NSA Metadata Collection Program Has Stopped Zero Attacks 199
Antipater writes "According to a member of the White House panel that recently called for the NSA's metadata-collection program to be curtailed, that program has not stopped any terrorist actions at all. This runs counter to the stories we've heard for months, which claimed as many as fifty prevented attacks. 'Stone declined to comment on the accuracy of public statements by U.S. intelligence officials about the telephone collection program, but said that when they referred to successes they seemed to be mixing the results of domestic metadata collection with the intelligence derived from the separate, and less controversial, NSA program, known as 702, to intercept communications overseas.'"
Wait a second... (Score:5, Funny)
You mean the lying liars who lie for a living... lied?
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Sorta... the 702 program did catch some (apparently ~50). The 215 program has caught 0. 702 and 215 are the same program just segmented along foreign and domestic lines. The 215 program apparently caught 0 because they actually do not have enough data. As apparently the smaller phone companies were like 'you are going to pay for that right?' The NSA decided not to pay. (hey I read the article :))
The way I read that was they wanted more money to buy more data. Nevermind all that constitution stuff and
Mod parent down. (Score:4, Insightful)
These programs caught no one. Until full analyses of the cases have been released, by no stretch of the imagination can you say that anyone was "caught." The best that the government "ABC/XYZ" organizations can do is entrap old, stupid people and paranoid schizophrenics whom they give the "bomb material" to. Don't give credit where it is not deserved, shill.
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Shill? All I did was regurgitate the article. You missed the 'apparently'. Which in my terms means maybe they did maybe the didnt. Personally I think they didnt... But it matters not one iota what I think.
However, you want to treat it emotionally. I want to know what they really did or didnt do. Unfortunately they are a secret org only beholden to a secret committee in congress and a secret court and a secret guy in the employe of the president. So getting any sort of what they did out of them is qu
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so do we still need the new 1.2 billion USD data centers?
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/politics/57281931-90/agency-center-changes-data.html.csp [sltrib.com]
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Either that or a hell of a lot of rocks to protect us against more tiger attacks.
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Working for whom?
Arresting people for some made up offense is easy. Ask any former Soviet dictator.
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Thank God (and the intelligence agencies) that all these terrorists are being dealt with appropriately!
http://stfuconservatives.tumblr.com/post/16895192354 [tumblr.com]
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Yes. There are nearly 200 countries filled with radios, radars, beacons, phones, networks, and so on that are controlling satellites, armies, air forces, and navies that produce data that gets captured and stored.
This is only a problem for a country which insists on treating pretty much all of those countries as either adversaries or sources of cheap labor and natural riches.
The NSAs domestic phone record surveillance program is a small program.
Compared to what, the NSA overall? Their budgets are not exactly well publicized, but on "defense" spending in general, the US is estimated to account for just about half of the planet total.
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There is NOTHING "small" about our military industrial complex. For every $100 spent on military needs throughout the world, about $30 are spent by the United States. I think that figure is probably inaccurate, because "defense" in the United States is an umbrella that covers activities by the NSA, DHS, the Coast Guard, and more. Reading various sources that cite "military spending", I get the impression that they are only using money allocated to the DoD. That is, the $30 figure above only covers spend
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Re:Wait a second... (Score:5, Insightful)
They could have said it did stop an attack but its a secret.
That's essentially EXACTLY what they said. They claimed several prevented attacks but refused to provide details.
Re:Wait a second... (Score:5, Insightful)
And given the way they publicise the "attacks" that they "stop" which are really just an informant giving fake bombs/weapons to some nut job ... you know they'd be shouting any successes from every rooftop they could get to. They'd be doing the talk show circuit and hosting their own news conferences.
The first problem is that the kind of "terrorism" that they want to focus on is almost non-existant in the USofA. The real terrorists had one huge success and that's all.
The second problem is that the real terrorists don't spend time gossipping on the phone with all their terrorist friends. Yes, it is a way to map out a social network. But this isn't Facebook. Sam the suicide does not have to call Bill the bomb every Tuesday at 7 to chat.
The metadata and phone location are useful for reconstructing the final days and those contacts AFTER an attack. And they don't need years of data for that. Or even months.
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Actually, they have had one huge success, and one moderate sized, but rather stunning, success. Or, did you forget the Boston Marathon?
And, the killer is, that both of those WERE successes for the bad guys. Our guys bumbled around like clueless fools, almost close enough to be counted among the victims.
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Your successes are secrets
Secrets from who? Marvin the Muslim who figured it out the instant he didn't get his America-shattering kaboom?
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Secrets from everybody. Marvin is dead. He doesn't know how or why. Marvin and his friends don't know if it was because he used a cell phone, or was followed, or if there is a spy among them, or if somebody dropped a paper at the gas station and it was turned in to the police.
To get a better understanding of this issue, look into the use of Enigma against the U-boats in WW2. Britain was in danger of being starved into submission if the U-boats weren't stopped. The breaking of the Enigma code was a vita
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Sounds like a success to me, thanks for telling me about it, you traitor!
There's a difference between telling us we killed the Al Qaeda second in command and telling us how we killed the Al Qaeda second in command. We hear plenty about the first... as long as they're not in the US. Wonder why.
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Yes, but it did not hurt the bottom line. The NSA has prevented many, many economic failures. Terrorists are so last decade. The real value is in the economic edge you can blackmail from all others.
Re:Wait a second... (Score:5, Insightful)
Tell that to Boeing, who just lost a major deal with Brazil [reuters.com] over this.
Re:Wait a second... (Score:5, Insightful)
Morons. Really. Both the Captain Kirk wannabees that run the agency and their private sector "partners". Besides Boeing, we now find out that IBM hid a couple of billion in lost business with China stemming from the Snowden leaks from their shareholders. This just underscores for me that the people running things got where they are through a combination of luck and ruthlessness rather than smarts and discipline. Those of us old enough to have lived through the Cold War pretty quickly made the connection between what our government has been up to now and what went on in the police states on the other side of the Iron Curtain (although perhaps not with the same sense of dejavu that Angela Merkel does). That anyone involved in this still has not been impeached or fired is probably an indication of how far gone we are.
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Re:Wait a second... (Score:5, Insightful)
It certainly is somewhat surprising that the security community and the State Department didn't foresee something like this happening as a result of the spying. How large their blinders must be to have missed this.
Re:Wait a second... (Score:5, Informative)
As the AC says below, this is not the only victim but the first major one to be published in detail with the exact verbiage because of the NSA. This should also make you question all of these reports claiming "economic recovery" in the US. It was reported back in June when the leaks first came out that CISCO lost numerous contracts due to the NSA. [snark]But of course we are all just crazy conspiracy theorists, so the facts below are nothing more than racist attacks against Obama [/snark]
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/how-nsa-mass-surveillance-hurting-us-economy
http://business.time.com/2013/12/10/nsa-spying-scandal-could-cost-u-s-tech-giants-billions/ [time.com]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-switch/wp/2013/08/07/nsa-snooping-could-cost-u-s-tech-companies-35-billion-over-three-years/ [washingtonpost.com]
http://www.storyleak.com/nsa-spying-us-companies-billions-american-job-loss/ [storyleak.com]
http://www.informationweek.com/cloud/infrastructure-as-a-service/nsas-prism-could-cost-us-cloud-companies-$45-billion/d/d-id/1111178 [informationweek.com]?
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Question for you - If Boeing lost because of NSA, why did the French company Dassault lose? They were bidding on the same contract in competition with Saab. Saab won. Dassault had nothing to do with NSA.
I see this question as an absurdity, but you seem to somehow believe it's valid (or since we know who the author is, we can explain the whole of your post). We realize that France has been compliant with, and complicit with, the NSA spying ring correct (as has the UK, Germany, Italy, etc..). If the NSA was the reason for Brazil to boot the US company, France would surely be held to the same level of scrutiny.
As to an "unattributed comment about Boing", are you implying that there is no source of informati
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Somebody directly stated that Boeing lost due to NSA despite the fact it was unattributed, and no evidence was offered.
Google is not broken shill, so your return accusation is laughable. Both US and Brazil authorities have offered spying as at a minimum a "contributing factor". The actual weight is fair to question, but to claim it has no bearing is a lie plain and simple. To deny that other companies, like CISCO have lost money due to the same cause is more lies. I provided 5 links that claim losses due to spying. Your "nuh uh" answer does not suffice to discount the facts provided.
The response to the rest of your pos
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In all fairness you are an obvious shill. You have made yourself a target for down mod of every post due to
the blatant nature of your shilling.
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You didn't even read the various articles, available with a simple Google search, did you?
The politicos in Brazil fully intended to slap the United States in the face when they awarded this contract. Everyone involved knew that Boeing was the front runner. Everyone. No one expected the contract to go to anyone, other than Boeing. It was all but a closed deal, right up until the politicos voted NOT to award any of their money to Boeing. Go ahead, Google it.
You know, I'm slow to accuse people of being pa
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I thought that story was pretty damned hilarious. The guys who won the contract weren't even expecting it. Brazil's military didn't seem to expect it. The contract was a blatantly political statement, made by the chief politicians. "You rat bastards spy on us like we're the enemy, and you expect us to buy your over rated, over priced military hardware? Go insert your listening devices into your own orifices!"
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Largely inconsequential since Boeing has more work than they can accomplish in 20 years as is. Put another way, they are not even remotely hurting for money. In fact, I will probably be picking up their stock on Monday.
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"Will NSA begin long term secret surveillance of subversives calling me an NSA shill in a post? Going AC won't help"
Hilarious. Simply hilarious, with multiple levels of hilarity!
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You mean the lying liars who lie for a living... lied?
I'm waiting for someone from the NSA to say "everything I say is a lie". How can you not use a classic like that?
Shocker! (Score:2)
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What's particularly shocking about this report, is that everyone presumed that a bunch of hand picked insiders would come back with an "it's all good" report. That even the most NSA friendly review group possible is criticizing the NSA, actually is pretty surprising. Things must be really really bad.
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The NSA probed our anus and found shit (Score:5, Funny)
The NSA probed our anus and found shit. What else is new.
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That we apparently still have too much money since we can obviously still afford food.
I doesn't matter (Score:5, Insightful)
No politician that already has any real power is going to want to reign in the NSA. Politicians don't want to take anything like this back. If you're the one who does, and then an attack does happen, then regardless of whether or not it would have been prevented you're pretty much handing the next election to your opponent, who will claim that the attack was your fault because you were too soft.
If you were a sociopath and cared only about your career rather than doing what's right (as a politician generally is by the time they get elected to an office where they have any real power), would you make a decision at work that had a finite chance of completely ruining your career?
Re:I doesn't matter (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to be all conspiratorial, but I think it's been a while now since politicians were really in charge of this sort of thing.
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Not to be all conspiratorial, but I think it's been a while now since politicians were really in charge of this sort of thing.
They are and they aren't. They rarely get involved--but if they really decide to get involved, they can do just about anything they want to the NSA. The problem is that they're not usually motivated to get involved. That's why having the tech lobby on the non-NSA side is important--even if you're in favor of lots of NSA data collection, you need countervailing forces to keep it in check.
Re:I doesn't matter (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to be all conspiratorial, but I think it's been a while now since politicians were really in charge of this sort of thing.
Agreed. I would add, I doubt that anyone who's done the things you have to do to get elected at the national level wants to cross the folks that have access to potentially EVERY electronic piece of information generated by them, their family and staff in the last decade plus. Don't think for a minute that if someone like Feinstein got critical of their programs, some shady business dealings of her husband's or his associates wouldn't get laundered to FBI or others.
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NoKaOi wrote:
No politician that already has any real power is going to want to reign in the NSA.
SteveFoerster replied:
I think it's been a while now since politicians were really in charge of this sort of thing.
Did anyone else spot that?
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Spot what? That NoKaOi misspelled "rein in"?
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Because all members of Congress have complete knowledge of what the NSA is doing? The NSA chief is held accountable for lying to Congress? Neither of those two things are true, so you are untruthful at best.
In theory, and by our original Constitutional law, you would be correct. Our Government is not acting within their Constitutional boundaries, and has not been for quite some time. Clapper is not the only one that should be in jail as a perjurer, you have to go back quite a ways to the first Gulf war
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If not all members, and in fact very few members, have knowledge then don't pretend that Congress has oversight and authority as you falsely claimed.
I'm not sure what you are referring to in regards to the first Gulf War - the one in 1991? What do you think was lied about there?
The pretenses for the first Gulf war were completely open and honest. I get that it's not as blatant as the 2nd Gulf war lies, but they are there in abundance before Iraq invaded Kuwait. The US and Saudi Arabia history of diplomacy between 1980 and 1989 is very telling. No, Saddam had no right to invade Kuwait by law. He did not see much choice however as c
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> you're pretty much handing the next election to your opponent, who will claim that the attack was your fault because you were too soft.
I'd like you now to direct your attention to all the European countries previous victims of terrorism, and how their populations have typically understood that leaving the door slightly open to an attack was the price to pay, for their taxes going to more useful things than spying on everyone.
The overreaction of the US, the terrorist paranoia down to the last moldy shac
Re:I doesn't matter (Score:5, Interesting)
Not to put too fine a point on it, but I find it interesting that so many are willing to sacrifice MY freedom in the interests of THEIR (illusion of) safety, then the safest (real safety) place I can think of would probably be an isolation cell inside a SuperMax prison. Barring any suicidal tendencies, you'd be pretty damn safe sitting in one of those rooms.
Maybe we just need to divert some tax dollars to building "safe facilities" for the cowards who think they need to be protected from all of the dangers their imaginations cook up.
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So who's career ended over 9/11?
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Nice try, but none of them meet the criteria. They didn't have any authority to define our security before the attacks at all.
Depending on what side of the tinfoil hat you're on, they were silenced whistleblowers or they were kooks who had accidents.
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No politician that already has any real power is going to want to reign in the NSA.
Anyone who is a lame-duck, destined for a career that doesn't involve holding office ought to be OK with it. You know, like a certain president...
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No politician that already has any real power is going to want to reign in the NSA.
That word may not mean what you think it means.
reign (v) reigned, reigning, reigns
intr.v.
1. To exercise sovereign power.
2. To hold the title of monarch, but with limited authority.
3. To be predominant or prevalent: Panic reigned as the fire spread.
rain (v) rained, raining, rains
v.intr.
1. To fall in drops of water from the clouds.
2. To fall like rain: Praise rained down on the composer.
3. To release rain.
v.tr.
1. To send or pour down.
2. To give abundantly; shower: rain gifts; rain curses upon
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That's a lot of words for "You misspelled 'rein'".
Zero-day attacks (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Zero-day attacks (Score:4, Informative)
Apparently I'm the only one to think they were taking credit for stopping zero-day malware attacks.
Don't be silly!
The NSA creates zero-day [wikipedia.org] malware [wikipedia.org] attacks. [wikipedia.org]
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And they purchase lots of zero-day exploits from the black market then deploys them via morons following a flow chart [theatlantic.com] -- That's the NSA version of a "cyberwarrior": The cyber equivalent of a school yard bully: Big, Dumb, and Dangerous.
Let's take them at their word, and count bodies (Score:5, Interesting)
Now in reality the number of attacks is probably much lower than the 50 they claim, and I would be willing to bet that at most a few dozen people would be killed in the most devastating of these attacks. So as others have pointed out before why are we wasting so much money and violating everyone's rights for something that is little more than a statistical anomaly.
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So as others have pointed out before why are we wasting so much money and violating everyone's rights for something that is little more than a statistical anomaly.
To be blunt- it is to help the rich and powerful to gain more money and power at the expense of the exploited powerless. With their current systems in place, they better and better entrench themselves in power. Using basically the same vertzezung style methods employed by the east german stasi. Everything else is the usual windowdressing of common authoritarianism. In other words, expounding on threat models that don't stand up to 'doing the math' as you took the effort to do. Thank you for your commen
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since I misspelled "zersetzung" so badly, I'll take the opportunity to correct that, and spam the current wikipedia quote-
"
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi -
"
Zersetzung
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2012)
The Stasi perfected the technique of psychological harassment of perceived enemies known as Zersetzung (pronounced [z])
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"less controversial" (Score:2)
Yeah, "less controversial" - unless you are, you know, part of the 95% of the world population that is outside of the US.
Sheesh.
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The subtext is that it's less controversial among people who could possibly constrain the NSA's activities in this area, i.e. U.S. citizens & politicians.
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You should feel grateful to your NSA overlords that you are even allowed to have communications at all.
perhaps the NSA suppilied the info for this hero (Score:3)
This is how the terror attacks were stopped:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j6nW7XvTYn0 [youtube.com]
Red herring is red (Score:2, Insightful)
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It went from "over 50" to "dozens" to "54" to "one or two"
These are public statements from the head of the NSA and the head of national intelligence.
Now we learned that the actual number of attacks prevented using their domestic data collection techniques is zero.
How is it a red herring to criticize the government for the statements that they made?
NSA logic at its best (Score:5, Insightful)
Program A was never designed to do B
Program A was designed to do C, which could help in B
So by saying that A didn't help B is incorrect. C didn't do B. A helped C as designed.
This sort of retarded logic is all too common when technical people try and justify their failure.
The program as a whole hasn't worked. The metadata collection is part of the program, and it may be doing great - but it's value is basically 0, because the program's value is 0.
Of course we've spent billions of dollars on it with no real return. So there's that. It's kept a bunch of storage companies alive.
Most surprising. (Score:5, Funny)
I didn't know people still flew Zero's.
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They don't. There hasn't been a Zero attack since 1945. That's how effective the NSA's program has been!
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1942 / 1943 and Zero attacks, right in the nostalgia!
http://www.youtube.com/v/FbUN5ITWQQo [youtube.com]
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A great game, even if they were confused about what year the battle of Midway happened in (and also what planes could operate off of carriers...)
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Well, not sure which side of "effective" this puts the NSA, but the disinformation campaign to lead people to think they've eliminated all the Zeros seems to be at least somewhat effective.
http://youtu.be/UmUseKNrh6Q [youtu.be]
Strat
Obviously they need to ramp it up more (Score:2, Redundant)
Clearly they need to expand the the scope of their data harvesting programs. An example of why is that they didn't stop the Boston bombers (even after Russia warned the FBI about Tamerlan Tsarnaev in 2011 [boston.com]).
let's not be so pessimistic (Score:5, Funny)
Another way of phrasing this is that the NSA's metadata collection program, while admittedly not perfect, has met or exceeded the benchmarks set by peer agencies, such as the TSA.
What the hell's a "Zero Attack"? (Score:4, Funny)
That sounds scary as shit. Sounds like something Magneto would do. I don't know about you guys, but I'm sure glad the NSA is on my side. Keep up the good work, boys!
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The "Zero" refers to the Mitsubishi A6M Zero, a suicide-bombing device that's been manufactured in large quantities, many of which are currently unaccounted for. A "Zero attack" is a common kind of suicide bomber strategy that's killed thousands of Americans. Here's some footage. [youtube.com] It's not as popular as it used to be, but we can't risk letting up our vigilance, of course.
Nearly one? (Score:4, Funny)
Interviewer: Now tell me, what exactly are you doing?
Spotter: Er well, I'm camel spotting. I'm spotting to see if there are any camels that I can spot, and put them down in my camel spotting book.
Interviewer: Good. And how many camels have you spotted so far?
Spotter: Oh, well so far Peter, up to the present moment, I've spotted nearly, ooh, nearly one.
Interviewer: Nearly one?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RexQLrcqwc
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umm...
Why does youtube need ssl?
I could understand logging in needs to be secure, but every page afterwards? They're public pages man!
Just sort of happened [google.com] *shrug*
They didn't say "as many as" (Score:2)
which claimed as many as fifty prevented attacks
Are you sure they didn't say "up to fifty prevented attacks"? Zero counts!
Doesn't seem likely (Score:2)
They are claiming that AT&T and Verizon's market share are dwarfed by 'bubba the goat's fancy magic wireless phone service'? I don''t think so.
RSA is complicit (Score:5, Interesting)
Wait 'til you hear the one about RSA taking $10million from the NSA to promote vulnerable security.
This is much much worse than many of us will admit. Despite all the other problems we face, this is the one that has to be tackled first. If we can't bring the out-of-control surveillance state to heel, nothing else can ever get really better.
And don't buy for a second the Obama Administration's press release about their "reforms" of NSA data collection. They're just trying to head off the serious challenges that are about to start coming down from the courts and from congress.
For a minute, I think we're going to have to put partisan politics aside to tackle this common threat: government surveillance.
Confirmation bias (Score:2)
When I read the headline, my brain filled in "-Day" because of everybody constantly pounding on the term "Zero Day" around here.
My prediction (Score:2)
The NSA will announce that they've helped to capture those responsible for the recent Target debacle in an attempt to bolster their image.
Wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
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So what do you do then? (Score:2)
Gather even more data, I guess...
Well, duh (Score:2)
Re:It's about money (Score:4, Insightful)
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their Allies must be other nation states? I figured they meant crony industrialists.
Re:Of course it didn't. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why has he not gotten in trouble legally yet?
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Oliver North, though he was arrested and indicted for other things.
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I'm really curious what other US citizen could directly and provably lie to congress, and not be arrested and indited for it
It's not a crime unless you're under oath. I'm not sure who took an oath and who didn't, but congress has a cute habit of not requiring "important" people to testify under oath. Peons are another story.
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Yeah, but now at least they have to invent a new reason for the expense.
If they were not so expensive, the NSA would be quite entertaining. In a Colombo'esque sort of way. You know that they lie and you know that they'll try to bullshit you into spending money on them, but you still watch to find out how they'll do it.
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But we will never know for sure unless we continue.
They should use the TSA's mantra: "Well yeah, we haven't really directly stopped any serious attacks, but we've undoubtedly deterred many attacks because the terrorists know they can't get past our security defenses (unless of course, they exploit one of the many weaknesses in airport security that aren't solved by groping children)"
The NSA can say the same "Well, by knowing that we're out there, many terrorists have just given up their plans and went to work at homeless shelters"