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Mostrando postagens com marcador NSA. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador NSA. Mostrar todas as postagens

segunda-feira, 2 de setembro de 2013

Big Brother, small brothers, como os franceses, por exemplo, igualmente espionados...

Se isto pode servir de consolo, bem magro, para os brios ofendidos de patriotas indignados, os franceses, aliados do Big Brother, também foram devidamente espionados.
Acho que só Deus escapou, mas não tenho muita certeza...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida


'Success Story': NSA Targeted French Foreign Ministry

French Foreign minister Laurent Fabius in Paris this month.Zoom
AFP
French Foreign minister Laurent Fabius in Paris this month.
Espionage by the US on France has already strained relations between the two countries, threatening a trans-Atlantic trade agreement. Now a document seen by SPIEGEL reveals that the NSA also spied on the French Foreign Ministry.
America's National Security Agency (NSA) targeted France's Foreign Ministry for surveillance, according to an internal document seen by SPIEGEL.
Dated June 2010, the "top secret" NSA document reveals that the intelligence agency was particularly interested in the diplomats' computer network. All of the country's embassies and consulates are connected with the Paris headquarters via a virtual private network (VPN), technology that is generally considered to be secure.Accessing the Foreign Ministry's network was considered a "success story," and there were a number of incidents of "sensitive access," the document states.
An overview lists different web addresses tapped into by the NSA, among them "diplomatie.gouv.fr," which was run from the Foreign Ministry's server. A list from September 2010 says that French diplomatic offices in Washington and at the United Nations in New York were also targeted, and given the codenames "Wabash" and "Blackfoot," respectively. NSA technicians installed bugs in both locations and conducted a "collection of computer screens" at the one at the UN.
A priority list also names France as an official target for the intelligence agency. In particular, the NSA was interested in the country's foreign policy objectives, especially the weapons trade, and economic stability.

US-French relations are being strained by such espionage activities. In early July, French President François Hollande threatened to suspend negotiations for a trans-Atlantic free trade agreement, demanding a guarantee from the US that it would cease spying after it was revealed that the French embassy in Washington had been targeted by the NSA."There can be no negotiations or transactions in all areas until we have obtained these guarantees, for France but also for all of the European Union, for all partners of the United States," he said at the time.
The NSA declined to comment to SPIEGEL on the matter. As details about the scope of the agency's international spying operations continue to emerge, Washington has come under increasing pressure from its trans-Atlantic partners. Officials in Europe have expressed concern that negotiations for the trade agreement would be poisoned by a lack of trust.

SPIEGEL/kla

Big Brother, small brothers e escutas da NSA sobre presidentes do Brasil e do Mexico: alguma novidade?

A pergunta a ser feita aqui, sem qualquer hipocrisia, é esta:
Se o governo brasileiro tivesse a capacidade, a habilidade e a oportunidade, por meio dos seus arapongas da Abin, ou por qualquer outro meio, de ouvir, de ler, de saber o que Obama anda fazendo, lendo, falando, instruindo a seus auxiliares, ele deixaria de fazer isso, em nome de algum código de ética de sua agência de informações, ou apenas porque isso não se faz entre gente de bem?
Ele seria gentil a este ponto?
Perderia essa oportunidade apenas por pruridos éticos?
Bem, se me disserem que sim, concordo com os protestos. Se houver algum sorriso amarelo no meio de tudo isso, pode-se apenas dizer: much ado about nothing.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

VEJA.com, 02/09/2013

Reportagem do Fantástico, da TV Globo, exibida na noite deste domingo afirma que as comunicações da presidente Dilma Rousseff foram alvo de espionagem por parte da Agência de Segurança Nacional (NSA) dos Estados Unidos. A acusação foi baseada em um documento secreto obtido pelo jornalista americano Glenn Greenwald, do jornal inglês The Guardian. Greenwald foi um dos primeiros a revelar o sistemático esquema de espionagem eletrônica da agência americana e do governo Obama delatado pelo ex-analista da NSA Edward Snowden. O jornalista é namorado do brasileiro David Miranda, que foi detido no mês passado em Londres, quando transportava papéis entregues por Snowden. Greenwald disse que o material sobre a vigilância ao governo brasileiro também foi repassado a ele pelo ex-analista.
Segundo a reportagem exibida no programa, o nome de Dilma aparece em uma apresentação produzida internamente para funcionários da NSA e intitulada “Filtragem inteligente de dados: estudo de caso do México e do Brasil”. De acordo com o material, o objetivo do monitoramento ao Brasil seria “melhorar a compreensão dos métodos de comunicação” entre a presidente e seus assessores. No documento, o presidente mexicano Enrique Peña Nieto também é mencionado como alvo de vigilância. Datada de 20 de junho de 2012, quando Peña Nieto ainda era candidato, a apresentação mostra mensagens de texto interceptadas do celular do futuro presidente. Nelas, ele aparece especulando quais seriam os seus ministros caso viesse a ser eleito.
No caso de Dilma, o material exibido pelo Fantástico não indica o conteúdo de qualquer conversa ou texto que eventualmente tenha sido alvo de bisbilhotagem pela agência. Os trechos que citam a presidente mostram apenas organogramas de sua rede de assessores, que aparecem com os nomes apagados. A apresentação detalha que a coleta de dados para espionar os governantes seria feita pelo monitoramento de números de telefone, e-mails e IP (a identificação do computador).
Método
“Ficou muito claro, com esses documentos, que a espionagem já foi feita, porque eles não estão discutindo isso só como alguma coisa que eles estão planejando. Eles estão festejando o sucesso da espionagem”, analisa Greenwald na reportagem.
A apresentação interna termina explicando que o método de monitoramento consiste em uma filtragem de dados “simples e eficiente” e que sua execução pode vir a ser repetida. Segundo as conclusões da reportagem, a indicação de que o monitoramento pode vir a ser repetido significa que ele já foi usado uma vez. A reportagem do Fantástico afirmou que tentou entrar em contato com Snowden, mas o ex-analista, que atualmente está asilado temporatiamente na Rússia, disse que o governo local exigiu que ele não comente o conteúdo dos documentos.

Reação
A denúncia foi tema de reunião realizada domingo entre Dilma e o ministro da Justiça, José Eduardo Cardozo. Ficou decidido que o Itamaraty vai convocar o embaixador dos Estados Unidos para cobrar explicações e que o governo brasileiro irá recorrer à ONU e a outros órgãos internacionais contra ações de espionagem. “Se forem comprovados os fatos, estaremos diante de uma situação inadmissível”, disse Cardozo ao Fantástico.

terça-feira, 27 de agosto de 2013

Snowden: o espiao que foi para o frio (alias, o nome combina)

Em primeiro lugar, Snowden não era, nunca foi e nunca será espião; ele era um mero técnico de comunicacões e de sistemas de informação e suas tecnologias associadas, apenas isso.
Enfim, lendo Dostoievski, ele deve estar contente, se não deprimido, com a perspectiva de passar vários anos naquela maravilha de país. Ele poderia começar a ler Tolstoy, depois Soljenitsyn, e outros mais...
A literatura russa é interessante, mais, em todo caso, do que essas histórias de espiões, que sempre terminam mal...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Presença de Snowden em Moscou ‘foi estratégica’, rebate fonte na diplomacia cubana

26/8/2013 11:45
Correio Do Brasil, Redação - de Brasília

Snowden conseguiu um visto de permanência na Rússia por um ano
Snowden conseguiu um visto de permanência na Rússia por um ano
O ex-espião da Agência Nacional de Segurança dos EUA (NSA, na sigla em inglês) e prestador de serviço para a Agência Central de Inteligência (CIA, também na sigla em inglês) Edward Snowdenoptou por não seguir viagem, a partir de Moscou, por “uma questão estratégica”, afirmou aoCorreio do Brasil, nesta segunda-feira, fonte do serviço diplomático cubano na América Latina. Com este desmentido, Cuba descarta a informação de ter cedido às pressões dos Estados Unidos para que não aceitasse a presença do refugiado político em seu território. Snowden, atualmente, reside em Moscou. Um jornal russo, ligado à ultradireita, divulgou nesta segunda-feira que Snowden teria ficado preso na zona de trânsito de um aeroporto de Moscou porque o governo cubano recusou-se a deixá-lo voar da Rússia para Havana, após ameaças dos norte-americanos.
Segundo o diário conservador russo Kommersant, Snowden, procurado pelos EUA por vazar detalhes de programas de vigilância do governo norte-americano, planejara voar para Havana a partir de Moscou um dia depois de chegar de Hong Kong, em 23 de junho. Mas o norte-americano, que acabou recebendo asilo de um ano na Rússia após passar quase seis semanas na área de trânsito do aeroporto de Sheremetyevo, não embarcou, embora tivesse um assento em seu nome no avião. Citando fontes, incluindo uma ligada ao Departamento de Estado dos EUA, o jornal disse que a razão foi que Cuba avisou no último minuto às autoridades russas para não deixarem Snowden embarcar no voo da Aeroflot.
O jornal disse, ainda, que Cuba mudara de ideia por pressão dos EUA, que desejam julgar Snowden sob a acusação de espionagem. O Kommersant disse ainda que Snowden passou alguns dias no consulado russo em Hong Kong para declarar sua intenção de voar para a América Latina através de Moscou.
– Sua rota e seu apelo por ajuda foram uma surpresa completa para nós. Nós não o convidamos – disse ao Kommersant uma fonte estatal russa.
A agência inglesa de notícias Reuters, a exemplo das demais agências internacionais, não pôde confirmar de imediato a reportagem, seja no governo de Havana, seja com o próprio Snowden, que permanece retirado, em um ponto desconhecido do público, em território russo. A fonte ligada ao serviço diplomático cubano a que o CdB teve acesso, no entanto, lembra que o presidente de Cuba, Raúl Castro, foi o primeiro a defender, ainda no início de julho deste ano, logo após a decisão de Snowden de permanecer em solo russo, o direito dos países latino-americanos de conceder asilo ao ex-técnico da CIA, Edward Snowden. Raúl Castro criticou, ainda, que a atenção sobre este caso se centre na “perseguição” do jovem e não nos sistemas de “espionagem global” dos Estados Unidos.
Castro fez a declaração publicamente, no discurso com que encerrou o primeiro plenário realizado pela Assembleia Nacional de Cuba na atual legislatura. Em sua primeira declaração sobre o caso do ex-técnico que vazou planos de espionagem em massa por parte dos EUA, Castro, porém, não revelou se Cuba havia recebido o pedido de asilo por parte de Snowden nem se permitiria seu trânsito pela ilha rumo a outro país. Ele insistiu em ressaltar que as revelações de Snowden “permitiram confirmar a existência de sistemas de espionagem global dos Estados Unidos, que violam a soberania das nações, inclusive de seus aliados, e dos direitos humanos”.
– Cuba, que foi historicamente um dos países mais agredidos e também mais espionados do planeta, já conhecia a existência destes sistemas de espionagem – disse o presidente cubano, em seu discurso.
Pesadelo
Advogado de Snowden, Anatoli Koutcherena contou a jornalistas, na véspera, que seu cliente viveu um verdadeiro pesadelo no aeroporto de Moscou, até obter um visto temporário, no dia 1 de agosto.
– Foi um período difícil. Agora ele precisa cuidar de sua saúde e se recuperar psicologicamente. Ele precisa de uma adaptação – declarou o advogado à rádio pública Golos Rossii (A Voz da Rússia).
De acordo com ele, o ex-consultor da CIA aguarda a chegada do pai e de amigos para tomar algumas decisões importantes. Entre elas, a escolha do local onde pretende morar no país. O advogado também disse que Snowden se sente “mais ou menos bem”, está aprendendo a falar russo e se interessa pela história do país.
No período em que ficou na zona de trânsito do aeroporto russo, Snowden, segundo o advogado, leu “Crime e Castigo” de Dostoïeviski e pediu a obra completa de 18 volumes do historiador russo do século 19 Nikolaï Karamzine. Com o visto temporário, o ex-consultor da CIA pode viajar pela Rússia e trabalhar, exceto no serviço público, segundo o chefe do serviço de Imigração da região de Moscou.
– Ele ainda corre riscos, não pode passear na praça Vermelha ou ir pescar. Ele aguarda com impaciência a chegada do pai – disse o advogado.
Por enquanto, Snowden também não pode falar em público. Mas mesmo “invisível”, ele já tem diversas propostas de emprego, entre elas, uma vaga no Facebook russo, a rede social Vkontakte. Senadores russos também propuseram ao técnico uma cooperação para detectar falhas na proteção de informações privadas.

domingo, 4 de agosto de 2013

Big Brother e as panelas de pressao: a atual obsessao securitaria americana - Joao Luiz Mauad

Estado Policial?

JOÃO LUIZ MAUAD *
Você acha que o governo tem o direito de espionar e monitorar seus próprios cidadãos, em nome da guerra contra o terror?  É daqueles que, sendo um cidadão pacato e dentro da lei, não tem nada a esconder e, portanto, acha que não precisa se preocupar com o Big Brother vigiando a sua vida? Então, você deveria dar uma olhada nesta notícia, que saiu ontem no jornal inglês The Guardian.
Segundo a matéria, uma simples pesquisa pela internet para a compra de panelas de pressão e mochilas colocou uma pacata família americana na mira da polícia anti-terror e levou a uma visita domiciliar de seis investigadores, exigindo informações sem cabimento sobre aspectos da vida privada daquela família.
Mas deixemos que a própria vítima nos dê a sua versão:
O que aconteceu foi o seguinte: Por volta das 09h00, meu marido …  estava sentado na sala de estar com nossos dois cães, quando ouviu barulho de carros parando lá fora. Ele olhou pela janela e viu que eram três SUVs pretas estacionadas na frente da nossa casa…
“Seis cavalheiros em roupas casuais saíram dos veículos e se espalharam, enquanto caminhavam em direção a casa. Dois foram para um lado da casa, dois para o outro lado e dois em direção à porta da frente.
“Um milhão de coisas passaram pela cabeça do meu marido. Nenhuma das quais era boa. Ele saiu e os homens o saudaram com emblemas cintilantes da polícia. Ele podia ver que todos tinham armas na cintura.
“Você é fulano de tal?” um deles perguntou, enquanto olhava para uma prancheta. Ele confirmou e foi perguntado se os visitantes poderiam entrar. “Claro, disse meu marido.”
“Em seguida, perguntaram se poderiam revistar a casa, mas fizeram apenas uma revista superficial. Eles caminharam ao redor da sala, estudaram os livros na prateleira (não, não havia nenhuma livro ensinando como fazer bombas ou qualquer receita de bolo anarquista), olharam para todas as nossas fotos, para o nosso quarto e nossos cães. Em seguida, perguntaram se poderiam ir ao quarto do meu filho, mas quando meu marido disse que ele estava dormindo, deixaram para lá.
“A partir dai, a polícia foi enchendo meu marido com perguntas. “De onde você é? De onde são os seus pais?” Eles perguntaram também sobre mim, onde eu estava, onde eu trabalho, onde meus pais moram.  Por fim, perguntaram se tínhamos bombas escondidas.
“Você possui uma panela de pressão?” Meu marido disse que não, mas nós temos uma panela de arroz. “Você pode fazer uma bomba com isso?” Meu marido disse que não, “minha esposa a utiliza para cozinhar quinoa”. “Que diabos é quinoa”, eles perguntaram.
“Senti uma sensação de pavor… As pesquisas que fizemos, por si sós, pareciam bastante inocentes, mas juntas podem fazer alguém suspeito. .. Principalmente eu senti uma grande sensação de ansiedade. Este é o lugar onde estamos. Onde você não tem nenhuma expectativa de privacidade. Onde tentar aprender a cozinhar algumas lentilhas pode colocá-lo em uma lista de observação. Onde você tem de prestar atenção a cada coisa que você faz porque alguém está observando cada pequena coisa que você faz.
“Tudo o que sei é que, se eu for comprar uma panela de pressão em um futuro próximo, não vou fazer isso online. Eu estou com medo. E não das coisas certas.
* ADMINISTRADOR DE EMPRESAS

Big Brother NSA is watching you, and it is not 1984 novel - ForeignPolicy

Meet the NSA's New Data Centers: Russia, China, and Venezuela
Here's something the National Security Agency probably isn't happy to find in Edward Snowden's latest revelation about its activities: The surprising locations of the servers that make up the program X-KEYSCORE, which, according to one leaked agency presentation, has the ability to vacuum up nearly every move a user makes on the Internet.
Those locations reportedly include China, Ecuador, Russia, Sudan, and Venezuela. In short, the NSA has managed to either place or gain access to servers in a collection of countries that are deeply hostile to the United States. Put another way, computer technicians in every one of those countries are probably combing through their systems right now to figure out ways to boot out the NSA.
The image at the top of this post comes from Wednesday's Guardianstory on X-KEYSCORE, which includes a set of slides described as internal NSA training material. The slide in question says that the program includes roughly 150 sites around the world and spans some 700 servers. The Guardian's coverage does not make entirely clear how the program works, but the report seems to outline a system that perches on top of communications infrastructure and sucks up streams of data that the X-KEYSCORE system then sifts into a searchable format. According to the Guardian, the volume of collected information is so large that content is stored on the system for three to five days before being deleted, and metadata stays on the system for 30 days. The picture that emerges is of NSA analysts running searches against a continuous data stream.[[BREAK]]
It doesn't take much imagination to figure out how Chinese officials might feel about the NSA operating a mass-collection system inside its borders. "The Prismgate affair is itself just like a prism that reveals the true face and hypocritical conduct regarding Internet," Defense Ministry spokesman Col. Yang Yujun said earlier this month. "To, on the one hand, abuse one's advantages in information technology for selfish ends, while on the other hand, making baseless accusations against other countries, shows double standards that will be of no help for peace and security in cyberspace." Now the Chinese can add the X-KEYSCORE allegations to their long list of complaints.
Edward Snowden once claimed that while sitting at his desk he had the ability to "wiretap anyone, from you or your accountant, to a federal judge or even the president, if I had a personal email." The X-KEYSCORE revelations appear to at least partially validate that statement -- and the Russian government's decision earlier this month to invest in typewriters in response to the NSA leaks. And it's not just that the NSA is able to collect vast quantities of information -- it's apparently able to do so in almost every corner of the globe. Consider this sampling of countries in which the NSA has an X-KEYSCORE presence: Mexico, Colombia, Brazil, Egypt, Algeria, Nigeria, Spain, France, Germany, Turkey, Pakistan, India, Japan, and even Myanmar.
As for those red dots ringing Antarctica? Why the NSA would have "sites" in the South Pole is anyone's guess.

sexta-feira, 26 de julho de 2013

NSA spy work: the Decision Problem - Goerge Dyson (The Edge)

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THE THIRD CULTURE
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NSA: THE DECISION PROBLEM
by George Dyson
Edge.orgJuly 26, 2013

...The ultimate goal of signals intelligence and analysis is to learn not only what is being said, and what is being done, but what is being thought. With the proliferation of search engines that directly track the links between individual human minds and the words, images, and ideas that both characterize and increasingly constitute their thoughts, this goal appears within reach at last. "But, how can the machine know what I think?" you ask. It does not need to know what you think—no more than one person ever really knows what another person thinks. A reasonable guess at what you are thinking is good enough.

Data mining, on the scale now practiced by Google and the NSA, is the realization of what Alan Turing was getting at, in 1939, when he wondered "how far it is possible to eliminate intuition, and leave only ingenuity," in postulating what he termed an "Oracle Machine." He had already convinced himself of the possibility of what we now call artificial intelligence (in his more precise terms, mechanical intelligence) and was curious as to whether intuition could be similarly reduced to a mechanical procedure—although it might (indeed should) involve non-deterministic steps. He assumed, for sake of argument, that "we do not mind how much ingenuity is required, and therefore assume it to be available in unlimited supply." 

And, as if to discount disclaimers by the NSA that they are only capturing metadata, Turing, whose World War II work on the Enigma would make him one of the patron saints of the NSA, was already explicit that it is the metadata that count. If Google has taught us anything, it is that if you simply capture enough links, over time, you can establish meaning, follow ideas, and reconstruct someone's thoughts. It is only a short step from suggesting what a target may be thinking now, to suggesting what that target may be thinking next. 

Does this not promise a safer world, protected not only from bad actors attempting to do dangerous things, but from bad actors developing dangerous thoughts? Yes, but at what cost? There's a problem, and it's the problem that Alan Turing was trying to answer when he first set us down this path. Turing delivered us into the digital age, as a 24-year-old graduate student, not by building a computer, but by writing a purely mathematical paper, "On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem," published in 1936. The Decision Problem, articulated by Göttingen's David Hilbert, concerned the abstract mathematical question of whether there could ever be any systematic mechanical procedure to determine, in a finite number of steps, whether any given string of symbols represented a provable statement or not. . . . [more: http://www.edge.org/conversation/nsa-the-decision-problem ]


GEORGE DYSON, Science Historian, is the author of TURING'S CATHEDRAL: THE ORIGINS OF THE DIGITAL UNIVERSE, and DARWIN AMONG THE MACHINES.


[ED. NOTE: George Dyson's piece was commissioned by Frank Schirrmacher, co-publisher of the national German newspaper FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG (FAZ), where he is Editor of the Feuilleton, cultural and science pages of the paper. First published by FAZ on July 26, 2013.]

sexta-feira, 12 de julho de 2013

Espionagem eletronica da NSA inconstitucional - Randy E. Bernett

The NSA's Surveillance Is Unconstitutional

Congress or the courts should put a stop to these unreasonable data seizures.

Randy E. Bernett
The Wall Street Journal, July 11, 2013

Due largely to unauthorized leaks, we now know that the National Security Agency has seized from private companies voluminous data on the phone and Internet usage of all U.S. citizens. We've also learned that the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has approved the constitutionality of these seizures in secret proceedings in which only the government appears, and in opinions kept secret even from the private companies from whom the data are seized.
If this weren't disturbing enough, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created by the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform, is compiling a massive database of citizens' personal information—including monthly credit-card, mortgage, car and other payments—ostensibly to protect consumers from abuses by financial institutions.
Reuters
The new National Security Agency (NSA) Utah Data Center facility is seen under construction in Bluffdale, Utah.
All of this dangerously violates the most fundamental principles of our republican form of government. The Fourth Amendment has two parts: First, "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated." Second, that "no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

By banning unreasonable "seizures" of a person's "papers," the Fourth Amendment clearly protects what we today call "informational privacy." Rather than seizing the private papers of individual citizens, the NSA and CFPB programs instead seize the records of the private communications companies with which citizens do business under contractual "terms of service." These contracts do not authorize data-sharing with the government. Indeed, these private companies have insisted that they be compelled by statute and warrant to produce their records so as not to be accused of breaching their contracts and willingly betraying their customers' trust.
As other legal scholars, most notably Yale law professor Akhil Reed Amar, have pointed out, when the Fourth Amendment was ratified in 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights, government agents were liable for damages in civil tort actions for trespass. The Seventh Amendment preserved the right to have a jury composed of ordinary citizens pass upon the "reasonableness" of any searches or seizures. Because judges were not trusted to jealously guard the liberties of the people, the Fourth Amendment restricted the issuance of warrants to the heightened requirements of "probable cause" and specificity.
Over time, as law-enforcement agents were granted qualified immunity from civil suits, it fell mainly to judges to assess the "reasonableness" of a government search or seizure during a criminal prosecution, thereby undermining the original republican scheme of holding law enforcement accountable to citizen juries.
True, judges have long been approving search warrants by relying on ex parte affidavits from law enforcement. With the NSA's surveillance program, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has apparently secretly approved the blanket seizure of data on every American so this "metadata" can later provide the probable cause for a particular search. Such indiscriminate data seizures are the epitome of "unreasonable," akin to the "general warrants" issued by the Crown to authorize searches of Colonial Americans.
Still worse, the way these programs have been approved violates the Fifth Amendment, which stipulates that no one may be deprived of property "without due process of law." Secret judicial proceedings adjudicating the rights of private parties, without any ability to participate or even read the legal opinions of the judges, is the antithesis of the due process of law.

In a republican government based on popular sovereignty, the people are the principals or masters and those in government are merely their agents or servants. For the people to control their servants, however, they must know what their servants are doing.
The secrecy of these programs makes it impossible to hold elected officials and appointed bureaucrats accountable. Relying solely on internal governmental checks violates the fundamental constitutional principle that the sovereign people must be the ultimate external judge of their servants' conduct in office. Yet such judgment and control is impossible without the information that such secret programs conceal. Had it not been for recent leaks, the American public would have no idea of the existence of these programs, and we still cannot be certain of their scope.
Even if these blanket data-seizure programs are perfectly proper now, the technical capability they create makes it far easier for government to violate the rights of the people in the future. Consider why gun rights advocates so vociferously oppose gun registration. By providing the government with information about the location of private arms, gun registries make it feasible for gun confiscation to take place in the future when the political and legal climate may have shifted. The only effective way to prevent the confiscation of firearms tomorrow is to deprive authorities of the means to do so today.
Like gun registries, these NSA and CFPB databanks make it feasible for government workers to peruse the private contents of our electronic communication and financial transactions without our knowledge or consent. All it takes is the will, combined with the right political climate.
Congress or the courts must put a stop to these unreasonable blanket seizures of data and end the jurisdiction of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to secretly adjudicate the constitutionality of surveillance programs. Both practices constitute a present danger to popular sovereignty and the rights retained by the people.
Mr. Barnett is a professor of constitutional law at Georgetown University and the author of "Restoring the Lost Constitution: The Presumption of Liberty" (Princeton University, 2005).
A version of this article appeared July 12, 2013, on page A13 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: The NSA's Surveillance Is Unconstitutional.

domingo, 23 de junho de 2013

O espiao que saiu do frio, parece que voltou para o frio... - NYTimes

The New York Times, June 23, 2013

China Said to Have Made Call to Let Leaker Depart


BEIJING — The Chinese government made the final decision to allow Edward J. Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor, to leave Hong Kong on Sunday, a move that Beijing believed resolved a tough diplomatic problem even as it reaped a publicity windfall from Mr. Snowden’s disclosures, according to people familiar with the situation.
Hong Kong authorities have insisted that their judicial process remained independent of China, but these observers — who like many in this article spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk freely about confidential discussions — said that matters of foreign policy are the domain of the Chinese government, and Beijing exercised that authority in allowing Mr. Snowden to go.
From China’s point of view, analysts said, the departure of Mr. Snowden solved two concerns: how to prevent Beijing’s relationship with the United States from being ensnared in a long legal wrangle in Hong Kong over Mr. Snowden, and how to deal with a Chinese public that widely regards the American computer expert as a hero.
“Behind the door there was definitely some coordination between Hong Kong and Beijing,” said Jin Canrong, professor of international relations at Renmin University in Beijing.
Beijing’s chief concern was the stability of the relationship with the United States, which the Chinese believed had been placed on a surer footing during the meeting between President Xi Jinping and President Obama at the Sunnylands estate in California this month, said Mr. Jin and a person knowledgeable about the Hong Kong government’s handling of Mr. Snowden.
The Chinese government was pleased that Mr. Snowden disclosed the extent of American surveillance of Internet and telephone conversations around the world, giving the Chinese people a chance to talk about what they describe as American hypocrisy regarding surveillance practices, said Mr. Jin and the person familiar with the consultations between Hong Kong and China.
But in the longer term, China’s overall relationship with the United States, which spans global economic, military and security issues, was more important than the feelings of the public in China and Hong Kong, who felt that the contractor should be protected from the reach of the United States, analysts said.
Mainland Chinese officials “will be relieved he’s gone — the popular sentiment in Hong Kong and China is to protect him because he revealed United States surveillance here, but the governments don’t want trouble in the relationship,” said the person familiar with the consultations between Beijing and Hong Kong.
Mr. Snowden went public in Hong Kong on June 9, the day after the meeting between Mr. Obama and Mr. Xi ended, as the source of a series of disclosures in the British newspaper The Guardian and The Washington Post about classified national security programs.
The stream of information about the extent of American worldwide eavesdropping shifted the focus in the public sniping between the Obama administration and China over cybersecurity that had been unfolding for months.
In a series of speeches, senior officials in the Obama administration, including the national security adviser, Tom Donilon, and the defense secretary, Chuck Hagel, had taken the offensive against China, publicly accusing it of cyberespionage against American businesses. Mr. Donilon said in a speech in March that China was responsible for theft of confidential business information and proprietary technologies through digital intrusions on an “unprecedented scale.”
In response to those accusations, China said that it was the victim of cyberattacks from the United States.
Mr. Snowden’s disclosures appeared to confirm the Chinese government’s argument, and put the United States on the defensive. The highly classified documents that Mr. Snowden gave to the two newspapers showed that the N.S.A. compiled logs of virtually all telephone calls in the United States and collected the e-mail of foreigners from American Internet companies.
Mr. Snowden has denied giving China classified documents and said he had spoken only to journalists. But his public statements, directly and to reporters, have contained intelligence information of great interest to China.
Two Western intelligence experts, who worked for major government spy agencies, said they believed that the Chinese government had managed to drain the contents of the four laptops that Mr. Snowden said he brought to Hong Kong, and that he said were with him during his stay at a Hong Kong hotel.
If that were the case, they said, China would no longer need or want to have Mr. Snowden remain in Hong Kong.
The disclosures by Mr. Snowden set off a surge of commentary against American “double faced” and “arrogant” behavior by many users of China’s version of Twitter.
In some instances, the Chinese news media made snide references to what it called the gap between how the United States portrayed itself, and what the United States practiced. “Washington must be grinding its teeth because Snowden’s revelations have almost overturned the image of the U.S. as the defender of a free Internet,” Global Times, which often reflects the official point of view, wrote in an editorial.
The precise details of how the Chinese government dealt with Hong Kong authorities were not immediately known.
But Beijing appears to have decided that weeks of focus on Mr. Snowden in Hong Kong and his disclosures about the American government’s global surveillance practices were enough, and that he could turn into a liability, said a second person familiar with the handling of Mr. Snowden. “Beijing has gotten the most they can out of the Snowden situation,” that person said.
A senior diplomat familiar with the way the Chinese government works said just before the departure of Mr. Snowden became public that he believed that Beijing would do all it could to keep Mr. Snowden out of American hands. The Chinese public would be outraged if the contractor was extradited, put on trial and jailed, he said. At the same time, the Obama administration would put relentless pressure on Beijing to get Mr. Snowden, he said.
“I see the sun of Sunnylands disappearing into the snow of Snowden,” the diplomat said.
Jane Perlez reported from Beijing, and Keith Bradsher from Hong Kong.

domingo, 16 de junho de 2013

Snowden: o espiao que saiu da neve - uma investigacao da Associated Press (Times Union)

AP IMPACT: Snowden'slife surrounded by spycraft
ADAM GELLER, Associated Press, By ADAM GELLER and BRIAN WITTE, Associated Press
Times Union, Saturday, June 15, 2013, 2:09 pm

FORT MEADE, Md. (AP) — In the suburbs edged by woods midway between Baltimore and the nation's capital, residents long joked that the government spy shop next door was so ultra-secretive its initials stood for "No Such Agency." But when Edward Snowden grew up here, the National Security Agency's looming presence was both a very visible and accepted part of everyday life.
When Snowden —the 29-year-old intelligence contractor whose leak of top-secret documents has exposed sweeping government surveillance programs — went to Arundel High School, the agency regularly sent employees from its nearby black-glass headquarters to tutor struggling math students.
When Snowden went on to Anne Arundel Community College in the spring of 1999 after leaving high school halfway through his sophomore year, he arrived on a campus developing a specialty in cybersecurity training for future employees of the NSA and Department of Defense, though, according to the records, he never took such a class.
And when Snowden joined friends in his late teens to edit a website built around a shared interest in Japanese animation, they chartered the venture from an apartment in military housing at Fort George G. Meade, the 8-square-mile installation that houses the NSA center dubbed the Puzzle Palace and calls itself the "nation's pre-eminent center for information, intelligence and cyber."
In this setting, it's easy to see how the young Snowden was exposed to the notion of spycraft as a career, first with the Central Intelligence Agency and later as a systems analyst for two companies under contract to the NSA. But details of his early life — in the agency's shadows and with both parents working for other branches of the federal government — only magnify the contradictions inherent in Snowden's decision to become a leaker.
What, after all, did he think he was getting into when he signed up to work for the nation's espionage agencies? And what specifically triggered a "crisis of conscience" — as described by a friend who knew him when he worked for the CIA — so profound that it convinced him to betray the secrets he was sworn to keep?
The latter is a question that even Snowden, in interviews since his disclosures, has answered piecemeal, describing his decisions as the same ones any thoughtful person would make if put in his position.
"I'm no different from anybody else," he said in a video interview with The Guardian, seated with his back to a mirror in what appears to be a Hong Kong hotel room, the tropical sunlight filtering through a curtained window. "I don't have special skills. I'm just another guy who sits there day to day in the office, watches what's happening and goes: This is not our place to decide. The public needs to decide whether these programs and policies are right or wrong."
Posts to online blogs and forums, public records and interviews with Snowden's neighbors, teachers and acquaintances reveal someone who prized the American ideal of personal freedom but became disenchanted with the way government secretly operates in the name of national security.
Those who knew him describe him as introspective, but seem puzzled by where the mindset led him.
"He's very nice, shy, reserved," Jonathan Mills, the father of Snowden's longtime girlfriend, told The Associated Press outside his home in Laurel, Md. "He's always had strong convictions of right and wrong, and it kind of makes sense, but still, a shock."
Snowden, who was born in 1983, spent his early years in Elizabeth City, N.C., before his family moved to the Maryland suburbs when he was 9. His father, Lonnie, was a warrant officer for the U.S. Coast Guard, since retired. His mother, Elizabeth, who goes by Wendy, went to work for the U.S. District Court in Maryland in 1998 and is now its chief deputy of administration and information technology. An older sister, Jessica, is a lawyer working as a research associate for the Federal Judicial Center in Washington, according to LinkedIn.
In the suburbs south of Baltimore, the younger Snowden attended public elementary and middle schools in Crofton. In the fall of 1997, he enrolled at Arundel High School, a four-year school with about 2,000 students.
At all three schools, many parents worked for the military, nearby federal agencies and the contractors serving them. But those employed at the NSA were tight-lipped, said Jerud Ryker, a math teacher who retired from Arundel in 1998. He recounted conversations over the years with people who mentioned they worked for the spy agency.
"Oh, what do you do?" Ryker says he asked. The answer was always the same: "Nothing that I can talk about."
At Arundel, Snowden stayed only through the first half of his sophomore year, a school district spokesman said. Former teachers and classmates interviewed in the days since he surfaced as the leaker said they had no recollection of him.
It's not clear why he left. Four years later, in a post Snowden wrote for the anime website jokingly explaining his irritation with cartoon convention volunteers, he wrote: "I really am a nice guy, though. You see, I act arrogant and cruel because I was not hugged enough as a child, and because the public education system turned its wretched, spiked back on me."
Years later, he "made a big deal of it (failing to finish high school), just in our everyday conversations,"Mavanee Anderson, who met Snowden when they worked together in Switzerland in 2007, said in an interview with MSNBC. "I think he was slightly embarrassed by it."
With high school behind him, Snowden registered at the community college, taking for-credit classes from 1999 to 2001 and again from 2003 to 2005, as well as some non-credit classes in between, spokeswoman Laurie Farrell said. Snowden told friends and reporters that he later earned a high school GED certificate.
In 2001, Snowden's parents divorced and his father moved to Pennsylvania. The next year his mother bought a gray clapboard-sided condominium in nearby Ellicott City, Md., and her son, then 19, moved in by himself. His mother dropped by with groceries from time to time and a girlfriend visited on weekends, said Joyce Kinsey, a neighbor who lives across the street from the unit, where Snowden's mother now resides.
Otherwise, Snowden appeared most often by himself, said Kinsey, who recalled seeing him working on a computer through the open blinds "at all times of the day and night," a period that coincided with his work on the anime venture, Ryuhana Press.
During this same time, it appears Snowden became a prolific participant in a technology blog, Arstechnica, under the pseudonym TheTrueHOOHA, posting more than 750 comments between late 2001 and mid-2012. In 2002, he posted a query asking for advice about getting an information technology job in Japan and mentioned he was studying Japanese. Later he argued that by pirating poorly made software he was justly punishing companies for their ineptitude.
But he also touched on questions of security and privacy.
In one October 2003 thread, he asked so many questions about how to hide the identity of his computer server that another discussion participant asked why he was being so paranoid.
Snowden's answer: "Patriot Act. If they misinterpret that actions I perform, I could be a cyb4r terrorist and that would be very ... bad."
In another post that fall, he mulled the politics of personal identity.
"This is entirely dependent on the individual -- as is the definition of freedom. Freedom isn't a word the can be (pardon) freely defined," he wrote. "The saying goes, 'Live free or die,' I believe. That seems to intimate a conditional dependence on freedom as a requirement for happiness."
In that discussion, Snowden mentioned that he had identified himself as a Buddhist in paperwork he filled out for the Army. And in May 2004, he enlisted, with aspirations of becoming a Green Beret.
"I wanted to fight in the Iraq war because I felt like I had an obligation as a human being to help free people from oppression," he told The Guardian. "Most of the people training us seemed pumped up about killing Arabs, not helping anyone."
Snowden reported to Fort Benning, Ga., in June 2004, where "he attempted to qualify to become a special forces soldier but did not complete the requisite training and was administratively discharged," said an Army spokesman, Col. David H. Patterson Jr.
Snowden left the Army at the end of that September. He mentioned on the tech forum that he was discharged after breaking both legs in accident, a detail the Army could not confirm.
He returned home, enrolling again in classes at the community college and working through most of 2005 as a security guard at the University of Maryland's Center for Advanced Study of Language, a mile off campus. The center, affiliated with the Department of Defense, says on its LinkedIn page that it was founded after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to help the intelligence community improve language preparedness. But a university spokesman said the center's work is not classified.
When he went public with his decision to leak the NSA's documents, Snowden told interviewers that he studied at Maryland, Johns Hopkins University and the University of Liverpool.
A Maryland spokesman, Crystal Brown, said Snowden did not take classes at the school's flagship campus. However, Robert Ludwig, a spokesman for the University of Maryland University College, which offers classes online and at military bases, said Snowden registered for one term in its Asia Division in the summer of 2009, but did not earn a certificate or degree.
Johns Hopkins said it had no record of Snowden taking classes. The only possibility, the school said, is that he might have enrolled at a private, for-profit entity that offered career training under the name Computer Career Institute at Johns Hopkins University. The university said it ended its relationship with the training school in 2009 and it had since shut down, making it impossible to check any records.
Liverpool said in a statement that Snowden had registered for an online masters' program in computer security in 2011, but never completed it.
Snowden has said that he was hired by the CIA to work on information technology security and in 2007 was assigned by the agency to work in Geneva, Switzerland. Anderson, Snowden's friend at the time, made the same assertion.
The Swiss foreign ministry confirmed that Snowden lived and worked in Geneva, where it says he was accredited to the United Nations as a U.S. Mission employee from March 2007 to February 2009.
Snowden appears to have been well-known among U.S. staff in Geneva, though none of those contacted by the AP would comment about him. But Anderson, who met Snowden when she spent part of 2007 as a legal intern at the mission, said many others can't speak out in his defense, for fear of losing their jobs. In both the cable TV interview and an op-ed piece for Tennessee's Chattanooga Times Free Press, she recalled him fondly as very intelligent — and increasingly troubled about his work.
"During that time period he did quit the CIA, so I knew that he was having a crisis of conscience of sorts," Anderson said in the TV interview. "But I am still surprised, even shocked. He never gave me any indication that he would reveal anything that was top secret." She could not be reached for additional comment.
Snowden told The Guardian he was discouraged by an incident in which he claimed CIA agents tried to recruit a Swiss banker to provide secret information. They purposely got him drunk, Snowden said, and when he was arrested for driving while intoxicated, an agent offered to help as a way to forge a bond.
"Much of what I saw in Geneva really disillusioned me about how my government functions and what its impact is in the world," he said.
Snowden has said he left the embassy to take a job with private contractors for the NSA — first with Dell, the computer company.
That work appears to have taken him to multiple locations. Public records show Snowden had a mailing address with the U.S. military in Asia, and he has said that he worked at an NSA installation on a U.S. military base in Japan. His girlfriend, Lindsay Mills, wrote on her blog that the two had fallen in love with Japanese street festivals.
By then, Snowden and Mills — who was raised in Laurel, Md., on the opposite side of Fort Meade from where Snowden grew up — had long been a couple, albeit a study in contrasts. The 28-year-old Mills, who earned a bachelor's degree in fine arts from the Maryland Institute College of Art, styles herself a performer, frequently posting carefully composed photos to a blog and Facebook page, many of them showing her scantily clad, pole dancing and doing acrobatics.
A friend of Mills from Laurel High School, Erin Shaw, said that back then Mills was a creative spirit, notable in the photography work they did together on the school newspaper, The Shield. But she also was relatively quiet, making it a surprise that she ended up comfortable as a performer, rather than in an arts-related job behind the camera or backstage, Shaw said.
"Lindsay is a wonderful, sweet, caring person who is artistic and beautiful," Shaw said, speaking in the midst of a move from Texas to California. "The idea of caring about state secrets does not occur to me that is anything she would be part of or care about."
After Japan, Snowden's work took him back to Maryland. In March 2012, he listed an address in Columbia when he made a donation to Rep. Ron Paul's campaign for president. But when he made another contribution to the campaign two months later, Snowden listed an address in Hawaii. Mills, his girlfriend, joined him in Hawaii in June of last year, and they settled into a rented blue house on a corner lot fringed with palmettos.
Neighbors said the couple were pleasant, quiet and kept to themselves.
Angel Cunanan, a 79-year-old doctor who lives next door, said he would wave to them and say hello in the morning.
"Sometimes I said, 'Why don't you come in for a cup of coffee?' But they never did," Cunanan said. Cunanan says Snowden said he worked for the military.
Another neighbor, Carolyn Tijing, said the couple always left the blinds closed and stacked the garage from floor to ceiling with moving boxes, so high they blocked any view inside.
Mills' online posts hint at a happy home life in Hawaii together: pictures of sunsets, time on the beach and his-and-hers cups of Japanese shaved ice.
But by January of this year, Snowden secretly was edging forward with a plan to leak NSA documents, contacting documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras with an anonymous offer to share information on U.S. intelligence. The following month he contacted Glenn Greenwald, an American living in Brazil who writes on surveillance issues for The Guardian, as well as Barton Gellman, a reporter for The Washington Post.
In March, Snowden switched employers, moving to contractor Booz Allen Hamilton in Hawaii. The company confirmed he was employee for less than three months, at an annual salary of $122,000.
Snowden and Mills prepared for a May 1 move a couple of blocks away, because the owner of the rental wanted to put it up for sale.
"E and I received the keys to our next abode yesterday," Mills wrote on her blog on April 15. "We took time to envision what each room could look like once we crammed our things in them. And even discussed hanging silks in the two-story main room."
Mills headed back to the East Coast for a visit and when she returned to Hawaii, she wrote, Snowden unexpectedly told her he, too, needed to get away; he told his employer that he needed some time off for medical treatment. On May 20, Snowden flew to Hong Kong.
Three weeks later, as intelligence officials raced to control the damage from the NSA leaks, Snowden revealed himself as the person responsible.
"When you're in positions of privileged access," Snowden told The Guardian, "you see things that may be disturbing...until eventually you realize that these things need to be determined by the public — not by somebody who is simply hired by the government."
(2)
In the suburbs south of Baltimore, the younger Snowden attended public elementary and middle schools in Crofton. In the fall of 1997, he enrolled at Arundel High School, a four-year school with about 2,000 students.
At all three schools, many parents worked for the military, nearby federal agencies and the contractors serving them. But those employed at the NSA were tight-lipped, said Jerud Ryker, a math teacher who retired from Arundel in 1998. He recounted conversations over the years with people who mentioned they worked for the spy agency.
"Oh, what do you do?" Ryker says he asked. The answer was always the same: "Nothing that I can talk about."
At Arundel, Snowden stayed only through the first half of his sophomore year, a school district spokesman said. Former teachers and classmates interviewed in the days since he surfaced as the leaker said they had no recollection of him.
It's not clear why he left. Four years later, in a post Snowden wrote for the anime website jokingly explaining his irritation with cartoon convention volunteers, he wrote: "I really am a nice guy, though. You see, I act arrogant and cruel because I was not hugged enough as a child, and because the public education system turned its wretched, spiked back on me."
Years later, he "made a big deal of it (failing to finish high school), just in our everyday conversations,"Mavanee Anderson, who met Snowden when they worked together in Switzerland in 2007, said in an interview with MSNBC. "I think he was slightly embarrassed by it."
With high school behind him, Snowden registered at the community college, taking for-credit classes from 1999 to 2001 and again from 2003 to 2005, as well as some non-credit classes in between, spokeswoman Laurie Farrell said. Snowden told friends and reporters that he later earned a high school GED certificate.
In 2001, Snowden's parents divorced and his father moved to Pennsylvania. The next year his mother bought a gray clapboard-sided condominium in nearby Ellicott City, Md., and her son, then 19, moved in by himself. His mother dropped by with groceries from time to time and a girlfriend visited on weekends, said Joyce Kinsey, a neighbor who lives across the street from the unit, where Snowden's mother now resides.
Otherwise, Snowden appeared most often by himself, said Kinsey, who recalled seeing him working on a computer through the open blinds "at all times of the day and night," a period that coincided with his work on the anime venture, Ryuhana Press.
During this same time, it appears Snowden became a prolific participant in a technology blog, Arstechnica, under the pseudonym TheTrueHOOHA, posting more than 750 comments between late 2001 and mid-2012. In 2002, he posted a query asking for advice about getting an information technology job in Japan and mentioned he was studying Japanese. Later he argued that by pirating poorly made software he was justly punishing companies for their ineptitude.
But he also touched on questions of security and privacy.
In one October 2003 thread, he asked so many questions about how to hide the identity of his computer server that another discussion participant asked why he was being so paranoid.
Snowden's answer: "Patriot Act. If they misinterpret that actions I perform, I could be a cyb4r terrorist and that would be very ... bad."
In another post that fall, he mulled the politics of personal identity.
"This is entirely dependent on the individual -- as is the definition of freedom. Freedom isn't a word the can be (pardon) freely defined," he wrote. "The saying goes, 'Live free or die,' I believe. That seems to intimate a conditional dependence on freedom as a requirement for happiness."
In that discussion, Snowden mentioned that he had identified himself as a Buddhist in paperwork he filled out for the Army. And in May 2004, he enlisted, with aspirations of becoming a Green Beret.

(3)
"I wanted to fight in the Iraq war because I felt like I had an obligation as a human being to help free people from oppression," he told The Guardian. "Most of the people training us seemed pumped up about killing Arabs, not helping anyone."
Snowden reported to Fort Benning, Ga., in June 2004, where "he attempted to qualify to become a special forces soldier but did not complete the requisite training and was administratively discharged," said an Army spokesman, Col. David H. Patterson Jr.
Snowden left the Army at the end of that September. He mentioned on the tech forum that he was discharged after breaking both legs in accident, a detail the Army could not confirm.
He returned home, enrolling again in classes at the community college and working through most of 2005 as a security guard at the University of Maryland's Center for Advanced Study of Language, a mile off campus. The center, affiliated with the Department of Defense, says on its LinkedIn page that it was founded after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to help the intelligence community improve language preparedness. But a university spokesman said the center's work is not classified.
When he went public with his decision to leak the NSA's documents, Snowden told interviewers that he studied at Maryland, Johns Hopkins University and the University of Liverpool.
A Maryland spokesman, Crystal Brown, said Snowden did not take classes at the school's flagship campus. However, Robert Ludwig, a spokesman for the University of Maryland University College, which offers classes online and at military bases, said Snowden registered for one term in its Asia Division in the summer of 2009, but did not earn a certificate or degree.
Johns Hopkins said it had no record of Snowden taking classes. The only possibility, the school said, is that he might have enrolled at a private, for-profit entity that offered career training under the name Computer Career Institute at Johns Hopkins University. The university said it ended its relationship with the training school in 2009 and it had since shut down, making it impossible to check any records.
Liverpool said in a statement that Snowden had registered for an online masters' program in computer security in 2011, but never completed it.
Snowden has said that he was hired by the CIA to work on information technology security and in 2007 was assigned by the agency to work in Geneva, Switzerland. Anderson, Snowden's friend at the time, made the same assertion.
The Swiss foreign ministry confirmed that Snowden lived and worked in Geneva, where it says he was accredited to the United Nations as a U.S. Mission employee from March 2007 to February 2009.
Snowden appears to have been well-known among U.S. staff in Geneva, though none of those contacted by the AP would comment about him. But Anderson, who met Snowden when she spent part of 2007 as a legal intern at the mission, said many others can't speak out in his defense, for fear of losing their jobs. In both the cable TV interview and an op-ed piece for Tennessee's Chattanooga Times Free Press, she recalled him fondly as very intelligent — and increasingly troubled about his work.
"During that time period he did quit the CIA, so I knew that he was having a crisis of conscience of sorts," Anderson said in the TV interview. "But I am still surprised, even shocked. He never gave me any indication that he would reveal anything that was top secret." She could not be reached for additional comment.
Snowden told The Guardian he was discouraged by an incident in which he claimed CIA agents tried to recruit a Swiss banker to provide secret information. They purposely got him drunk, Snowden said, and when he was arrested for driving while intoxicated, an agent offered to help as a way to forge a bond.
"Much of what I saw in Geneva really disillusioned me about how my government functions and what its impact is in the world," he said.

(4)
Snowden has said he left the embassy to take a job with private contractors for the NSA — first with Dell, the computer company.
That work appears to have taken him to multiple locations. Public records show Snowden had a mailing address with the U.S. military in Asia, and he has said that he worked at an NSA installation on a U.S. military base in Japan. His girlfriend, Lindsay Mills, wrote on her blog that the two had fallen in love with Japanese street festivals.
By then, Snowden and Mills — who was raised in Laurel, Md., on the opposite side of Fort Meade from where Snowden grew up — had long been a couple, albeit a study in contrasts. The 28-year-old Mills, who earned a bachelor's degree in fine arts from the Maryland Institute College of Art, styles herself a performer, frequently posting carefully composed photos to a blog and Facebook page, many of them showing her scantily clad, pole dancing and doing acrobatics.
A friend of Mills from Laurel High School, Erin Shaw, said that back then Mills was a creative spirit, notable in the photography work they did together on the school newspaper, The Shield. But she also was relatively quiet, making it a surprise that she ended up comfortable as a performer, rather than in an arts-related job behind the camera or backstage, Shaw said.
"Lindsay is a wonderful, sweet, caring person who is artistic and beautiful," Shaw said, speaking in the midst of a move from Texas to California. "The idea of caring about state secrets does not occur to me that is anything she would be part of or care about."
After Japan, Snowden's work took him back to Maryland. In March 2012, he listed an address in Columbia when he made a donation to Rep. Ron Paul's campaign for president. But when he made another contribution to the campaign two months later, Snowden listed an address in Hawaii. Mills, his girlfriend, joined him in Hawaii in June of last year, and they settled into a rented blue house on a corner lot fringed with palmettos.
Neighbors said the couple were pleasant, quiet and kept to themselves.
Angel Cunanan, a 79-year-old doctor who lives next door, said he would wave to them and say hello in the morning.
"Sometimes I said, 'Why don't you come in for a cup of coffee?' But they never did," Cunanan said. Cunanan says Snowden said he worked for the military.
Another neighbor, Carolyn Tijing, said the couple always left the blinds closed and stacked the garage from floor to ceiling with moving boxes, so high they blocked any view inside.
Mills' online posts hint at a happy home life in Hawaii together: pictures of sunsets, time on the beach and his-and-hers cups of Japanese shaved ice.
But by January of this year, Snowden secretly was edging forward with a plan to leak NSA documents, contacting documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras with an anonymous offer to share information on U.S. intelligence. The following month he contacted Glenn Greenwald, an American living in Brazil who writes on surveillance issues for The Guardian, as well as Barton Gellman, a reporter for The Washington Post.
In March, Snowden switched employers, moving to contractor Booz Allen Hamilton in Hawaii. The company confirmed he was employee for less than three months, at an annual salary of $122,000.
Snowden and Mills prepared for a May 1 move a couple of blocks away, because the owner of the rental wanted to put it up for sale.
"E and I received the keys to our next abode yesterday," Mills wrote on her blog on April 15. "We took time to envision what each room could look like once we crammed our things in them. And even discussed hanging silks in the two-story main room."
Mills headed back to the East Coast for a visit and when she returned to Hawaii, she wrote, Snowden unexpectedly told her he, too, needed to get away; he told his employer that he needed some time off for medical treatment. On May 20, Snowden flew to Hong Kong.
Three weeks later, as intelligence officials raced to control the damage from the NSA leaks, Snowden revealed himself as the person responsible.
"When you're in positions of privileged access," Snowden told The Guardian, "you see things that may be disturbing...until eventually you realize that these things need to be determined by the public — not by somebody who is simply hired by the government."
 ___
Geller reported from New York. AP writers Oskar Garcia and Anita Hofschneider in Hawaii; John Heilprin in Geneva; Kimberly Dozier, Jack Gillum and Jessica Gresko in Washington, D.C.; Emery Dalesio in Raleigh, N.C.; Brock Vergakis in Elizabeth City, N.C.; Sylvia Hui in London; and AP researchers Judith Ausuebel, Rhonda Shafner and Monika Mathur in New York contributed to this story. Geller can be reached at features @ ap.org. Follow him on Twitter athttp://twitter.com/AdGeller
The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate@ap.org