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The Courts Government United States

Edward Snowden Says a Report Critical To an NSA Lawsuit Is Authentic (techcrunch.com) 70

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: An unexpected declaration by whistleblower Edward Snowden filed in court [last] week adds a new twist in a long-running lawsuit against the NSA's surveillance programs. The case, filed by the EFF a decade ago, seeks to challenge the government's alleged illegal and unconstitutional surveillance of Americans, who are largely covered under the Fourth Amendment's protections against warrantless searches and seizures. It's a big step forward for the case, which had stalled largely because the government refused to confirm that a leaked document was authentic or accurate. News of the surveillance broke in 2006 when an AT&T technician Mark Klein revealed that the NSA was tapping into AT&T's network backbone. He alleged that a secret, locked room -- dubbed Room 641A -- in an AT&T facility in San Francisco where he worked was one of many around the U.S. used by the government to monitor communications -- domestic and overseas. President George W. Bush authorized the NSA to secretly wiretap Americans' communications shortly after the September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001.

Much of the EFF's complaint relied on Klein's testimony until 2013, when Snowden, a former NSA contractor, came forward with new revelations that described and detailed the vast scope of the U.S. government's surveillance capabilities, which included participation from other phone giants -- including Verizon (TechCrunch's parent company). Snowden's signed declaration, filed on October 31, confirms that one of the documents he leaked, which the EFF relied heavily on for its case, is an authentic draft document written by the then-NSA inspector general in 2009, which exposed concerns about the legality of the Bush's warrantless surveillance program -- Stellar Wind -- particularly the collection of bulk email records on Americans.
"I read its contents carefully during my employment," he said in his declaration. "I have a specific and strong recollection of this document because it indicated to me that the government had been conducting illegal surveillance."
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Edward Snowden Says a Report Critical To an NSA Lawsuit Is Authentic

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  • The Federal Government is corrupt beyond fixing. Which is why I joined thousands of others to concentrate our efforts â" the Free State Project. Itâ(TM)s also why I use Tor, Monero, Signal, and look forward to getting a Purism phone. They will try to surveil; we will encrypt and use open systems!
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It is the nature of governance that it corrupts. No government can ever be kept free of corruption, it's impossible.

      The only thing we can do is keep it accountable. The more public their actions, the better behaved they are. Public accountability is the only thing we have that works.

      Tools that allow us to sneak around unseen may help us to do things of which they disapprove (including completely legal things such as honest journalism and so forth), but it won't stop them from being corrupt nor from harmi

      • by jd ( 1658 )

        You are correct about the nature of the problem, so one option is a heuristic. If government is self-replacing, it never lasts long enough to corrupt.

        A second option is to have no common vector. Have the second house be chosen at random from a meritocracy or a noocracy. Hybrids are stronger than pure systems. Fixed, single terms from a random population of achievers and thinkers mean all the attack vectors for a democracy don't work. There are new attack vectors, but they don't work on a democracy.

        • A constantly changing government of amateurs means the beurocracy runs the country. Experienced politicians are better at the job. Outlaw politicians taking money from anyone who can't vote for him/her. Have a cap on donations from a single person. Force politician to put their investments/company in a blind trust while in office. Adopt a Proportional Representation system, so you don't have a government that 2/3 of the voters voted against and voting third party isn't throwing away your vote.
        • For the legislative branch, make it like jury duty. Itâ(TM)s not like these fucking idiots know what the hell theyre doing. Didnâ(TM)t know anything about the shit they vote on. They go ask a few questions and talk to a few advisors. Anybody can fucking do that. The problem with people that of been in there so long is that they know where all the bodies are buried. They use that to get their way and thats part of the reason why they are corrupt. Someone like you or me should go to their mailbox

      • by Megol ( 3135005 )

        That's why democracy is the best system we know for the long term. It surely isn't perfect, far from it, but it allows moderation of the corruption as long as the system is balanced.

  • Snowden is a hero. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 05, 2018 @07:54PM (#57597346)

    Snowden should be pardoned and welcomed home for the good deeds he did for us.

    He broke the law because the law was being abused, and he revealed the ways that our government was boldfacedly betraying all of us and lying to us. He didn't weaken national security, he gave us the evidence we needed to call our government on their treachery.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      https://www.fff.org/2014/09/12/remembering-the-criminal-conviction-of-the-director-of-the-cia/
      Using that twisted logic you could argue with is more important in the constitutional pecking order. The CIA or whoever do not want black letter law interpretation to go to trial. A reasonable person would say doing a Helms is OK - if you had no jurisprudence awareness.

    • He is a hero - and a traitor at the same time.

      And I'm pretty sure he, being the smart kid he is, was always aware of that, too. Ever since he copied the first file.
      It's an enormous sacrifice.

  • IANAL, but the inability to cross-examine Snowden might well make this inadmissible.

    (And that's without expressing my highly unfavorable opinion of the author.)

    • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

      They could choose to allow a deposition, a remote one even.

  • For participating in helping the US gov spy on US citizens in many different ways, from email to financial transactions to listening in on phone calls after 9/11. It was thrown out by the judge.

    The claim was the government was looking for terrorists but the fact of the matter is that is as insane as looking for a needle in a hay producing state. Given the fact that any terrorist group if using such vulnerable communication would simply use common phrases of which they would have different meaning among them

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