NSA (partially) Declassified 353
Lally Singh writes "Posted yesterday on the National Security Archives was the NSA's "Transition 2001" report, prepared as an introductory report for President Bush (II)'s incoming administration. "The largest U.S. spy agency warned the incoming Bush administration in its 'Transition 2001' report that the Information Age required rethinking the policies and authorities that kept the National Security Agency in compliance with the Constitution's 4th Amendment prohibition on 'unreasonable searches and seizures' without warrant and 'probable cause,' according to an updated briefing book of declassified NSA documents posted today on the World Wide Web.""
oblig. sneakers quote (Score:5, Funny)
Martin Bishop: Ah. You're the guys I hear breathing on the other end of my phone.
Dick Gordon: No, that's the FBI. We're not chartered for domestic surveillance.
Martin Bishop: Oh, I see. You just overthrow governments. Set up friendly dictators.
Dick Gordon: No, that's the CIA. We protect our government's communications, we try to break the other fella's codes. We're the good guys, Marty.
Martin Bishop: Gee, I can't tell you what a relief that is, Dick.
Better (Score:5, Funny)
Dick: "Heh...." (holds back Wallace) "Hey, we're all FRIENDS here..."
Oh, and:
Carl: "The young lady with the Uzi. Is she single?"
Martin: "Carl. This is the brass ring."
Carl: "I just want her phone number"
Martin: "How about a lunch date? You can chaparone. The FBI will give 'em twins."
Abbott: "NO!"
Mary: "You could have anything in the world and you want my phone number?"
Carl: "....yes."
Mary: "342-4525. Area code 701" (sorry, I don't remember her number
Carl: "I'm Carl."
Mary(giggles): "I'm Mary."
Abbott: "I'm going to be sick."
Re:oblig. sneakers quote (Score:2)
hmm, I think you missed something. The scientist guy had figured out the math needed to factor large polynomials and thus break pretty much anybody's encryption.
The movie would have been pretty boring if the math had been on a peice of paper, and the plot would have been spoiled because they could have made a photocopy of it. So instead, he supposedly programmed it into a chip.
The movie wasn't about the chip, or the box it was in. The movie was
Re:oblig. sneakers quote (Score:2)
Well.. (Score:5, Interesting)
A little more than that, perhaps (Score:4, Interesting)
The 4th is already void (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The 4th is already void (Score:5, Informative)
No shit... (Score:5, Informative)
Guantanamo Bay Detention of prisoners [wikipedia.org]:
See also:
Camp X-Ray [wikipedia.org]
and:
Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse [wikipedia.org]
No, it's not about SS and Gestapo in Nazi Germany, it's about our US Army. I wish it never happened but it did and we as real patriots have the responsibility to talk about it.
mod parent up (Score:2, Offtopic)
Things like this should be known to all, true or not, so they can be properlly investigated.
OFFTOPIC!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
Go post this in your journal, but this comment does not deserve to be modded up just because you agree with it.
Re:And the really sad part... (Score:2)
Bush, as the Commander in Chief, has experienced no repercussions WHATSOEVER. He does a damn fine job of paying lip service though.
Re:No shit... (Score:3, Insightful)
good argument.
Re:No shit... (Score:2, Offtopic)
What is the line here?
Batons against your footsoles is ok? Sleep-depravation, is that ok? Heat/cold changes in your surroundings? What exactly do you find acceptable of torture methods? I just want to make sure I understand your concerns...
Re:No shit... (Score:3, Interesting)
First of all, there are different classes of prison here in the US. Some of them are "farms" which are not bad places - you get all of the stuff you're talking about. Some of them are maximum security, and you share a room the size of a small bathroom with another man and a toilet, and nothing else. You get out fo
Re:No shit... (Score:2, Insightful)
Tell that to these people's [google.com] loved ones.
There are people in the world who want to kill other people with every fibre of their being, danila. You don't play patty-cake with people like that. Our government has an important responsibility to protect us from those people. We need to know where, when, and how they intend to try to kill us so we can try to prevent that from happening. It's about saving lives and promoting peaceful co-existence. Simple, really.
Re:No shit... (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Terrorists are not monsters. Yes, they want to kill other people, but how is that different from presidents and kings? Of course, the masses are brainwashed to believe that Osama bin Laden is the devil's incarnate, but the "elite" knows the truth. He is just an enemy, nothing more, nothing less.
2) Car accidents kill orders of magnitude more people than terrorism. Do you support torture to be used against bad drivers who fail their driving tests?
Your argume
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
Re:No shit... (Score:3, Interesting)
Ok, so death row isn't quite a the same as Germans cleansing disabled and mentally ill, but most of the people on death row are mentally ill, so I'll make the comparison.
Nazis may have been a bit coarser with their torture methods at home, but there not much different to the torture techniques used in Albania to obtain 'key information' about AlQuida that is 'lapped up by' the American and British governments.
The Nazis may have ethnical
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
There is NO comparison between the Nazi tortures and what happened in Guantanamo and Abu-Ghraib.
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
Also, while we're at it, where would you personally draw the line with regards to interrogation? What could and could not be done?
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
Then leave Iraq now. I personally see no way how can you fight insurgents in a supporting society without torture. That is not to say I support torture -- I rather see no point in sending an army into a place nobody wants it to be and pretending to be doing something good at the same time.
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
The shitty thing about the Geneva convention is that it assumes everybody is civilized and will play by the same rules. If that doesn't happen, one side is at a decisive disadvantage.
Consider what the North Vietnamese did to US forces.
Re:No shit... (Score:2, Interesting)
Sorry, you've just used the G word which means you've lost the argument.
What G word, well what G word would you associate with 'good' and 'evil'?
Try saying 'our G word is better than yours so we are Good and you are Evil' and I think you could be writing Bush's next speech.
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
How about beating inmates to death [nytimes.com]? Is that a problem?
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
Re:No shit... (Score:2, Troll)
Re:No shit... (Score:4, Insightful)
That's well-documented, and horrific. It also has nothing to do with detainees in Afghanistan.
If I was a soldier there and someone was laughing about blowing up cafe's full of children promising he will one day do it again, you know I might just beat him to death too, on accident
Well, then I'm glad you're not a soldier there. Not for high ideals, but because it makes ME less safe.
Torture produces bad intelligence. People will say anything to make it stop.
Public knowledge that we torture and kill prisoners is also a fine recruitment tool for terrorists.
Re:No shit... (Score:3, Interesting)
Bingo it doesn't. But what does this NSA topic have to do with beatings in Cuba? Nothing but it was modded insightful because many, many people here love to hear of stories where the Americans are made to look bad.
Torture produces bad intelligence. People will say anything to make it stop. Public knowledge that we torture and kill prisoners is also a fine recruitment tool for terrorists.
You know what else i
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
Re:No shit... (Score:2)
But we do care, infact we cared so much the US and England were amung one of the few countries to stick to our guns on the sanctions. Nobody else cared they still traded with Iraq giving the mad man more money even after finding out about his plans to take over the middle east. Infact an interesting note
Re:No shit... (Score:3, Insightful)
You do realise that our society made a lot of progress over the past millenium, don't you? 1000 years ago the best torturing techniques were often fatal and physically destructive to the detainee. How often do we read in historical fiction about prisoner who died from torture before the interrogators could extract the information they seeked? Today this risk is minimized through careful application of "harmless" torture
Finally (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Finally (Score:4, Insightful)
Before anyone points out that now we'll find out the truth about the infamous NSAKEY in Windows or some dirty little secrets of Bush administration, I would like to remind you that according to Bruce Schneier "algorithms from the NSA are considered a sort of alien technology: They come from a superior race with no explanations."
Isn't that quote from the days when cryptography research was still behind the classified organizations?
The most important implication of declassifying NSA would be a better understanding of the mysterious rationale of many of NSA decisions in crypto algorithms, because even many aspects of DES remain a mystery to this day.
What?! Which aspects would these be?
So please stop the explosion of crackpot conspiracy theories and focus on the most important issue: cryptoanallysis.
That would be "cryptanalysis." Also, that statement doesn't make any sense.
Re:Finally (Score:4, Interesting)
The derivation of the S-Boxes are a secret. Changing the numbers in the S-Boxes certainly weaken DES, but it is not published as to _why_ the ones the NSA picked are so strong and how they were derived.
Re:Finally (Score:2, Interesting)
As is so often the case, the slashdot article has a misleading headline. The parent has responded to that headline, not the article itself, nor the 'Briefing Book' published by the nonprofit "National Security Archive", nor underlying NSA document Transition 2001. There is nothing at all about declassifying the NSA (a meaningless phrase) in the slashdot article, the National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
What nonsense (Score:3, Interesting)
Yet more "we should be above the law to protect you" crap. I don't usually wear a tinfoil hat, but 1984 seems to be approaching faster than I would like.
Re:What nonsense (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What nonsense (Score:2)
Dont know what you were doing during the last millennium but 1984 has been and gone for the rest of us.
Re:What nonsense (Score:5, Funny)
Well, actually, it's 21 years late already. Can't hold it off forever.
Let me set you straight (Score:5, Informative)
I work there. You've got it backwards.
The rules for access to data are extremely strict and the NSA takes the 4th Amendment very seriously.
The governing directive is USSID 18 (here [gwu.edu] is an older declassifed version). Anyone requiring access to certain types of data is thoroughly briefed on this (even if you're a developer and just need data to work with).
If you're an analyst requiring an account on one of the search tools you get the above mentioned briefing and a more tailored briefing. In addition, before an account is granted two auditors at a supervisory level must be identified. Those auditors get a weekly report of every search you conduct.
People have lost their clearances over misusing the databases (which also means the loss of the job). No one at the NSA is cavalier with the data and access is tightly controlled. The NSA definitely works hard to remain within the law, and any violations are incidental, not some sort of secret big brother program.
Besides, anything found through the illegal use of data couldn't be used in court, and the loss of the public trust would hurt the NSA far more than catching you downloading "The Family Guy". The real bad guys (legitimate and lawful targets) though, we work very hard to take down.
Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:3, Insightful)
This is a faulty assumption made by both sides of almost any political debate.
Humankind has remained mostly unchanged for thousands of years. To presume (without evidence) that Americans of 200+ years ago were somehow vastly different in mode of thought is just silly.
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:5, Insightful)
Humankind has remained mostly unchanged for thousands of years. To presume (without evidence) that Americans of 200+ years ago were somehow vastly different in mode of thought is just silly.
The mode of thought may not be much different, but the circumstances are much different. At one time, most of the U.S. was rural, and owned a gun. Private conversations happened behind the barn, and there was no such thing as a shotgun mike. A stranger seen breaking in was subject to being shot on sight. There was no thought of databasing everyone's personal information because there was no practical way to store and retrieve it (for that matter, it's questionable if there was enough paper and ink available for that). There were no photo IDs or fingerprints. In essence, you were who you said you were, perhaps backed up by other people agreeing.
The fault is that they never imagined such an invasive government to be technically possible.
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:2)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:2)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:5, Insightful)
The federal government was never intended to be as large as it is now. I don't think a single founding father would look at the federal government today and say, "Good job", unless they were being sarcastic.
Oh well, at least we still have the Libertarians.
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:2, Funny)
Surely the founding fathers had seen an industrialized nation before, or at the very least had experience in watching how Europe governed at the time.
They had great expectations for this country, and definitely would not have limited themselves to "thinking small".
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:5, Interesting)
The type of government the founding fathers envisioned could never hope to effectively govern the US as it is today.
The type of government they imagined would have done better. Consider that each of the states was to handle anything within that state, and that they are about the same size as many countries in the E.U.
The Federal Government was meant to be literally a Federation of state governments, overseeing interstate commerce, organizing the state militias into a common force, and providing absolute limits on the power any state government could weild against it's citizens.
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:3, Insightful)
and providing absolute limits on the power any state government could weild against it's citizens.
I'm not sure about that last -- the fact that it was spelled out in the 14th amendment ("No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.") suggests that if it
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:2)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:2)
Note that I'm not saying the 4th is in any way outmoded; I'm very much a civil libertarian. Just not against government as a whole in the modern sense, as your argument implies.
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:2)
Re:Yes the gove does need to rethink the 4th (Score:2)
It's ironic that the founding fathers were questioning even *having* a bill of rights. Their reason? You should be allowed to do anything, and putting down in words what you have a right to do would eventually limit people to only those things.
Cool! The founding fathers were anarchists!
Perhaps it was strong enough (Score:2)
there is at least a marginal concern for the 4th (Score:5, Interesting)
Make no mistake, NSA can and will perform its missions consistent with the fourth amendment and all applicable laws.
There is some concern at least. This would mean nothing if it were a public statement, but it's a bit reassuring that they think this even in documents not meant for public consumption
Re:there is at least a marginal concern for the 4t (Score:2, Interesting)
Useless to ask that question (Score:2)
Unfortunately, there is also no way to prove that something does not exist.
Have I talked about God yet?
Re:there is at least a marginal concern for the 4t (Score:5, Insightful)
The accellerating attacs on civil liberties and human rights, in particular under Bush II, are very worrysome. The new General Attorney is the very same man that wrote in a memorandum that the Geneva Convention is obsolete when it come to "the war on terror". That torture could be done. Who are now the bad guys? It's sure is getting confusing [zmag.org] :
Re:there is at least a marginal concern for the 4t (Score:2)
The new Attorney General is the very same man who was asked what the US could legally do to terrorists captured by the military. He gave a legal answer. Does the fact that something's legal make it right? No. But he wasn't asked what the US can morally do to al Qaeda prisoners.
Re:there is at least a marginal concern for the 4t (Score:2)
Do you feel comfortable with an Attorney General that is looking for legal loopholes to torture of people with impunity? This type of "legality" is what you can expect from corporate laywers trying to rationalize (after the fact)
Re:there is at least a marginal concern for the 4t (Score:3, Insightful)
Its a real stretch to say that what they've been doing is even legal. Its no accident the U.S. is puting most of its prisoners in Gitmo or unnamed spots around the world and outside the U.S. They are using Gitmo because its mostly outside the jurisdiction of the U.S. legal system and its obviously not under the jurisdiction of the host country, Cuba. They are using Gitmo precisely so they can skirt the law and international treaties to which the U.S. is a signatory.
They are also using the CIA's semi sec
Re:there is at least a marginal concern for the 4t (Score:2)
Dubya likes gooseberry pie. Nazis liked gooseberry pie. QED, Dubya is a Nazi.
You need to learn better debate technique, dumbass.
Re:there is at least a marginal concern for the 4t (Score:5, Insightful)
I read it. It's not obsolete. It's only called "obsolete" by certain people who want to justify their "need" for systematical torture.
The Geneva Convention was designed for exactly the kind of crisis that we face, namely large-scale conflicts where a lot of people are threatened by certain forces. While it wasn't specifically written for the case of terrorism, its teleological ideas of human rights hold up, and it's the duty of democrat (as in "believes in the democratic system", not as in the political party) to rise up against a government pulling human rights through the dirt, for a very unspecific "war on terror" with badly defined targets.
Make no mistake, times will come where the US government will be punished for their self-righteousness they currently show to the world.
Forensic chaff for semiotic warfare (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.spywarearcata.com/semiotic_war_lexical
This should greatly help the NSA to protect us from bad ideas. Please suggest improvements and additions to this list. 1836.15@gmail.com
Re:Forensic chaff for semiotic warfare (Score:2, Funny)
Any reason you slipped your own name into that list? :-)
Is it just me...? (Score:3, Funny)
Y2K bug (Score:5, Interesting)
"The need for action was underscored in January 2000 when NSA experienced a catastrophic network outage of 3 1/2 days. This outage greatly reduced the signals intelligence information available to national decision makers and military commanders. As one result, the President's Daily Briefin - 60% of which is normally based on SIGINT - was reduced to a small portion of its typical size."
Oh, an a few paragraph above, they presented their favoured solution : outsourcing (to the industry).
Weird but True. (Score:4, Interesting)
1) The NSA is the most likely to be concerned about "unreasonable searches and seizures" and other Bill of Rights issues. The FBI and CIA routinely take the "extreme circumstance" route and use common loopholes to justify citizen and non-citizen monitoring. I would argue, however, that I have yet to see an ill-intented abuse of their power.
2) Members from all branches of the Department of Defense are active Slashdot readers and contributers. They just never talk about what they do and some use "Tor [eff.org]" to post from work.
3) The NSA has an extremely bright team of civilians that do the bulk of their cryptoanalysis work. One of which is famous, and not for the work he does in cryptology. You'd actually laugh aloud if you knew. I guess it is his hobby, but someone is taking him seriously.
4) The FBI is nothing like you see in the movies. The brightest agents last about 2 years before moving to a different area. Internally, the FBI has some serious issues with "dinosaurs" and "micro-management".
5) There is one member of the CIA that is single-handedly responsible for saving us from the plan devised by Jose Padilla. Unfortunately, they will never get the credit they deserve. It only took one person to say, "Why is this American talking with Abu Zubaydah twice?".
6) If you join the NSA, you voluntarily give up your rights to unreasonable searches and seizures. In fact, you have to agree to have your phone tapped and everything you do is monitored 24/7. It's a life-long career choice, but they take care of you "very well".
Re:Weird but True. (Score:2)
There is an old saying that "The road to Hell is paved with good intentions."
Re:Weird but True. (Score:2)
I guess I took the bait.
Nothing to see. Move along folks. (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd argue that you haven't been looking very hard then.
The Church Commission clearly showed that the FBI and CIA were in cahoots spying on legitimate political activi
Re:Weird but True. (Score:2, Funny)
3) The NSA has an extremely bright team of civilians that do the bulk of their cryptoanalysis work. One of which is famous, and not for the work he does in cryptology. You'd actually laugh aloud if you knew. I guess it is his hobby, but someone is taking him seriously.
God, I really hope you're not referring to Bill...
Re:Weird but True. (Score:5, Insightful)
"1) The NSA is the most likely to be concerned about "unreasonable searches and seizures" and other Bill of Rights issues. The FBI and CIA routinely take the "extreme circumstance" route and use common loopholes to justify citizen and non-citizen monitoring. I would argue, however, that I have yet to see an ill-intented abuse of their power."
You must be working a technicality, like you haven't physically "seen" the abuse but the DOD, NSA, FBI and CIA have all engaged in well documented and proven abuses of their powers over the years. They haven't been nailed lately but that is only because we are living in, for all practical purposes, a one party state, and the Republican's especially since 9/11 has been literally letting these agencies get away with murder. For example the Pentagon last week investigated itself and amazingly found itself innocent of ordering or condoning torture, though there are documented cases of varying degress of torture going on across the globe, far to widespread to be rogue national gaurdsmen. When abuse is this wide spread in the military either the chain of command is ordering or condoning it, or there is massive deriliciton of duty in the chain of command, the officers and civilian leadership, in letting it happen on such a large scale.
When you say something this blatantly and provably false it so undermines your credibility, we can safely assume the rest of your post is either a troll or B.S. too.
"2) Members from all branches of the Department of Defense are active Slashdot readers and contributers. They just never talk about what they do and some use "Tor" to post from work."
Not sure I follow why they anyone in the DOD would be using Tor to post to this silly little web site. Not like anyone on Slashdot is tracking their IP address. If someone is using Tor from a DOD facility with DOD's blessing, and posting on Slashdot or anywhere else, it tends to suggest they must be part of the DOD's rapidly growing propaganda machine, so you can't believe a thing they say. I have no doubt people from all branches of government read and post here, SO WHAT. If they post anything controversial or sensitive, from a government facility, they are just begging to be fired. I'm sure the DOD can read everything they are posting, and Tor isn't going to make any difference. Not sure I've ever read any post on Slashdot that rose to a level of importance the DOD would ever care.
"5) There is one member of the CIA that is single-handedly responsible for saving us from the plan devised by Jose Padilla. Unfortunately, they will never get the credit they deserve. It only took one person to say, "Why is this American talking with Abu Zubaydah twice?"."
Whatever Padilla was planning, if anything, wasn't nearly as dangerous as the precedent being set by the Bush administration in how they've abused his most basic civil liberties in arresting and detaining indefinitely, in isolation in a military brig in South Carolina. The Bush administration is seeking, through Padilla, to establish a precedent where the executive branch can arrest any American citizen, anywhere and deprive him or her of all of the most basic constitutional protections we thought we had in this country. In particular American citizens have a right to an attorney, a right to be charged, and a right to a speedy trial, and to be imprisoned only if found guilty by a jury of their peers. If Padilla is guilty of something, charge him, prove it, get a conviction or let him go.
The Supreme Court, spineless politicians that they are have passed on hearing his case on technicalities leaving this precedent in place for two years. A federal judge a week or two ago ruled the executive branch has NO constitutional authority to arrest, and hold in ind
Forever and ever. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's always, ALWAYS hanging by a thread.
Every generation will have to keep fighting for it, over and over, until the end of time.
Those who look at things like Nazism as freak accidents are only fooling themselves. Oppressive governments are the rule, not the exception in history. People are easily convinced, either quickly in harsh circumstances, or in slow, careful and quiet measures in good times, to at first not care about others, and then not care about themselves.
Even if you're lucky enough to live in a country whose founding is based on some good ideals, you've still got to realize, that country will spend the rest of its history struggling to get anywhere near living up to those ideals.
Constitution? (Score:2, Funny)
Will the real terrorists please stand up (Score:5, Insightful)
I find it interesting that with all of the flag waving, and beating of drums to "protect America", we never hear urgent discussion of the greatest threat this country has ever faced.
If blowing up a building is terrorism, surely attempting to evicerate the Constitution and sacrificing every thing that makes the U.S. worth protecting is high treason!
If the terrorists goal is to destroy the American way of life, what does that say about those federal agencies and Congresscritters that are so anxious to dismantle the principles of the American way of life?
If terrorism is the deliberate creation of fear in the civillain population to further a political goal, what does that say about DHS's perminant orange alert telling us to be afraid.
What does the fact that I wonder if I should post this anonymously say?
Re:Will the real terrorists please stand up (Score:2)
It says that you are more paranoid than you should be. Look at all the comments on /. Many if them are anti-Bush and/or anti-American. Many of these people do post under their own handles. Yet we see them again and again on this forum.
Re:Will the real terrorists please stand up (Score:3, Insightful)
Hate to break it to you but everything you just said doesn't matter one iota to the executive branch or its minions. It is unfortunately just so much pissing in the wind, like the millions of similar rants posted to the Internet every year.
You could probably advocate overthrowing the government and the Federal government still wouldn't care unless you said something that suggested you were going to actually do something about it.
Date written (Score:4, Interesting)
Read the Documents (Score:3, Informative)
A careless reading of that Briefing Book's comments on Transition 2001 might leave you with the impression that the NSA is calling for being freed from compliance with the 4th Amendment. However, that is NOT what the Briefing Book says, nor does the underlying NSA document do so. Slashdotters, please read the documents before making wild-eyed postings.
Here are the relevant paragraphs from Transition 2001:
SIGINT in the Industrial Age meant collecting signals, often high frequency (HF) signals connecting two discrete and known target points, processing the often clear text data and writing a report. eSIGINT in the Information Age means seeking information on the Global Net, using all available access techniques, breaking often strong encryption, again using all available means, defending our nation's own use of the Global net, and assisting our warfighters in preparing the battlefield for the cyberwars of the future. The Fourth Amendment is as applicable to eSIGINT as it is to the SIGINT of yesterday and today. The Information Age will however cause us to rethink and reapply the procedures, policies and authorities born in an earlier electronic surveillance environment.
Make no mistake, NSA can and will perform its missions consistent with the Fourth Amendment and all applicable laws. But senior leadership must understand that today's and tomorrow's mission will demand a powerful, permanent presence on a global telecommunications network that will host the "protected" communications of Americans as well as the targeted communications of adversaries.
this might not be popular here, but.... (Score:5, Insightful)
In the same sense that tinfoil-hatters are constantly alert to the possibilty that "they are watching us", the NSA exists because there are countries and organizations and individuals whose interests ARE inimical to the United States. It shouldn't have to be said this shortly after the Cold War, or even Sept 11, but the security agencies of the United States have a serious and IMPORTANT function.
Do they go overboard? Once in a while, no question they exceed their mandate, usually from an overzealous interpretation of their duties. Yes, it's important to find a careful compromise between secrecy and oversight REQUIRED by a free society.
However, I think occasionally
Re:this might not be popular here, but.... (Score:5, Insightful)
You're a classic example of a drift into "pollyanna /. land" as you call it. The evidence of history shows clearly that the "intelligence agencies" have a long and negative history of distorting the political landscape in the USA (whether that's the harrassment of civil rights activists in the 60's or the FBI planting a carbomb in environmental activist Judi Barri's car), or the external activities of scum like the CIA helping rightwing terrorists to power in Latin America.
As soon as I see some example of "correction" of any sort operating on these misdeeds I'll accept that there's a working system in place to regulate this dangerous and anti-democratic part of the state apparatus.
Re:this might not be popular here, but.... (Score:2, Troll)
Do you think that the USA has dangerous external enemies or not? We have the CIA and the NSA because we do have enemies abroad. Look at Iran. I agree that the CIA and NSA have gone overboard in the past but we should work to vigilantly curb their abuses and improve them rather than to pretend that we are not threatened by dangerous enemy states and organizations.
Re:this might not be popular here, but.... (Score:5, Interesting)
And Iran is our enemy because we supported an anti-democratic fascistic dictator (the Shah) instead of allowing the people there to get on with their own lives and evolve towards democracy. At around the same time we supported other anti-democratic fascists in the Ba'ath party and look where that got us. The CIA supported that Ba'ath Party coup in Iraq.
Then later on the CIA fucked around supporting directly the Mujaheddin while they were busy dealing drugs, raping little boys and women and being allround asshats. Look where that got us.
The CIA are crap at preventing problems from external enemies: they seem to create all the external enemies. For a good read (after you've come down from your "external enemy" hysteria high, you could have a read of Chalmers Johnston's "Blowback" or Alexander Cockburn's "Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs and the Press".
If you still believe that the CIA are more effective at preventing terror than creating it by their cack-handed and immoral interventions abroad then I'll eat your hat.
Re:this might not be popular here, but.... (Score:2)
Now, you are right, we are dealing with the messy aftermath. Still, here we are. Where do you think appeasing the Islamic Fascists will get us?
Re:this might not be popular here, but.... (Score:2)
I have no doubts that some policemen and FBI agents are nice guys. Sure. You can even argue that most of them are. May be. But it should be clear that police and FBI are by their nature instruments of oppression. We should not pretend for a second that their goal is just to oppress "the bad guys", because the system doesn't work that way.
Please remember how many people are imprisoned for smoking some weed. This is a
What 4th amendment? (Score:5, Insightful)
Bush then passed the Patriot Act, with effectively suspends the 4th amendment (and 6th).
And the American people said
"thank you thank you! please take more of my inaliable rights away from me so I can feel safe from the enemies my government makes for itself!"
The average american decided it was ok to allow their fellow citizens to be arrested and held without charge, without being allowed to see a lawyer or even notify family. As long as the thousands of citizens that were now being abused was not them personally, then who cares.
When really, they should have carried out their own Constitutional Responsibility to fight for those rights to the point of overthrowing Bush.
But the average american stopped thinking they need to act on their responsibilities a few decades ago when suing everyone for any stupid reason became the norm.
America has died at the hands of its own people. Welcome back to 1930's Germany.
Bush did not *pass* the Patriot Act (Score:5, Insightful)
Kinda like the Kyoto Accords - they went down in the US Senate 95-0.
Hell, the US declaration of war against Japan after Pearl Harbor had more opposition.
Who are the truly secret gov't agents? (Score:2, Interesting)