Made with Love

Snowden, Do you know that we are always spied on?.

Can't wait till tonight and Google all sorts of nasty stuff.
 
New Snowden leak: NSA program taps all you do online

New Snowden leak: NSA program taps all you do online

Well are we not surprised Damn-Not too smart

(CNN) -- You've never heard of XKeyscore, but it definitely knows you. The National Security Agency's top-secret program essentially makes available everything you've ever done on the Internet — browsing history, searches, content of your emails, online chats, even your metadata — all at the tap of the keyboard.

The Guardian exposed the program
on Wednesday in a follow-up piece to its groundbreaking report on the NSA's surveillance practices. Shortly after publication, Edward Snowden, a 29-year-old former Booz Allen Hamilton employee who worked for the NSA for four years, came forward as the source.

This latest revelation comes from XKeyscore training materials, which Snowden also provided to The Guardian. The NSA sums up the program best: XKeyscore is its "widest reaching" system for developing intelligence from the Internet.

The program gives analysts the ability to search through the entire database of your information without any prior authorization — no warrant, no court clearance, no signature on a dotted line. An analyst must simply complete a simple onscreen form, and seconds later, your online history is no longer private. The agency claims that XKeyscore covers "nearly everything a typical user does on the Internet."

As The Guardian points out, this program crystallizes one of Snowden's most infamous admissions from his video interview on June 10:

"I, sitting at my desk," said Snowden, could "wiretap anyone, from you or your accountant, to a federal judge or even the president, if I had a personal email."
While United States officials denied this claim, the XKeyscore program, as the public understands it, proves Snowden's point. The law requires the NSA to obtain FISA warrants on U.S. citizens, but this is pushed aside for Americans with foreign targets — and this program gives the NSA the technology to do so. The training materials claim XKeyscore assisted in capturing 300 terrorists by 2008.

The Guardian article breaks down how the program works with each activity, from email monitoring to chats and browsing history, and includes screenshots from the training materials.


The Guardian reached out to the NSA for comment prior to publication. The agency defended the program, stressing that it was only used to legally obtain information about "legitimate foreign intelligence targets in response to requirements that our leaders need for information necessary to protect our nation and its interests."


"XKeyscore is used as a part of NSA's lawful foreign signals intelligence collection system," the agency said in its response. "Allegations of widespread, unchecked analyst access to NSA collection data are simply not true. Access to XKeyscore, as well as all of NSA's analytic tools, is limited to only those personnel who require access for their assigned tasks ... .


"In addition, there are multiple technical, manual and supervisory checks and balances within the system to prevent deliberate misuse from occurring. Every search by an NSA analyst is fully auditable, to ensure that they are proper and within the law. These types of programs allow us to collect the information that enables us to perform our missions successfully -- to defend the nation and to protect U.S. and allied troops abroad."


XKeyscore is the second black mark on the NSA's record in the past few weeks. The Guardian's first story uncovered PRISM, a highly controversial surveillance program that reportedly allows the security agency to access the servers of major Internet organizations including Facebook, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Yahoo, YouTube and Skype, among others.


Snowden's information led to a public outcry for transparency, and the U.S. government pushed to declassify more information about PRISM in an effort to paint a clearer picture about the program.


Snowden has been charged with espionage. He is currently holed up in the transit area of Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport while his request for asylum is under review by Russian immigration authorities, according to Snowden's lawyer.


This article originally appeared on Mashable.

https://edition.cnn.com/2013/07/31/tech/web/snowden-leak-xkeyscore/index.html?iid=article_sidebar
 
And pigs fly.

The Guardian reached out to the NSA for comment prior to publication. The agency defended the program, stressing that it was only used to legally obtain information about "legitimate foreign intelligence targets in response to requirements that our leaders need for information necessary to protect our nation and its interests."
 
Those NSA dudes are going to wear out their fingers and dicks when they start sifting through my history of browsing and posting in the erotic photography forum.
 
Those NSA dudes are going to wear out their fingers and dicks when they start sifting through my history of browsing and posting in the erotic photography forum.

:LMAO:

They can go through mine and bore them to death.
 
So you post "news" from the Clinton News Network

You are re-posting as a political operative or just thought the biggest scam news network got something right???
 
So you post "news" from the Clinton News Network

You are re-posting as a political operative or just thought the biggest scam news network got something right???

CNN is the Clinton news Network :don'twantto-see:/

I need to be punished.
 
So what if the story is published by a network with a slight left bias? Does it make it any less true?

With apologies to our American members, I am sincerely sick of the abuses of civil rights the increasingly-inaccurately called Land of the Free inflicts on the world. If they want to spy on their own citizens, that's fine by me. They elected the pig-fuckers, let them live with the consequences. But having them delve into into foreign nationals privacy is not their responsibility nor their business. I hope the world gathers and gives the Americans their due. I will be the first to re-enlist if that does happen.
 
So what if the story is published by a network with a slight left bias? Does it make it any less true?

With apologies to our American members, I am sincerely sick of the abuses of civil rights the increasingly-inaccurately called Land of the Free inflicts on the world. If they want to spy on their own citizens, that's fine by me. They elected the pig-fuckers, let them live with the consequences. But having them delve into into foreign nationals privacy is not their responsibility nor their business. I hope the world gathers and gives the Americans their due. I will be the first to re-enlist if that does happen.

I am with you on this one.
 
Back
Top Bottom