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Snowden Demystified: Can the Government See My Junk? 200

An anonymous reader writes Comedian and journalist John Oliver set out to understand US Government surveillance in advance of the June 2015 expiration of section 215 of the Patriot Act. What resulted was a humorous but exceptionally journalistic interview of Edward Snowden which distilled the issues down in a (NSFW) way everyone can understand. Regardless of whether you view Snowden as a despicable traitor or an honorable whistleblower, it's worth a watch.
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Snowden Demystified: Can the Government See My Junk?

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  • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @09:59AM (#49422593)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:01AM (#49422617)

    Uh...I just got out of some very cold water, but normally, it would be HUGE, I swear.

  • Overrated (Score:3, Insightful)

    by StikyPad ( 445176 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:02AM (#49422625) Homepage

    Regardless of whether you view Snowden as a despicable traitor or an honorable whistleblower, it's worth a watch.

    I didn't think so.

    Oliver criticized Snowden for his complex descriptions of complex issues, and asserted that it's Snowden's job to make the facts easily digestible and relatable for the general public. It's not. In the first place, it's the media's job to do that. That is their raison d'etre. In the second place, distilling issues down to "dick pics" is part of the problem with the modern media. Why fuel that race to the bottom? Idiocracy was supposed to be satire, not prophecy.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      You know, I have to agree with you. I understand that Oliver is supposed to be a comedian and is not attempting to push himself as a legit reporter, but he really needed to just shut up and let Snowden speak instead of constantly interrupting (and usually with something that wasn't even funny).

      Though, I do have to give him credit for being brutally honest.

      • Educating Snowden (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Immerial ( 1093103 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:36AM (#49422935) Homepage
        I think John Oliver did an excellent job of educating Snowden on how to speak. I think it's something that many people her on slashdot struggle with. Put it in layman's terms. As John Oliver pointed out to Snowden... most people don't get what you are saying. All the geeks do... and are rightfully freaked-out/outraged by it ...but most regular people don't. But mention how the current programs captures all your 'dick pics'... and people start to get it. Hopefully this will help him in the future with how he communicates this with the American public ...and hopefully enough of the American public will be freaked out about it and push for roll-back/limits on these things.
        • by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @11:37AM (#49423399)

          I think John Oliver did an excellent job of educating Snowden on how to speak.

          Right. Snowden, for all his bravery and balls of steel, has a speaking style that doesn't connect with the man on the street. Asked simple questions he gives long, complex answers that are full of nuance, appeals to the Constitution and attempts to be reasonable. If I knew every word I uttered could one day play a part in deciding my freedom I'd speak pretty damn carefully too, so maybe he's like that in "real life" and maybe he's not. But Oliver forced him to give short answers in laymans terms. I hope ES remembers.

          It's a specific case of a more general problem though. The civil rights movement has really struggled to give clear explanations for why people should care. The best explanation is We should all have something to hide [thoughtcrime.org] by Moxie Marlinspike. He sums up arguments I was developing myself before I found that blog post. Sure, the man on the street feels he is boring and the world of political intrigue is far away from his life. So talk about how this stuff affects issues like gays going to jail (lots of people have gay friends), or how marijuana could never be legalised if there was perfect enforcement of anti-drug laws (which is enabled by this type of surveillance). Heck, for conservative parents who might find both issues irrelevant, point out that their darling teenagers are very likely to be guilty of producing and distributing child pornography. All it takes is for them to send a nude selfie to their new boyfriend/girlfriend between the years of 16-18 and they're guilty of sex crimes. Lots and lots of people either have had teenage children or will have.

      • by perpenso ( 1613749 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:36AM (#49422937)
        Actually Oliver was doing something very valuable with his interruptions. Forcing Snowden to refrain from technobabble that the general public would not get. Forcing Snowden to be more effective at his self appointed task, to put in the extra effort necessary to phrase things so the general public could understand.
        • by Chelloveck ( 14643 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @04:51PM (#49425439)

          Actually Oliver was doing something very valuable with his interruptions. Forcing Snowden to refrain from technobabble that the general public would not get.

          I agree. At first I thought Oliver was being a real jerk. He's always opinionated and blunt, but he seemed determined to be an asshole about it. It wasn't until he pulled out the dick pics that I actually figured out what he was doing. After that I thought it was a great interview, kept on-topic by constantly bringing it back to that one absurd fear -- "They" can see your dick. Literally and metaphorically. We're all exposed.

          We've got people like Bruce Schneier interviewing Edward Snowden [youtube.com] for all us geeky types who understand the technical issues. I think Oliver's interview boiled it down to something understandable by non-geeks. Lack of privacy means the NSA gets to look at your privates. That's something anyone can grasp.

      • Re:Overrated (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @12:21PM (#49423665)

        If he shut up and let Snowden speak, we would get another generic Snowden interview reiterating what has been already stated, which only people who already get Snowden would grasp.

        I'm glad Oliver kept interrupting Snowden and pointed him towards the different type of conversation. That's what made this interview interesting and viral.

    • Re:Overrated (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ADRA ( 37398 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:17AM (#49422783)

      The alternative is to what? Take a 'high ground' approach where you're ignored by the populace at large? Rule #1 of effective speaking is to talk to your audience. If you can't be willing to meet people even half way, you'll never convince them to take action.

    • Because the media is supposed to be the media of the people, not the media of the intellectual university alumni. Drawing dick picks is pretty much the highest the average american made it in their educational career.
    • Re: Overrated (Score:5, Informative)

      by Joe Gillian ( 3683399 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:18AM (#49422789)

      I think the "dick pics" line actually really works well. If you think about it from the perspective of the average person, a lot of people buy the NSA's statements that they don't care about the communications of most Americans and that PRISM is necessary to maintain security. After all, a lot of people post everything they do on Facebook or Twitter where anyone can see it.

      One of the articles I read on this mentioned that even people who support or don't care about the NSA suddenly cared when they realized that the NSA can see the things they don't post on Facebook (nude pics, sexting, etc).

      If framing the NSA's data collection programs as "dick pics" makes more people understand, then I'm all for it.

      • by perpenso ( 1613749 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:42AM (#49422987)
        Sometimes simplification is helpful, sometimes it is not. Technobabble can give the illusion of importance. For example is you say the NSA is collecting telephone metadata that sound ominous. If you simplify it and say the NSA is having AT&T share the info on your phone bill, date, number called, duration ... then people would understand and probably not rate the collection of much importance.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Except for the fact that it doesn't stop at just metadata collection. Apparently the Bahamas is a hotbed of terrorist activity as all your calls are recorded and retained there.

          The thing I don't understand in the whole debate is lack of historical context when this crap is justified. Go back in history, look at the attack on Pearl Harbor and you realize that we had enough info to prevent the attack but we were so busy with other details that we didn't put all the pieces together.

          Fast forward to 9/11 and y

        • by sdoca ( 1225022 )
          I think it would be the reverse of what you said.

          For example is you say the NSA is collecting telephone metadata that sounds benign as they don't know what metadata is. If you simplify it and say the NSA is having AT&T share the info on their phone bills; date, number called, duration ... then people would understand and probably rate the collection of much higher importance as they understand their privacy is being invaded.

      • Re: Overrated (Score:5, Insightful)

        by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:43AM (#49422993)

        I think the "dick pics" line actually really works well. If you think about it from the perspective of the average person, a lot of people buy the NSA's statements that they don't care about the communications of most Americans and that PRISM is necessary to maintain security. After all, a lot of people post everything they do on Facebook or Twitter where anyone can see it.

        One of the articles I read on this mentioned that even people who support or don't care about the NSA suddenly cared when they realized that the NSA can see the things they don't post on Facebook (nude pics, sexting, etc).

        If framing the NSA's data collection programs as "dick pics" makes more people understand, then I'm all for it.

        Do not confuse apathy with stupidity.

        The government is monitoring every single path that innocent civilians are taking to communicate these days, under the guise of national security, which is not only unethical, but also illegal under our Constitution.

        Do I really need to re-word that simple shit to the point where the pre-school kid gets it? Anyone with a 4th grade education understands.

        • Re: Overrated (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Fire_Wraith ( 1460385 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @12:28PM (#49423719)
          The problem is that a lot of people buy the whole "I have nothing to hide" line of crap. "Oh, I don't care if they read my email, I have nothing to hide." You're not going to nearly as much traction by convincing them of the principle that it shouldn't matter, that the government could abuse this someday, as you will by pointing out that, yes, they DO have something they want to keep private, even from the government, and provoking a visceral reaction on those grounds.

          Bottom line, it's not just a way to get them to understand, it's a way to get them to care about it because it impacts their otherwise blissfully ignorant lives.
          • Ugh, I can't stand people with that attitude. Ask them if they're comfortable with the government tracking everything they do, from phone conversations, to infrared monitoring of their house, and random photographing of them and their children going about their day.

            If anything, the average American deserves whatever is coming to them for their apathy. It stinks, as it seems the only solution is to get out of the country. I don't want to be here when the rest of the world decides they want to sack Rome or

        • Do I really need to re-word that simple shit to the point where the pre-school kid gets it? Anyone with a 4th grade education understands.

          The lesson here is: Yes, yes you do.

    • Re:Overrated (Score:5, Interesting)

      by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:21AM (#49422815) Homepage

      Oliver criticized Snowden for his complex descriptions of complex issues

      I don't think that the interview was, in the end, very critical of Snowden. If anything, I think he came across as someone who, whether or not you agree with his decisions, had the best interests of the general public at heart. If anything, it made me feel very sorry for Snowden, especially when he had to watch video of people who didn't understand what he had done.

      And I'd agree that it's the media's job to make the whole thing easily digestible, which is exactly what I think Oliver was doing in reducing the issue to "dick pics". He forced Snowden to explain the different programs in terms of "dick pics" because he knew that, otherwise, people wouldn't really understand or appreciate Snowden's explanations.

    • Re:Overrated (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:21AM (#49422823)

      Just because someone you admire was challenged by the interviewer doesn't mean it isn't worth a watch. He didn't criticize Snowden for "complex descriptions", he criticized him for ducking the questions and responsibility. That is a journalist's raison d'etre. That fact that you clearly didn't understand what you were listening to is why folks like Oliver have to "dumb it down"... and I guess he didn't do it enough for you.

    • No. Delegation of your work does not relieve you of responsibility. If Snowden delegates to journalists the screening of releases for info that will aid the enemy (say al-Queda) and they fail, as Oliver also points out they in fact did, then Snowden bears some responsibility too. He decided to make the info public. He chose who to release it and trust with such screening. Similar story if the message is not effectively communicated. Contrary to popular myth, geeks can effectively communicate with non-geeks.
    • Re:Overrated (Score:4, Interesting)

      by 0xdeadbeef ( 28836 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:42AM (#49422985) Homepage Journal

      If Snowden wasn't made aware of the angle Oliver was taking before the interview, it's pretty obvious is on board with it by the end of it. Being a dick to him and asking "hard questions" was part of the schtick. If you don't perceive that, you probably shouldn't be holding up Idiocracy as your banner.

      What I think is funny, especially in light of your "that's the media's job" complaint, is that I thought he was going to take the angle "you don't trust the government with our privacy, but you just trust less competent journalists with our secrets... hypocrite much?" Oliver didn't go quite that far, maybe because it would implicate himself, though the entire exercise is him doing precisely what you claim should be his job and not Snowden's.

    • Re:Overrated (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Dixie_Flatline ( 5077 ) <vincent@jan@goh.gmail@com> on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:49AM (#49423047) Homepage

      Oliver is a master of taking a terrible, boring and critically important subject and making it palatable. Net Neutrality, predatory lending--we've seen people cover these topics for years and get no traction. But John Oliver keeps us watching for the whole thing.

      I find it sad that nobody knew who he was to begin with. I do, and I live in Canada. I think it's a really important piece of news. But then again, I'm a nerd, and I'm bombarded with this information, relatively speaking. I guarantee my non-geek friends only have the most meagre understanding of who he is.

      Snowden's information is important, and he has the right idea of what should be done with it. But John Oliver is one of the best ways to communicate the information. He managed to get Snowden to summarise things into really relatable chunks of data--it was brilliant.

    • The fact John Oliver seemed a bit biased against Snowden's "method of delivery", and the complexity of the information he decided to make public being out of his "jurisdiction", were clearly outbalanced by his concise, honest and morally sound answers. Snowden proved in more than enough ways his intentions were good, and the only place where it's still up for debate if the consequences paid off is in closed-minded, nationalist-following individual opinion.

      And criticizing the childish tone the conversation t

    • These are the same sort of complaints you hear from older politicians. The quality of the media has absolutely decreased significantly over the last 20 years. That's come with a drastic decrease in how much time they have to work stories, budgets, salaries, etc. It's telling that we're discussing a comedian interviewing Snowden for a subscription-only television channel's fake news program, rather than someone on broadcast network news or something like 60 minutes. Two years ago, 60 minutes did a report

      • The quality hasn't declined - it's just that the media's effort in 24-hour news channels is being deployed to make money rather than inform the public. They're very good at what they do: engage eyeballs and prepare them to absorb commercial messages. CNN and FoxNews (and other news channels) are knowingly crafting over-the-top material and - far from being concerned that they'll be called out by comedians - they're thrilled every time one of their segments makes it to the Daily Show. Beyond that, they retur

    • Re:Overrated (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JMJimmy ( 2036122 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @11:43AM (#49423429)

      Regardless of whether you view Snowden as a despicable traitor or an honorable whistleblower, it's worth a watch.

      I didn't think so.

      Oliver criticized Snowden for his complex descriptions of complex issues, and asserted that it's Snowden's job to make the facts easily digestible and relatable for the general public. It's not. In the first place, it's the media's job to do that. That is their raison d'etre. In the second place, distilling issues down to "dick pics" is part of the problem with the modern media. Why fuel that race to the bottom? Idiocracy was supposed to be satire, not prophecy.

      [facepalm] Oliver, via his comedy, was simplifying the issue, making a commentary on the media, and the comprehension level of the American people. It was layered and pointed and even managed some balance all wrapped in humour. Brilliant.

    • I could not disagree more. Oliver is adept at something that geeks are not: Appealing to the masses. He and his writers have great skill in making dry subjects such as PRISM and net neutrality entertaining and thus impactful to non-geeks (read: mostly everybody). Impact is REQUIRED to get the momentum you need to enact change. You can spin your wheels all you want trying to take the high road and "educate" non-geeks on why they should be outraged. In fact, NSA and Comcast prefer we do this because THEY
    • A reporter's job is to relay information suitably to THEIR demographic and get them interested enough to dig deeper. John Oliver's demographic is not tech savvy computer types, it's young people who also probably liked the Colbert report or The Daily Show. Boiling down the entire debate into dick pics is probably exactly correct for him. That the problem is much more serious than dick pics, and that people like my mom from another generation would say "well you shouldn't be sending pictures of your dick aro

    • In the second place, distilling issues down to "dick pics" is part of the problem with the modern media.

      It also diminishes the issue. I don't give a shit if the government gets a look at my dick. That is the absolute least of my concerns with the NSA spying.

      What I do care about is the government building a profile on me of everyone that I communicate with and storing all of those communications. If one of my facebook friends teams up with one of my cellphone contacts and goes all rogue crockpot bombing Islamic terrorist, I don't want to get roped into that by association.

    • You are correct. Your comment is overrated. How'd you do that?

      (BTW... it's the US media's job to sell advertising. They are not beholden to anything else.)
    • I was also bothered by this coverage. Not all attention is good attention in this case. To turn this into a joke isn't helpful to the cause in the slightest. I don't think the public is as stupid as Oliver makes them out to be, though studies have shown that far too many are too stupid to understand why government surveillance is an issue. I'd site the Pew Study from 2013, but most of the links fail for me currently. We certainly do have to keep discussing the issues as a nation and we have to keep finding

  • The uploader has not made this video available in your country. :( :(
  • Yes, the US has become an overreaching police state.
    • by mi ( 197448 )

      No, actually, it has not. The omni-present surveillance itself, though uncomfortable, is neither a required nor sufficient condition for "Police State" [wikipedia.org] term to apply.

      As long as the NSA only records (or even forwards to police but only to prosecute actual crimes), it is not a representative of "police state".

      (Also note too, that, according to Snowden, for NSA to record your conversation, it has to cross the national border.)

      • "only records..."
        There no only here, it's just one brick in a big shithouse.
        "...or even forwards...actual crimes" DA's have bragged for decades about their ability to indict a ham sandwich.

        Various less advertised provisions for "collection" and "sharing" already make broad surveillence an internal US affair. We already have internal checkpoints under various sweeps and searches of the public e.g. Immigration and Customs broadly stopping interior highway traffic without probable cause, wanting to
        • by mi ( 197448 )

          While I agree with you regarding the sad state of affairs and government's overreach, the NSA — and its propensity to collect our border-crossing pictures (including those of the impolite body-parts) — has nothing to do with it.

          I'm a lot more worried about the IRS being in a position to deny "non-profit" status to an anti-government political group (thus reducing the size of their bullhorn compared to that of pro-government groups) or the FCC's self-proclaimed power to dictate, how ISPs treat c

      • by Sir_Eptishous ( 873977 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:52AM (#49423075)
        Nice hair splitting.
        We'll keep that in your permanent record.
      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        As the NSA regularly "tipps off" the DEA and the FBI (with their agents then lying under oath in court about it), you argument is deeply flawed.

        • by mi ( 197448 )

          As the NSA regularly "tipps off" the DEA and the FBI

          That's exactly the practice, that I referred to as: "forwards to police but only to prosecute actual crimes [emphasis added]".

          No, I don't believe, this alone qualifies for "Police State".

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:12AM (#49422745)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • If you tell people "we know who you called" people will think "I have nothing to hide". Once you say "We saw your dick" then suddenly it becomes real and understandable.

      Yeah, and I think part of the whole thing is, it needs to be put into concrete terms. A lot of people (at least middle-class white people) aren't actually that frightened of the idea that law enforcement might possibly intercept one of their communications. You can say that it's impinging on our freedom, and that it has the possibility of creating an oppressive police state, but most people aren't actually afraid of that. The possibility seems too distant, and they assume it must be, "The police are moni

  • by l0ungeb0y ( 442022 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:12AM (#49422747) Homepage Journal
    I like John Oliver, but his attempts at humor early in the interview just came off as awkward at best. However, he did finally hit his stride when he started in with his survey results, which showed Americans have no clue and even less concern with educating themselves on todays issues much less wanting to do anything about it. Hopefully Snowden got the message -- that coming here to "Face Trial" as he has supposedly been mulling over would not serve any sort of public debate or discourse that could create change, but only be ratings fodder for Fox and CNN. Because yes -- American's don't care, Americans don't want to know, Americans just want to be given shiny things.
  • TSA (Score:4, Insightful)

    by wisnoskij ( 1206448 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:15AM (#49422765) Homepage
    The TSA sure can. They get to feel it up as well.
    • by Hartree ( 191324 )

      Yeah, I thought they went a bit far for a first date. ;)

    • A couple weeks I got a new "pat down" procedure where they ran their hands down the inside of my thighs. I was unsure whether or not I was supposed to tip them.
  • Just because the government has a certain power, does not make that power rightly American.

    Your Constitutional rights are guaranteed in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, your personal safety is not, Brenda Make

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:23AM (#49422853)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by DutchUncle ( 826473 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:48AM (#49423031)
    My usual response to anyone of the "I have nothing to hide" mindset: Do you close the bathroom door when you go to the toilet? I'm betting the answer is "Yes." Why? Modesty? Propriety? Custom? Doesn't matter. The question is: Does it mean you have something to hide? Not something evil or wrong, just private? So maybe it's OK to have things to hide . . . or at least not flaunt in public.

    Now, Do you also close the bathroom door when you are home by yourself, and know for certain that nobody is there to see? Again, I'll bet the answer is "Yes". Why? WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO HIDE? Oh, right, you have nothing to hide, so why are you hiding? The guilty hide when none pursueth! How easy it is to infer guilt!
  • by mrflash818 ( 226638 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @10:54AM (#49423103) Homepage Journal

    In my opinion, the last 10min of the presentation, using the analogy of taking pictures of your junk, and which systems would capture, store, and track it, were excellent.

  • Or some terrorists could use these as a method [wikipedia.org] of passing encoded messages.

  • Most interesting part for me was all the wikileaks references in the "random" non-cherry picked interviews. Had all but forgotten about intersection of Wikileaks and Snowden. Reminded me of all the people who thought Iraq war was about Terrorism... wonder how these things happen?

  • by eepok ( 545733 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @11:40AM (#49423413) Homepage

    There is no "Patriot Act". It's called the USA PATRIOT Act and it must be remembered for what it is because what it stands for and what it spells out demonstrates the absolute inanity of the document and the (lack of) discussion when it was voted on.

    USA PATRIOT stands for Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism.

    It was proposed on October 23, 2001, passed by the House on October 24, passed by the Senate on October 25, and signed into law by President Bush on October 26. The Act amended 11 previously passed acts, 108 US Codes, and created 9 new US Codes. The bill itself was 342 pages long and it was passed in 3 days.

    I don't think we have since learned our lesson, but at least there will be a historical record of our errors and how quickly we can be bullied into a political frenzy.

  • "Can the government see my junk"

    If the NSA people are that into seeing the junk of a 50 something fat geek, they can have all the look they want.

    Frankly, I and much of Slashdot would prefer Natalie Portman (even after becoming a mom), but I guess there's no accounting for taste.

  • These 15 minute "in depth" pieces are amazing AND effective.

    But an actual interview with Snowden was amazing.

    And oliver covered every angle from what I could see. He brought some reality to Snowden. And He brought some reality to us.

    His humor is the sugar that makes the medicine go down.

    I'm still pissed off about police officers confiscating people's houses and cars and using the money to buy margherita machines.

  • If the government can see MY junk, their spy satellites must have really impressive image magnification! Er... just kidding. Like the Great Wall of China, it's visible from space...
  • by Hussman32 ( 751772 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @01:38PM (#49424195)

    One thing that wasn't clear. ES said that if my gmail account was moved overseas on an international server, then the NSA could have a copy of my account even if there were no international sources/targets. Is that true or false?

    Also, that look on Oliver's face when Snowden told him 'you're already on the list' as an associate was priceless.

    • ES said that if my gmail account was moved overseas on an international server, then the NSA could have a copy of my account even if there were no international sources/targets. Is that true or false?

      That's true. While theoretically the NSA is not allowed to monitor communications between two american citizens, in practice, any communication leaving the country is simply assumed to involve a foreigner and is thus up for grabs. This "inadvertent" capture of american communications is in fact standard operating procedure [aclu.org]:

      The government has set a dismally low bar for concluding that a potential surveillance target is, in fact, a foreigner located abroad. By default, targets are assumed to be foreign. That's right, the procedures allow the NSA to presume that prospective targets are foreigners outside the United States absent specific information to the contrary—and to presume therefore that those individuals are fair game for warrantless surveillance.

  • by mpercy ( 1085347 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @04:09PM (#49425165)

    What if I think he's a despicable traitor who just happened--in the course of his treasonous endeavors--to shed light on the NSA's probably extralegal practices.

    But which practices didn't *really* surprise anyone.

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