Mayer new yorker nsa




















I should apologize to the American people. It can be used to eavesdrop on the whole world. When you remove that, you can target anyone.

Binney says that an N. It had no need — it was getting every fish in the sea. Just how much data the NSA is pulling from the American people can be culled from budget documents for the multi-billion dollar data centers the NSA is building around the world.

The 1. According to Devin Coldewey of CrunchGear. There are a thousand gigabytes in a terabyte, a thousand terabytes in a petabyte, a thousand petabytes in an exabyte, a thousand exabytes in a zettabyte, and a thousand zettabytes in a yottabyte. In other words, a yottabyte is 1,,,,,GB.

Are you paranoid yet? By some estimates, a yottabyte is the current size of the entire Internet. Among other things, the report says call data should no longer be collected by the NSA and should instead be kept by the phone companies, with the spy agency needing a court order, on a case-by-case basis, to get at it.

The findings also say as did the Bush-appointed judge, and as critics have been saying for some time that there's no evidence the NSA's contested programs have contributed to fighting terrorism. That last point potentially takes the wind out of the agency's main defensive talking point. If you doubt that all this had the NSA's critics a little giddy, just check out some of this eventful December week's TV appearances by journalist, Internet defender , and Edward Snowden confidant Glenn Greenwald, and watch as he tries -- unsuccessfully -- to contain his glee.

The year ended on a very high note for journalist Glenn Greenwald right and other critics of the NSA. But though these noise-making New Year's Eve developments might have tempted some anti-NSA'ers to bust out the party hats, the situation is far from resolved, and the sort of reform that surveillance critics would call "real" is not ensured. After all, the government will very probably appeal the ruling in the Klayman case ; at least one source says Obama gave the tech companies no guarantee of reform; and the president has already ignored one of his panel's suggestions, opting to keep a single military official in charge of both the NSA and the Pentagon's Cyber Command, rather than split the duties between two chiefs.

James R. Clapper , a judge issued a pro-NSA ruling, saying that the agency's bulk collection of telephony metadata is both reasonable and legal , and calling it a "vital tool" for disrupting terrorist attacks. At some point, the contrary judicial interpretations will have to be reconciled. Jim Sensebrenner R-Wis.

These two trains -- one that codifies bulk collection and the other that outlaws it -- are on a collision course," Gregory Nojeim, senior counsel at privacy advocate the Center for Democracy and Technology, told The Washington Post earlier in the year. The Sensenbrenner-Leahy bill is the one that would do the outlawing. It's designed to, among other things:. Feinstein , a committed supporter of the NSA, has said she believes the agency's call-records program is constitutional and " subject to extensive congressional judicial oversight " and that it "contributes to our national security.

But the bill also would, according to NSA opponent Sen. Ron Wyden D-Ore. That's why a slew of civil liberties groups oppose it. Feinstein has a lot of influence among Democrats in Congress, so her bill shouldn't be taken lightly. On the other hand, during wrangling this past summer over a military-spending bill, Rep. Justin Amash R-Mich. That amendment was defeated by a scant seven votes , so the Sensenbrenner-Leahy bill may have a solid chance on the hill.

It also has the backing of major privacy advocates. The coming year will see various members of Congress campaigning for re-election, and "people in election years usually want to get everything done in the first six months," says Richardson.

That, and the obvious visibility of the NSA issue, may discourage any delays on hashing out these two proposals and ultimately picking a winner. The big news in the judicial realm as we head into ? The cat's out of the secret court. Oh, and there's a chance privacy law will catch up to the Digital Age.

Leon, in a case called Klayman v. Obama, is the one who in late December called the NSA's bulk collection of phone metadata "almost Orwellian. In his ruling, Leon wrote that "while Congress has great latitude to create statutory schemes like FISA, it may not hang a cloak of secrecy over the Constitution.

And so, in the words of the EFF's Opsahl, "over the course of the next year, we're going to have open-court analysis of these programs, where judges will have heard from both sides and seen the problems with the government's arguments, and I think that's going to be very useful for assessing the legality and also helping the judges and the public understand what's going on. What, then, is likely to come up? And what of the Digital Age? Well, as the Klayman case goes to appeal -- and other cases, such as those filed by the EFF and the ACLU , wend their way through the courts -- we'll no doubt be hearing a fair amount about two Supreme Court cases: Smith v.

Maryland, from , and 's United States v. You never asked for credit. We only know you are Alfreda Bikowsky because of journalist Glenn Greenwald, who has problems with authority. Glenn defied the CIA to identify you in an article for The Intercept , an investigative news website that purposely operates outside the parameters of mainstream media.

Thanks a lot, Glenn Greenwald. I said that sarcastically, Ms. Or, if I may: I said that sarcastically, Your Majesty. There can be hard feelings. Like, I can only guess how you feel now. Dexter Filkins covered the American invasion of Afghanistan when he was a reporter for the New York Times, and has continued to report on Aretha Franklin was the Queen of Soul, the greatest voice of her generation, an eighteen-time Grammy Award winner whose career spanned five For a few brief moments this summer, in places where the vaccination rate was high, we could imagine life after COVID restaurants and Jack Antonoff has had a busy pandemic.

Sought out by Taylor Swift as a producer, he ultimately made two records for her—one of which, Should the Climate Movement Embrace Sabotage? Recommended episodes :.



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