent, we have the information and tools we need to create the society in which we want to live.

Sam Smith reminds us that “The key to both a better future and our own continuous faith in one is the constant, conscious exercise of choice even in the face of absurdity, uncertainty and daunting odds.” He tells us that change starts with action, that each of us has a way to contribute, and that when “we will have thrown every inch and ounce of our being into what we are meant to be doing which is to decide what we are meant to be doing. And then to walk cheerfully over the face of the earth doing it.”



Now we're laying in the mud, looking up above
Tear wather just ah drop from the sky
They try to keep us in the mud, separating us from love
But me nah go let dem conquer de I




Miss Liberty turn inna Jazabelle
All the dreams you go sell, de whole dem turn inna hell
Her bed of roses are filled with thorns
Her righteous robes are tattered and torn

If she had only stood for love, that would have been enough
She wouldn't have to hide her shame
If she had only stood for love, that would have been enough
But now she's burnt us all with her flames

Amerimacka, oh what a beautiful life
Amerimacka, is like licking honey off a knife
Amerimacka, oh what a beautiful sight
Amerimacka, don't be blinded by the light

The land of the free built on slavery
Our consciousness in captivity
Promise land is the liar's den
Your culture of greed has got to end
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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