Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Edward Snowden

Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2014 4:58 PM

Edward Snowden
Edward Snowden
Edward Snowden-2.jpg
Screen capture from the interview with Glenn Greenwald andLaura Poitras on June 6, 2013
BornEdward Joseph Snowden
June 21, 1983 (age 30)
Elizabeth City, North Carolina, United States
ResidenceRussia (temporary asylum)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationSystem administrator
EmployerBooz Allen Hamilton[1]
Kunia, Hawaii, US
(until June 10, 2013)
Known forRevealing details of classified United States government surveillance programs
Home townWilmington, North Carolina
Criminal charge
Theft of government property, unauthorized communication of national defense information, and willful communication of classified intelligence to an unauthorized person (June 2013).
AwardsSam Adams Award[2]
Edward Joseph Snowden (born June 21, 1983) is an American computer specialist, a former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) employee, and formerNational Security Agency (NSA) contractor who disclosed a large number of top secret NSA documents to several media outlets . The leaked documentsrevealed operational details of a global surveillance apparatus run by the NSA and other members of the Five Eyes alliance, along with numerous commercial and international partners.[3]
The release of classified material was called the most significant leak in US history by Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg. A series of exposésbeginning June 5, 2013 revealed Internet surveillance programs such asPRISMXKeyscore and Tempora, as well as the interception of US and European telephone metadata. The reports were based on documents Snowden leaked to The Guardian and The Washington Post while employed by NSA contractor Booz Allen Hamilton. By November 2013, The Guardian had published one percent of the documents, with "the worst yet to come".
Snowden flew to Hong Kong from his home in Hawaii on May 20, 2013, where he later met with journalists Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras and released his copies of the NSA documents.[4][5] After disclosing his identity, he flew from Hong Kong and landed at Moscow's Sheremetyevo International Airport on June 23, reportedly for a one-night layover en route to Ecuador.[6] US officials revoked his passport upon his arrival in Russia, where he remained stranded in the airport transit zone until August 1,[7] when the Russian government granted him a one-year temporary asylum, renewable annually.
A subject of controversy, Snowden has been variously called a hero,[8][9][10] awhistleblower,[11][12][13][14] a dissident,[15] a traitor,[16][17][18] and a patriot.[19][20][21] Snowden's "sole motive" for leaking the documents was, in his words, "to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them."[22] The disclosures have fueled debates over mass surveillancegovernment secrecy, and the balance between national security and information privacy. Two court rulings since the initial leaks have split on the constitutionality of the NSA's program to collect metadata on nearly every telephone call made in or to the United States.
Snowden is considered a fugitive by American authorities who in June 2013 charged him with espionage and theft of government property.[23] In early 2014, numerous media outlets and politicians issued calls for leniency in the form of clemency,amnesty or pardon, while others called for him to be imprisoned or killed.[24][25] He lives in an undisclosed location in Russia and, according to German politician Hans-Christian Ströbele, continues to seek permanent asylum "in a 'democratic' country" such as Germany or France.[26]


Background

Childhood, family, and education

Edward Joseph Snowden was born on June 21, 1983,[27] in Elizabeth City, North Carolina[28] and grew up in Wilmington, North Carolina.[29] His father, Lonnie Snowden, a resident of Pennsylvania, was an officer in the United States Coast Guard,[30] and his mother, a resident of Baltimore, Maryland, is a clerk at the United States District Court in Maryland.[29][31] His parents are divorced, and his father has remarried.[32] Friends and neighbors described Snowden as shy, quiet and nice. One longtime friend said that he was always articulate, even as a child.[31] Speaking in an interview, Snowden's father described his son as "a sensitive, caring young man", and "a deep thinker".[33]
By 1999, Snowden had moved with his family to Ellicott City, Maryland.[29] He studied at Anne Arundel Community College[29] to gain the credits necessary to obtain a high-school diploma but he did not complete the coursework.[34][35] Snowden's father explained that his son had missed several months of school owing to illness and, rather than return, took and passed the tests for his GED at a local community college.[22][33][36]
Snowden worked online toward a Master's Degree at the University of Liverpool in 2011.[37] Having worked at a US military base in Japan, Snowden was reportedly interested in Japanese popular culture, had studied the Japanese language,[38] and also worked for an anime company domiciled in the US.[39][40] He also said he had a basic understanding of Mandarin Chinese and was deeply interested in martial arts and, at age 19 or 20, listed Buddhism as his religion on a military recruitment form, noting that the choice of agnostic was "strangely absent".[41] Snowden told The Washington Post that he was an ascetic, rarely left the house and had few needs.[42]
Before leaving for Hong Kong, Snowden resided in Waipahu, Hawaii, with his girlfriend.[43] According to local real estate agents, they moved out of their home on May 1, 2013.[35]

Political views

Snowden has said that in the 2008 presidential election, he voted for a third-party candidate. He has stated he had been planning to make disclosures about NSA surveillance programs at the time, but he decided to wait because he "believed in Obama's promises". He was later disappointed that Obama "continued with the policies of his predecessor".[44] For the 2012 election, political donation records indicate that he contributed to the primary campaign of Republican candidate Ron Paul.[45][46]
Several sources have alleged that Snowden, under the pseudonym "TheTrueHOOHA", authored hundreds of posts on technology news provider Ars Technica's chat rooms.[47][48][49] The poster discussed a variety of political topics. In a January 2009 entry, TheTrueHOOHA exhibited strong support for the United States' security state apparatus and said he believed leakers of classified information "should be shot in the balls".[50] However, in February 2010 TheTrueHOOHA wrote, "Did we get to where we are today via a slippery slope that was entirely within our control to stop, or was it an relatively instantaneous sea change that sneaked in undetected because of pervasive government secrecy?"[51]
In accounts published in June 2013, interviewers noted that Snowden's laptop displayed stickers supporting internet freedomorganizations including the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the Tor Project.[22] Snowden considers himself "neither traitor nor hero. I'm an American".[52]

Career

On May 7, 2004, Snowden enlisted in the United States Army Reserve as a Special Forces recruit but did not complete any training.[27][53] He said he wanted to fight in the Iraq War because he "felt like [he] had an obligation as a human being to help free people from oppression."[22] In an email to The Guardian, the US Army confirmed his enlistment as Special Forces recruit and said he was discharged on September 28, 2004. The email said, "He did not complete any training or receive any awards".[54] Snowden stated that this was the result of breaking both of his legs in a training accident.[55]
His next employment was as a National Security Agency (NSA) security guard for the Center for Advanced Study of Language at the University of Maryland,[56] before, he said, joining the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to work on IT security.[57] A Reutersreport stated that from 2005 to mid-2006 he worked for a classified intelligence agency in Washington, DC.[58] He joined the CIA in 2006.[59] In May 2006 Snowden wrote in Ars Technica that he had no trouble getting work because he was a "computer wizard". In August he wrote about a possible path in government service, perhaps involving China, but said it "just doesn't seem like as much 'fun' as some of the other places".[53]
In 2007, the CIA stationed Snowden with diplomatic cover in Geneva, Switzerland, where he was responsible for maintaining computer network security.[60] Snowden described his CIA experience in Geneva as "formative", stating that the CIA deliberately got a Swiss banker drunk and encouraged him to drive home. Snowden said that when the latter was arrested, a CIA operative offered to intervene and later recruited the banker.[61] Swiss Federal Council President Ueli Maurer said it did not seem likely "that this incident played out as it has been described by Snowden and by the media".[62] The revelations were said to have come at a sensitive time as the United States was pressing the Swiss government to increase banking transparency.[63] Eric Schmitt of The New York Times stated that "two senior American officials" told him that, prior to the end of Snowden's term, Snowden's supervisor wrote a negative report that stated suspicions of Snowden attempting to obtain classified information not authorized to him.[64] The Times later reported that the CIA had sent a statement, clarifying: "The CIA did not file any report on Snowden indicating that it suspected he was trying to break into classified computer files to which he did not have authorized access while he was employed at the CIA...".[65] When Snowden talked about the report to the Times' James Risen, a different story emerged. He said that he had tried to go through proper channels of reporting a flaw, and the result was a critical report in his file.[66]
Snowden left the CIA in 2009 and began work for Dell, a private contractor, inside an NSA facility on a US military base in Japan.[22] Snowden remained on the Dell payroll until early 2013.[67] He was one of around 1,000 NSA "sysadmins" allowed to look at many parts of the system without leaving an electronic trace and able to argue for the use of thumb drives in a secure environment.[68] Persons familiar with the 2013 government investigation into Snowden's history said that Snowden had downloaded sensitive NSA material in April 2012.[69] NSA Director Keith Alexander has said that Snowden held a position at the NSA for the twelve months prior to his next job as a consultant,[70] with top secret Sensitive Compartmented Informationclearances.[71] Snowden took a six-day Certified Ethical Hacker training course in 2010 in India.[72][73][74][75] USIS completed a background check on Snowden in 2011.[76] On January 23, 2014, the US Department of Justice filed fraud charges against the USIS for routinely failing to properly investigate individuals.[77][78] The company falsified 665,000 background checks on government employees.[79]
Snowden described his life as "very comfortable", earning a salary of "roughly US$200,000".[80] At the time of his departure from the United States in May 2013, he had been employed by consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton for less than three months inside the NSA at the Kunia Regional SIGINT Operations Center in Hawaii,[81][82][83] earning $122,000.[84] While intelligence officials have described his position there as a "system administrator", Snowden has said he was an "infrastructure analyst", which meant that his job was to look for new ways to break into Internet and telephone traffic around the world.[85] He said he had taken a pay cut to work at Booz Allen,[86] and that he sought employment in order to gather data on NSA surveillance around the world so he could leak it.[87] According to Reuters, while in Hawaii Snowden "persuaded between 20 and 25 fellow workers" to give him their logins and passwords "by telling them they were needed for him to do his job as a computer systems administrator".[88][89] This allegation was later refuted by a source inside the NSA and by Snowden himself.[90] In a live chat in January 2014, he said that the Reuters report was "simply wrong", continuing, "I never stole any passwords, nor did I trick an army of co-workers."[91] Snowden's employment was terminated on June 10, 2013, "for violations of the firm's code of ethics and firm policy".[84][92]
Using 'internal channels of dissent', Snowden said that he told multiple employees and two supervisors about his concerns. An NSA spokesperson responded, saying they had "not found any evidence to support Mr. Snowden's contention that he brought these matters to anyone's attention".[93] Snowden elaborated in January 2014, saying "[I] made tremendous efforts to report these programs to co-workers, supervisors, and anyone with the proper clearance who would listen. The reactions of those I told about the scale of the constitutional violations ranged from deeply concerned to appalled, but no one was willing to risk their jobs, families, and possibly even freedom to go to through what Drake did."[91]
A source "with detailed knowledge on the matter" told Reuters that hiring screeners for Booz Allen had found some details of Snowden's education that "did not check out precisely", but decided to hire him anyway; Reuters stated that the element which triggered these concerns, or the manner in which Snowden satisfied the concerns, were not known.[94] The résumé stated that Snowden attended computer-related classes at Johns Hopkins University. A spokesperson for Johns Hopkins said that the university did not find records to show that Snowden attended the university, and suggested that he may instead have attended Advanced Career Technologies, a private for-profit organization which operated as "Computer Career Institute at Johns Hopkins".[94] The University College of the University of Maryland acknowledged that Snowden had attended a summer session at a UM campus in Asia. Snowden's resume stated that he estimated that he would receive a University of Liverpool computer security master's degree in 2013. The university said that Snowden registered for an online master's degree program in computer security in 2011 but that "he is not active in his studies and has not completed the program".[94]
A former NSA co-worker told Forbes that although the NSA was full of smart people, Edward Snowden was "a genius among geniuses". He was described as a "principled and ultra-competent, if somewhat eccentric employee, and one who earned the access used to pull off his leak by impressing superiors with sheer talent". Snowden created a backup system for the NSA that was implemented, and often pointed out security bugs to the agency. The former colleague said Snowden was "given full administrator privileges, with virtually unlimited access to NSA data" because he could "do things nobody else could". Snowden had been offered a position on the NSA's elite staff of hackersTailored Access Operations (TAO), but turned it down for the contractor position at Booz Allen.[95]

Global surveillance leaks

The exact size of Snowden's disclosure is unknown, but the following estimates have been put up by various government officials: 15,000 or more Australian intelligence files, according to Australian officials;[96] at least 58,000 British intelligence files, according to British officials;[97] and roughly 1.7 million US intelligence files, according to US officials.[98]

Disclosure

Snowden first made contact with Glenn Greenwald, a journalist working at The Guardian, in late 2012.[99] He contacted Greenwald anonymously and said he had "sensitive documents" that he would like to share.[100] Greenwald found the measures that the source asked him to take to secure their communications, such as encrypting email, too annoying to employ. Snowden then contacted documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras in January 2013.[101] According to Poitras, Snowden chose to contact her after seeing her New York Times documentary[102] about NSA whistleblower William BinneyThe Guardian reported that what originally attracted Snowden to both Greenwald and Poitras was a Salon article penned by Greenwald detailing how Poitras' controversial films had made her a "target of the government".[100][103] Greenwald began working with Snowden in either February[104] or in April after Poitras asked Greenwald to meet her in New York City, at which point Snowden began providing documents to them both.[99] Barton Gellman, writing for The Washington Post, says his first "direct contact" was on May 16, 2013.[105] According to Gellman, Snowden approached Greenwald after the Post declined to guarantee publication of all 41 of the PRISM PowerPoint slides within 72 hours and publish online an encrypted code allowing Snowden the ability to later prove that he was the source.[105]
Snowden communicated using encrypted email,[101] using the codename "Verax". He asked not to be quoted at length for fear of identification by stylometry.[105]
According to Gellman, prior to their first meeting in person, Snowden wrote, "I understand that I will be made to suffer for my actions, and that the return of this information to the public marks my end."[105] Snowden also told Gellman that until the articles were published, the journalists working with him would also be at mortal risk from the United States Intelligence Community "if they think you are the single point of failure that could stop this disclosure and make them the sole owner of this information."[105]
In May 2013, Snowden was permitted temporary leave from his position at the NSA in Hawaii, on the pretext of receiving treatment for his epilepsy.[22] In mid-May Snowden gave an electronic interview to Poitras and Jacob Appelbaum which was published weeks later by Der Spiegel.[106]
After disclosing the copied documents, Snowden promised that nothing would stop subsequent disclosures. In June 2013, he said, "All I can say right now is the US government is not going to be able to cover this up by jailing or murdering me. Truth is coming, and it cannot be stopped."[107]

Publication

On May 20, 2013, Snowden flew to Hong Kong,[108][109] where he was staying when the initial articles based on the leaked documents were published,[108][110] beginning on June 5.[111][112] Within months, documents had been obtained and published by media outlets worldwide, most notably The Guardian (Britain), Der Spiegel (Germany), The Washington Post andThe New York Times (US), O Globo (Brazil), Le Monde (France), and similar outlets in Sweden, Canada, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, and Australia.[113] In 2014, NBC broke its first story based on the leaked documents.[114]

Leaks

Slide from an NSA presentation on "Google Cloud Exploitation" from itsMUSCULAR program;[115]the sketch shows where the "Public Internet" meets the internal "Google Cloud" where user data resides[116]
Logo for the XKeyscoreprogram
A reference to Tailored Access Operations (TAO) in an XKeyscore slide
The ongoing publication of leaked Western government documents has revealed previously unknown details of a global surveillance apparatus run by the United States' NSA[117] in close cooperation with its Five Eyes partners: Australia (ASD),[118]Great Britain (GCHQ),[119] Canada (CSEC),[120] and New Zealand (GCSB), along with cooperation from the security agencies of "most other Western countries".[3][121]
The Guardian's editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger said in November 2013 that only one percent of the documents had been published.[122] Officials warned that "the worst is yet to come", a sentiment echoed by Glenn Greenwald and by Lon Snowden.[123][124][125] The extent of the leaks may never be known, according to US investigators, due in part to outdated software at the Hawaiian NSA facility.[126] NSA Director Keith Alexander initially estimated that Snowden had copied anywhere from 50,000 to 200,000 NSA documents.[127] Later estimates ran as high as 1.7 million.[128]
Media reports documenting the existence and functions of classified surveillance programs and their scope began on June 5, 2013 and continued throughout the entire year. The first program to be revealed was PRISM, with reports from both The Washington Post and The Guardian published an hour apart. PRISM allows for a court-approved, front-door access to Americans' Google and Yahoo accounts.[115][129] The Post's Barton Gellman was the first journalist to report on Snowden's documents. He said the US government urged him not to specify by name which companies were involved, but Gellman decided that to name them "would make it real to Americans".[130] Reports also revealed details of Tempora, a British black-ops surveillance program run by the NSA's British partner, GCHQ.[131][132] The initial reports included details about NSA call databaseBoundless Informant, and of a secret court order requiring Verizon to hand the NSA millions of Americans' phone records daily,[133] the surveillance of French citizens' phone and internet records, and those of "high-profile individuals from the world of business or politics".[134][135][136] XKeyscore, which allows for the collection of 'almost anything done on the internet', was described by The Guardian as a program that "shed light" on one of Snowden's more contentious claims: "I, sitting at my desk [could] wiretap anyone, from you or your accountant, to a federal judge or even the president, if I had a personal email".[137]
It was revealed that the NSA was harvesting millions of email and instant messaging contact lists,[138] searching email content,[139] tracking and mapping the location of cell phones,[140] undermining attempts at encryption via Bullrun[141][142] and that the agency was using cookies to "piggyback" on the same tools used by internet advertisers "to pinpoint targets for government hacking and to bolster surveillance".[143] The NSA was shown to be "secretly" tapping into Yahoo and Google data centers to collect information from "hundreds of millions" of account holders worldwide by tapping undersea cables using the MUSCULARprogram.[115][116]
The NSA, the US CIA and GCHQ spied on users of Second Life and World of Warcraft by creating make-believe characters as a way to "hide in plain sight".[144] Leaked documents showed NSA agents spied on their "love interests", a practice NSA employees termed LOVEINT.[145][146] The NSA was also shown to be tracking the online sexual activity of people they termed "radicalizers", in order to discredit them.[147] The NSA was accused of going "beyond its core mission of national security" when articles were published showing the NSA's intelligence-gathering operations had targeted Brazil's largest oil company,Petrobras.[148] The NSA and the GCHQ were also shown to be surveilling charities including Unicef and Médecins du Monde, as well as allies such as the EU chief and the Israeli Prime Minister.[149]
By October 2013, Snowden's disclosures had created tensions[150][151] between the US and some of its close allies after they revealed that the US had spied on Brazil, France, Mexico,[152] Britain,[153] China,[154] Germany,[155] and Spain,[156] as well as 35 world leaders,[157] most notably German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who said "spying among friends" was "unacceptable"[158] and compared the NSA with the Stasi.[159]
The NSA's top-secret "black budget", obtained from Snowden by The Washington Post, exposed the "successes and failures" of the 16 spy agencies comprising the US intelligence community,[160] and revealed that the NSA was paying US private tech companies for "clandestine access" to their communications networks.[161] The agencies were allotted $52 billion for the 2013 fiscal year.[162]
An NSA mission statement titled "Sigint Strategy 2012–2016" affirmed that the NSA plans for continued expansion of surveillance activities. Their stated goal was to "dramatically increase mastery of the global network" and "acquire the capabilities to gather intelligence on anyone, anytime, anywhere."[163][164]
In July 2013, Greenwald said that Snowden had additional sensitive information about the NSA he had chosen not to make public, including "very sensitive, detailed blueprints of how the NSA does what they do".[165] A joint statement issued by theHouse Intelligence Committee's Republican Chairman and Ranking Democrat in January 2014 asserted that "Though press reporting to date has focused on NSA’s foreign intelligence collection, much of the information stolen by Snowden is related to current U.S. military operations."[166] A U.S. intelligence official told The Daily Beast that Snowden had fabricated the identity of more than one user who had extensive access and this allowed Snowden to take documents indicating how the U.S. coordinated its satellite coverage, potentially allowing military adversaries to better hide their assets.[167]
In a December 2013 letter to the people of Brazil, Snowden wrote:
"There is a huge difference between legal programs, legitimate spying ... and these programs of dragnet mass surveillance that put entire populations under an all-seeing eye and save copies forever ... These programs were never about terrorism: they're about economic spying, social control, and diplomatic manipulation. They're about power."[168]

Motivations

Snowden's identity was made public by The Guardian at his request on June 9, 2013.[104] He explained: "I have no intention of hiding who I am because I know I have done nothing wrong."[22] He added that by revealing his identity he hoped to protect his colleagues from being subjected to a hunt to determine who had been responsible for the leaks.[169] According to Poitras, who filmed the interview with Snowden in Hong Kong, he had initially not wanted to be seen on camera, because "he didn't want the story to be about him."[170] Poitras says she convinced him it was necessary to have him give an account of the leaked documents' significance on film: "I knew that the mainstream media interpretation would be predictable and narrow, but because to have somebody who understands how this technology works, who is willing to risk their life to expose it to the public, and that we could hear that articulated, would reach people in ways that the documents themselves wouldn't." [170] Snowden explained his actions saying: "I don't want to live in a society that does these sort of things [surveillance on its citizens]... I do not want to live in a world where everything I do and say is recorded... My sole motive is to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them."[171] Snowden said in a later interview that his "mission's already accomplished" and that he had already won.[42] He declared:
For me, in terms of personal satisfaction, the mission’s already accomplished. I already won. As soon as the journalists were able to work, everything that I had been trying to do was validated. Because, remember, I didn’t want to change society. I wanted to give society a chance to determine if it should change itself. All I wanted was for the public to be able to have a say in how they are governed.[42]
When Snowden met with representatives of human rights organizations on July 12, he said:
The 4th and 5th Amendments to the Constitution of my country, Article 12 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and numerous statutes and treaties forbid such systems of massive, pervasive surveillance. While the US Constitution marks these programs as illegal, my government argues that secret court rulings, which the world is not permitted to see, somehow legitimize an illegal affair....
I believe in the principle declared at Nuremberg in 1945: "Individuals have international duties which transcend the national obligations of obedience. Therefore individual citizens have the duty to violate domestic laws to prevent crimes against peace and humanity from occurring."[172]
Snowden said that in the past, whistleblowers had been 'destroyed by the experience', and that he wanted to "embolden others to step forward" by demonstrating that "they can win".[173] In October, Snowden spoke out again on his motivations for the leaks in an interview with The New York Times, saying that the system for reporting problems does not work. "You have to report wrongdoing to those most responsible for it", Snowden explained, and pointed out the lack of whistleblower protection for government contractors, the use of the 1917 Espionage Act to prosecute leakers, and his belief that had he used internal mechanisms to 'sound the alarm', his revelations "would have been buried forever".[174][175]
In December 2013, upon learning that a US federal judge had ruled the collection of US phone metadata conducted by the NSA as likely unconstitutional, Snowden stated: "I acted on my belief that the NSA's mass surveillance programs would not withstand a constitutional challenge, and that the American public deserved a chance to see these issues determined by open courts...today, a secret program authorized by a secret court was, when exposed to the light of day, found to violate Americans' rights. It is the first of many."[176] Snowden, in his words, "didn't want to change society", he "wanted to give society a chance to determine if it should change itself."[42]
In a December 2013 interview, Snowden spoke to the question of 'who elected' him to expose the NSA surveillance programs:
Dianne Feinstein elected me when she asked softball questions [in committee hearings]. Mike Rogers elected me when he kept these programs hidden. . . . The FISA court elected me when they decided to legislate from the bench on things that were far beyond the mandate of what that court was ever intended to do. The system failed comprehensively, and each level of oversight, each level of responsibility that should have addressed this, abdicated their responsibility.
It wasn't that they put it on me as an individual – that I'm uniquely qualified, an angel descending from the heavens – as that they put it on someone, somewhere ... You have the capability, and you realize every other [person] sitting around the table has the same capability but they don't do it. So somebody has to be the first.[42]
Snowden, in a January 2014 interview, said that the "breaking point" which lead to his leaks was "seeing the Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, directly lie under oath to Congress." He furthered, "There’s no saving an intelligence community that believes it can lie to the public and the legislators who need to be able to trust it and regulate its actions. Seeing that really meant for me there was no going back. Beyond that, it was the creeping realization that no one else was going to do this. The public had a right to know about these programs."[177]

Flight from the US

Hong Kong

Protesters rally in Hong Kong to support Edward Snowden, June 15, 2013
In May 2013 Snowden took a leave of absence, telling his supervisors he was returning to the mainland for epilepsy treatment, but instead left Hawaii for Hong Kong[178] where he arrived on May 20. Wikileaks reported that he was seeking asylum in Iceland because of the country's "shared values".[22][179] Iceland's ambassador to China said Icelandic law requires that asylum applications be made from within Iceland.[180] Snowden explained why he did not go directly from the US to Iceland: "Leaving the US was an incredible risk, NSA employees must declare their foreign travel 30 days in advance and are monitored. There was a distinct possibility I would be interdicted en route, so I had to travel with no advance booking to a country with the cultural and legal framework to allow me to work without being immediately detained. Hong Kong provided that. Iceland could be pushed harder, quicker, before the public could have a chance to make their feelings known, and I would not put that past the current US administration."[86]
Snowden vowed to challenge any extradition attempt by the US government, and had reportedly approached Hong Kong human rights lawyers.[181] Snowden told the South China Morning Post that he planned to remain in Hong Kong until "asked to leave",[182] adding that his intention was to let the "courts and people of Hong Kong" decide his fate.[183] While in Hong Kong Snowden supplied information about US intelligence operations in China to the Post, which Glenn Greenwald explained as reflecting "a need to ingratiate himself to the people of Hong Kong and China."[184] In late August the Russian newspaper Kommersantreported that Snowden was living at the Russian consulate shortly before his departure from Hong Kong to Moscow.[185] Anatoly Kucherena rejected the Kommersant story, stating that Snowden "did not enter into any communication with our diplomats when he was in Hong Kong."[186][187] Kucherena became Snowden's lawyer in July and was then head of the Russian Interior ministry's public council,[188] in addition to serving as a member[189] of the public council for the Federal Security Service (FSB).[190] In early September, however, Russian president Vladimir Putin acknowledged that "Mr. Snowden first appeared in Hong Kong and met with our diplomatic representatives."[191] Ben Wizner, a lawyer with the ACLU and legal adviser to Snowden, said in January 2014 "Every news organization in the world has been trying to confirm that story. They haven’t been able to, because it’s false."[192]
US officials revoked Snowden's passport on June 22.[193][194] On June 23 Snowden boarded the commercial Aeroflot flight SU213 to Moscow, accompanied by Sarah Harrison of WikiLeaks.[195][196] Hong Kong authorities said that Snowden had not been detained as requested by the United States, because the United States' extradition request had not fully complied with Hong Kong law,[197][198][199] and there was no legal basis to prevent Snowden from leaving.[200][201][Notes 1] On June 24, U.S. State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said "we’re just not buying that this was a technical decision by a Hong Kong immigration official. This was a deliberate choice by the government to release a fugitive despite a valid arrest warrant.... though the Privacy Act prohibits me from talking about Mr. Snowden’s passport specifically, I can say that the Hong Kong authorities were well aware of our interest in Mr. Snowden and had plenty of time to prohibited his travel."[204] That same day, Julian Assange said that WikiLeaks had paid for Snowden's lodging in Hong Kong and his flight out.[205] Assange would later say that "While Venezuela and Ecuador could protect him in the short term, over the long term there could be a change in government. In Russia, he's safe, he's well-regarded, and that is not likely to change."[178] When Assange was asked "What was the most difficult part on getting Snowden out of the U.S.?" Assange said he wasn't sure he could answer the question given "the legal situation".[206]

Russia

Arrival at Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow on June 23, 2013
On June 23, 2013, Snowden landed in Moscow's Sheremetyevo international airport.[207][208][209] Wikileaks stated that he was "bound for the Republic of Ecuador via a safe route for the purposes of asylum".[210] According to Gellman, Snowden "didn't choose Russia. He was literally changing planes in the Moscow airport when the United States revoked his passport. He was stuck there by that. He's said from the beginning that he wanted asylum in a Western country, for example, Iceland, that, from his point of view, respects rights of free speech and whistleblowers. He is not looking to live in a country like Russia or China."[211] A US official said that Snowden's passport was annulled before he left Hong Kong[212] and along with other sources, such as legal expert James C. Hathaway, said not having a passport would not prevent Russia from allowing Snowden to board an onward flight as a matter of law.[213][214][215]
Snowden remained in the Sheremetyevo transit zone for 39 days until being granted temporary asylum by the Russian government on August 1. In a statement made on July 1, Snowden said:
Although I am convicted of nothing, [the US government] has unilaterally revoked my passport, leaving me a stateless person. Without any judicial order, the administration now seeks to stop me exercising a basic right. A right that belongs to everybody. The right to seek asylum."[216][217]
According to Russian news services, Snowden had a seat reserved to continue on to Cuba within 24 hours of arriving in Moscow.[218][219] Snowden did not board that onward flight, however, saying in a January 2014 interview that he was "stopped en route" despite an intention to be "only transiting through Russia". According to Snowden, "I was ticketed for onward travel via Havana — a planeload of reporters documented the seat I was supposed to be in — but the State Department decided they wanted me in Moscow, and cancelled my passport." He decided to remain in Russia because whilst he was "considering possibilities for asylum in Latin America, the United States forced down the Bolivian President’s plane." He said that he would travel from Russia if there was no interference from the US government.[192]

Morales plane incident

On July 1, 2013, president Evo Morales of Bolivia, who had been attending a conference of gas-exporting countries in Russia, suggested during an interview with Russia Today that he would be 'willing to consider a request' for asylum.[220] The following day, Morales' plane en route to Bolivia was rerouted to Austria and reportedly searched there after France, Spain and Italy denied access to their airspace.[221][222][223] US officials had raised suspicions that Snowden may have been on board.[224][225]Morales blamed the US for putting pressure on European countries, and said that the grounding of his plane was a violation of international law.[226]

Asylum applications

Snowden had applied for political asylum to 20 countries by July 1.[227] A statement attributed to Snowden also contended that the US administration, and specifically Vice President Joe Biden, had pressured the governments of these countries to refuse his petition for asylum.[228] In a July 1 statement published by WikiLeaks, Snowden accused the US government of "using citizenship as a weapon" and using what he described as "old, bad tools of political aggression". Citing Obama's promise to not allow "wheeling and dealing" over the case, Snowden commented "This kind of deception from a world leader is not justice, and neither is the extralegal penalty of exile."[229]
Snowden made a second batch of applications for asylum to 6 more countries several days later, but declined to name them citing prior interference by US officials.[230][231] Finland, Germany, India, Poland, Norway, Austria, Italy, and the Netherlands cited technical grounds for not considering the application, saying that applications for asylum to these countries must be made from within the countries' borders or at border stations.[227][232][233][234][235][236] Ecuador had initially offered Snowden a temporary travel document but later withdrew it;[237] on July 1, President Rafael Correa said the decision to issue the offer had been "a mistake".[238][239]
Russian president Putin said that Snowden's arrival in Moscow was "a surprise" and "like an unwanted Christmas gift".[240]Putin said that Snowden remained in the transit area of Sheremetyevo, noted that he had not committed any crime on Russian soil,[241] and declared that Snowden was free to leave and should do so.[242] He added that Russia's intelligence agencies neither "had worked, nor were working with" Snowden.[240][242] Putin's claims were received skeptically by some observers.[243][244]
Putin said on July 1 that if Snowden wanted to be granted asylum in Russia, Snowden would be required to "stop his work aimed at harming our American partners".[245][246] A spokesman for Putin subsequently said that Snowden had withdrawn his asylum application upon learning of the conditions.[227][247]
In a July 12 meeting at Sheremetyevo Airport with representatives of human rights organizations and lawyers, organized in part by the Russian government,[248] Snowden said he was accepting all offers of asylum that he had already received or would receive in the future, noting that his Venezuela's "asylee status was now formal",[172] he also said he would request asylum in Russia until he resolved his travel problems.[249] Russian Federal Migration Service officials confirmed on July 16 that Snowden had submitted an application to them for temporary asylum.[250] According to Kucherena, Snowden agreed to meet Putin's condition for granting asylum, and would not further harm US interests 'by releasing more intelligence secrets'.[250][251] On July 23 Kucherena said his client intended to settle in Russia.[252] Snowden explained that he applied for asylum in Russia because, with no direct flights from Moscow to asylum offers in Latin America, he did not feel he could safely travel to them, and claimed that the US had pressured countries along his route to "hand him over".[251]
Amid media reports in early July 2013 attributed to US administration sources that Obama's one-on-one meeting with Putin, ahead of a G20 meeting in St Petersburg scheduled for September, was in doubt due to Snowden's protracted sojourn in Russia,[253][254] top US officials repeatedly made it clear to Moscow that Snowden should immediately be returned to the United States to face justice.[255][256][257] Snowden needed asylum, according to his lawyer, because "he faces persecution by the US government and he fears for his life and safety, fears that he could be subjected to torture and capital punishment."[258] In a letter to Russian Minister of Justice Alexander Konovalov dated July 23, US Attorney General Eric Holder sought to eliminate the "asserted grounds for Mr. Snowden's claim that he should be treated as a refugee or granted asylum, temporary or otherwise":[259][260] he assured the Russian government that the US would not seek the death penalty for Snowden irrespective of the charges he might eventually face and said Snowden would be issued a limited validity passport for returning to the US, and that upon his return, Snowden would benefit from legal and constitutional safeguards and not be tortured, as "torture is unlawful in the United States".[259] The same day, the Russian president's spokesman reiterated the Kremlin's position that it would "not hand anyone over"; he also noted that Putin was not personally involved in the matter as Snowden "had not made any request that would require examination by the head of state" and that the issue was being handled through talks between the FSB and the FBI.[261][262]

Criminal charges

On June 14, 2013, United States federal prosecutors filed a criminal complaint against Snowden, charging him with theft of government property, and alleging he had violated the US' 1917 Espionage Act through unauthorized communication of national defense information and "willful communication of classified communications intelligence information to an unauthorized person".[263][259]

Temporary asylum in Russia

Snowden left the Moscow airport on August 1 after more than a month in the transit section. He had been granted temporary asylum in Russia for one year, an asylum that could be extended indefinitely on an annual basis.[264] According to his lawyer, Snowden went to an undisclosed location kept secret for security reasons.[265]
In response to the asylum grant, White House spokesman Jay Carney said the US administration was "extremely disappointed" by the Russian government's decision and that the meeting scheduled for September between Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin was under reconsideration.[266][267] Some US legislators urged the president to take a tough stand against Russia, possibly including a US boycott of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.[267][268] On August 7, the White House announced that Obama had canceled the meeting previously planned with Putin in Moscow citing lack of progress on a series of issues that included Russia's granting Snowden temporary asylum.[269][270][271] Following cancellation of the bilateral talks, Putin's foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov said they were "disappointed" and that it was clear to him that the decision was due to the situation around Snowden, which they "had not created"; Ushakov alleged that the US had been avoiding signing an extradition agreement and had "invariably" used its absence as a pretext for denying Russian extradition requests.[272][273]
In late July 2013, Lon Snowden said he believed his son would be better off staying in Russia, and didn't believe he would receive a fair trial in the US.[274][275] In mid October, he visited his son in Moscow, later telling the press that he was pleased with Edward's situation, and still believed Russia was the best choice for his asylum, saying he wouldn't have to worry about people "rushing across the border to render him". Snowden commented that his son found living in Russia "comfortable", and Moscow "modern and sophisticated".[276] Snowden's lawyer, Kucherena, announced on October 31 that his client had found a technical support job providing maintenance for Russia's largest website.[277][278][279]
Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern said that Snowden did not give any computer files to Russia or China. American officials said that they have no proof of Russia or China having received such files.[280][281] In an October 2013 interview, Snowden maintained that he did not bring any classified material into Russia "because it wouldn't serve the public interest". He added "there's a zero percent chance the Russians or Chinese have received any documents".[175]
Edward Snowden speaks about various topics at the Sam Adams Awardpresentation in Moscow
Wikileaks released video of Snowden on October 11 taken during the Sam Adams Award reception in Moscow, his first public appearance in three months. Former US government officials attending the ceremony said that, contrary to claims from the US government, Snowden did not appear to be under the control of 'local security forces'. The whistle-blower group said that he was in good spirits, looked "remarkably well", and that he still believes he was right to release the NSA documents.[282][283] In the video, Snowden said "people all over the world are coming to realize" that the NSA's surveillance programs put people in danger, hurt the US and its economy, and "limit our ability to speak and think and live and be creative, to have relationships and associate freely" as well as putting people "at risk of coming into conflict with our own government".[284]
On October 31, Snowden met with German lawmaker Hans-Christian Ströbele, a visit prompted by a recent leak revealing NSA surveillance of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone for the past decade.[285][286] Snowden was invited to testify in Germany to "assist investigations" into the alleged surveillance of the German leader by explaining how the leaked documents 'fit together'; according to Stroebele, Snowden showed he "knew a lot" about the matter.[287][288][289] After the visit, Snowden indicated a willingness to testify, though not from Moscow as Germany requested. Snowden said he would rather give testimony before the US Congress, his second choice being Berlin.[290]
Wikileaks' representative Sarah Harrison, who accompanied Snowden from Hong Kong to Moscow, left Russia for Germany in early November after waiting until she felt confident he had "established himself and was free from the interference of any government." Her lawyers advised her to not return to her home in the UK, fearing she would be prosecuted under anti-terrorism laws.[291] In a statement released November 6 upon arrival in Germany, Harrison wrote "I...negotiated [Snowden's] safe exit from Hong Kong to take up his legal right to seek asylum. I was travelling with him on our way to Latin America when the United States revoked his passport, stranding him in Russia."[292] Journalist Glenn Greenwald commented on Snowden's Russian asylum: "[Snowden] didn't choose to be there. He was trying to get transit to Latin America, and then the US revoked his passport and threatened other countries out of offering Snowden safe passage."[293]
NSA whistleblower Thomas Drake, who was also charged with espionage for leaking classified materials, said he believes Snowden would not be able to return to the US in the "forseeable future", as he has "essentially been declared enemy of the State number 1, exhibit number 1".[294] According to Ströbele, Snowden was seeking asylum 'in a "democratic" country' such as Germany or France, and wanted to leave Russia at the end of his year-long asylum.[295] Snowden's legal advisors Jesselyn Radack and Kucherena indicated that Snowden would remain in Russia, however, with Radack saying in January 2014 that Snowden "hopes that [his temporary asylum] will be renewed for another year or into a permanent asylum because he is safe there [in Russia] and he knows that."[296] In Russia "he is protected from a lot of people who would like to harm him," Radack noted.[297]
On December 17, 2013 Snowden wrote an open letter to the people of Brazil offering to assist the Brazilian government in investigating allegations of US spying, and added that he continued to seek, and would require, asylum.[298] Snowden wrote, "Until a country grants permanent political asylum, the US government will continue to interfere with my ability to speak...going so far as to force down the Presidential Plane of Evo Morales to prevent me from traveling to Latin America!"[299] Brazil had been in an uproar since Snowden revealed that the US was spying on Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, her senior advisors, and Brazil's national oil company, Petrobras.[300]
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff and officials of the Brazilian foreign ministry said in response to the letter that they could not consider asylum for Snowden because they had not received any formal request for asylum from him.[301][302][303] A representative of the foreign ministry said that a fax requesting asylum had been sent to the Brazilian embassy in Moscow in July but it had not been signed and could not be authenticated.[301] David Miranda, the Brazilian partner of Glenn Greenwald, launched an internet petition urging the Brazilian president to consider offering Snowden asylum.[304] Some prominent Brazilian senators expressed support for giving asylum to Snowden,[302] including Senator Ricardo Ferraco (president of the Senate Foreign Relations and Defense Committee),[301][303] although some other politicians, mainly opponents of Rousseff's government, said Brazil should not risk further harming relations between Brazil and the US by offering Snowden asylum.[303] In July, the Brazilian Senate's Foreign Relations and Defense Committee had unanimously recommended granting asylum to Snowden.[302]
Snowden met with Barton Gellman of The Washington Post six months after the disclosure for an exclusive interview spanning 14 hours, his first since being granted temporary asylum. Snowden talked about his life in Russia as "an indoor cat", reflected on his time as an NSA contractor, and discussed at length the revelations of global surveillance and their reverberations. Snowden said, "In terms of personal satisfaction, the mission's already accomplished...I already won. As soon as the journalists were able to work, everything that I had been trying to do was validated."[42] He commented "I am not trying to bring down the NSA, I am working to improve the NSA...I am still working for the NSA right now. They are the only ones who don't realize it." On the accusation from former CIA and NSA director Michael Hayden that he had defected, Snowden stated, "If I defected at all, I defected from the government to the public."[305]
Snowden's Russian attorney, Anatoly Kucherena, announced in January 2014 that recent media reports coming from the US have left his client in fear for his life.[306][307] An interview with Pentagon officials and NSA analysts, published by Buzzfeed in mid-January, detailed ways they said Snowden can be killed, as well as a strong desire by some to carry out such plans.[24][308]Kucherena said he may request the names of those who made explicit threats against his client. Snowden reportedly has plans to ask the Russian Police for protection.[307] He could be walking home from the grocery store, according to claims in the article, "going back to his flat and he is casually poked by a passerby. He thinks nothing of it at the time starts to feel a little woozy ... and next thing you know he dies in the shower." Kucherena stated, "This is a real death threat and we are concerned about the fact it has prompted no reaction from anybody."[306] A State Department spokesperson said that the statements were unacceptable, clarifying that she hadn't read the Buzzfeed article.[309] Snowden wrote that the threats on his life were "concerning" but "primarily for reasons you might not expect ... That current, serving officials of our government are so comfortable in their authorities that they’re willing to tell reporters on the record that they think the due process protections of the 5th Amendment of our Constitution are outdated concepts. These are the same officials telling us to trust that they’ll honor the 4th and 1st Amendments. This should bother all of us. The fact that it’s also a direct threat to my life is something I am aware of, but I’m not going to be intimidated."[91] He was asked about the threats, and whether he lost sleep over them, in his first television interview[310] which aired on Germany's NDR January 26, 2014.[177] "I’m still alive and don’t lose sleep for what I did because it was the right thing to do," he responded.[311]
On Meet the Press in late January, speculation arose from top US officials in the House and Senate Intelligence Committees that Snowden might have been assisted by Russian intelligence,[312] prompting a rare interview during which Snowden spoke in his defense. He told The New Yorker "this 'Russian spy' push is absurd", adding that he "clearly and unambiguously acted alone, with no assistance from anyone, much less a government."[192] The New York Times reported that investigations by the NSA and the FBI "have turned up no evidence that Mr. Snowden was aided by others".[313] Days later, Feinstein stated that she had seen no evidence that Snowden is a Russian spy.[314] Germany's Der Speigel suggested the accusations were part of a 'smear campaign' by US officials. For Snowden, the smears didn't "mystify" him, but rather "that outlets report statements that the speakers themselves admit are sheer speculation".[315]
In late Janauary 2014, US attorney generalEric Holder in an interview with MSNBC indicated that the US could allow Snowden to return from Russia under negotiated terms, saying he was prepared to engage in conversation with him, but that full clemency would be going too far.[316]

Reaction

Snowden's release of NSA material was called the most significant leak in US history by Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg.[317][318] Ellsberg said "Snowden’s disclosures are a true constitutional moment" enabling the press to hold the Executive branch of the US federal government accountable, while the legislative and judiciary branch refused to do so.[319] The 'accountability' mechanisms of the US government, he said, are "a one-sided secret court, which acts as a rubber stamp, and a Congressional 'oversight' committee, which has turned into the NSA's public relations firm."[319] On January 14, 2014, Ellsberg posted to his Twitter page: "Edward Snowden has done more for our Constitution in terms of the Fourth and First Amendment than anyone else I know."[320]
United States President Barack Obama was initially dismissive of Snowden, saying in June 2013, "I'm not going to be scrambling jets to get a 29-year-old hacker".[321][322][323] In August, Obama rejected the suggestion that Snowden was a patriot[324] and would later say that "the benefit of the debate he generated was not worth the damage done, because there was another way of doing it."[325]
In January 2014, Obama mentioned Snowden in a speech covering proposed reforms to the NSA's surveillance program and said that "our nation's defense depends in part on the fidelity of those entrusted with our nation's secrets. If any individual who objects to government policy can take it into their own hands to publicly disclose classified information, then we will not be able to keep our people safe, or conduct foreign policy." Obama also objected to the "sensational" way the leaks had been reported, saying the reporting often "shed more heat than light". He went on to assert that the disclosures had revealed "methods to our adversaries that could impact our operations".[326]
On his blog, Vermont senator Bernie Sanders praised Snowden for sparking a debate on a matter of surveillance.[327]Intelligence services whistleblower Frank Snepp acknowledged the debate but condemned Snowden's actions as nonetheless "reprehensible."[328]
Ex-CIA director James Woolsey said in December 2013 that if Snowden was convicted of treason, he should be hanged.[329]One of Snowden's legal advisers, Jesselyn Radack, said that Snowden "has concerns for his safety" based on this and joking remarks between Hayden and House Intelligence Committee chairman Mike Rogers about putting Snowden on a "kill list".[330][331]
According to Mike Rogers and ranking member Dutch Ruppersberger, a classified Pentagon report written by military intelligence officials contends that Edward Snowden's leaks had put US troops at risk and prompted terrorists to change their tactics, and that "most files copied" were related to current US military operations.[332] Glenn Greenwald and Ben Wizner, anUCLU lawyer representing Snowden, disputed these claims, stating that Snowden's leaks overwhelmingly relate to NSA activities and noting that similar claims were made about the Pentagon Papers.[333]
On January 1, 2014, the Editorial Board of The New York Times praised Snowden as a whistleblower and wrote in favor of granting him clemency or "at least a substantially reduced punishment," arguing that while Snowden may have broken the law, he had "done his country a great service" by bringing the abuses of the NSA to light. "When someone reveals that government officials have routinely and deliberately broken the law," they wrote, "that person should not face life in prison at the hands of the same government." The Times further criticized James Clapper for lying to Congress about the NSA's surveillance activities and cast doubt on the claim made by Snowden's critics that he had damaged national security. The editorial concluded with a request to President Obama to discontinue the "vilification" of Snowden and to offer Snowden "an incentive to return home."[334][335] The article garnered an unusual amount of "heat" for an editorial, with responses from multiple media outlets.[336] The editorial board of The Guardian called for a pardon in an article coincidentally published on the same day. The board asked President Obama to "use his executive powers to treat [Snowden] humanely and in a manner that would be a shining example about the value of whistleblowers and of free speech itself."[337][338]
In his article dated January 4, 2014, Moves to Curb Spying Help Drive the Clemency Argument for SnowdenPeter Baker of The New York Times laid out the polarization of opinions throughout the US and the impetus toward clemency gained by the public reaction to the revelations of the surveillance. He notes that officials in the intelligence establishment "warn that letting Mr. Snowden off the hook would set a dangerous precedent" and contrasts that with the statement of attorney Bruce Fein about the protections afforded by the First Amendment, "It prohibits government from punishing communications that expose government lawlessness whether or not the illegality is classified" and saying further, "Calling government to account for breaking the law is a compelling civic duty of all citizens."[339] The author also noted that similar polarization has arisen in judicial review, citing judge Leon's ruling that the surveillance program in question "was probably unconstitutional", implying that laws passed to enable such programs could be struck down.
Cybersecurity scholar Peter Singer divided the material disclosed by Snowden into three categories: "smart, useful espionage against enemies of the United States; legally questionable activities that involved US citizens through backdoors and fudging of policy/law; un-strategic (stupid) actions targeting American allies that has had huge blowback on US standing and US business." It was postulated that these were differing ways people viewed Snowden, which could explain why he was so polarizing.[340] Singer also spoke of a "double legacy" from the NSA revelations released by Snowden: "One, it’s hollowed out the American ability to operate effectively in ensuring the future of the internet itself, in the way we would hope it would be. That has huge long-term consequences. And the second is, it’s been and will be a hammer-blow to American technology companies. The cloud computing industry, for example, had a recent estimate that they’ll lose $36 billion worth of business because of this."[341]

Debate

Snowden said in December 2013 that he was 'inspired by the global debate' ignited by the leaks, and stated that NSA's 'culture of indiscriminate global espionage "is collapsing".'[342]

International community

Demonstration at Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin against the NSA surveillance program PRISM during Barack Obama's visit, June 18, 2013
Crediting the Snowden leaks, the United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted Resolution 68/167[343], an 'anti-spying resolution' to 'protect the right to privacy against unlawful surveillance' in the wake of reports that 35 foreign leaders were subjects of US eavesdropping.[344][345] The resolution "unequivocally states that the same rights that people have off-line must also be protected online."[346][347]
The European Parliament invited Snowden to make a pre-recorded video appearance to aid their NSA investigation, though he has yet to accept the invitation and no date has been set.[348][349]

United States

In the US, Snowden's actions precipitated an intense debate on privacy and warrantless domestic surveillance.[350][351] Jim Sensenbrenner, author of the Patriot Act, submitted a proposal on October 29, 2013 called the "USA Freedom Act", which would end the bulk collection of Americans' metadata, and reform the FISA court.[352]
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper condemned Snowden's actions as having done "huge, grave damage" to US intelligence capabilities, while United States Secretary of State John Kerry stated that "in some cases" the NSA had gone "too far" in some of its surveillance activities, and promised that it would be stopped.[353][354]
At the end of 2013, The Washington Post noted that the public debate, lawsuits, "presidential task forces, and attempts at legislative remedy" had not brought about any "meaningful policy change". They printed: "...the status quo continues, if with forced disclosures and administration arguments that the public just doesn't understand how difficult it is to prevent the next 9/11 – even though there's been no evidence publicly revealed so far that these measures have prevented the next 9/11."[145]
An analysis released by the New America Foundation in January 2014 reviewed 225 terrorism cases since the September 11 attacks found that the NSA's bulk collection of phone records "has had no discernible impact on preventing acts of terrorism", and that US governments' claims of the program's usefulness were "overblown".[355][356] Officials maintained that the program was a good "insurance policy".[357]
Another review in January 2014, this from the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB), found the NSA's phone metadata program to be illegal and of "only limited value". The board, chosen by Obama, said it "implicates constitutional concerns under the First and Fourth Amendments." The board was unable to find "a single instance" that the program "made a concrete difference in the outcome of a terrorism investigation" or "directly contributed to the discovery of a previously unknown terrorist plot or the disruption of a terrorist attack."[358] The White House rejected the findings, saying "We simply disagree with the board's analysis on the legality of the program".[359]
A survey conducted by USA Today and Pew Research Center in January 2014 revealed a change in American's opinion of phone and Internet metadata collection. In July 2013, 50 percent supported the NSA programs. Six months later, the percentage dropped to 40.[360]
The Republican Party in early 2014 voted unanimously to pass a "Resolution To Renounce The National Security Agency’s Surveillance Program" which called for a "special committee to investigate, report, and reveal to the public the extent of this domestic spying". They said that Snowden's revelations had uncovered "an invasion into the personal lives of American citizens that violates the right of free speech and association afforded by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution" and that "the mass collection and retention of personal data is in itself contrary to the right of privacy protected by the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution."[361] The resolution endorses legislation proposed by Justin Amash.[362]
Presidential panel
Obama also said that he himself had called for a review of US surveillance activities even before Snowden had begun revealing details of the NSA's operations.[324] On August 9, Obama announced that he was ordering Director of National Intelligence James Clapper to arrange for "a high-level group of outside experts to review our entire intelligence and communications technologies."[363][364] In December, the task force issued 46 recommendations that, if adopted, would subject the NSA to additional scrutiny by the courts, Congress, and the president, and would strip the NSA of the authority to infiltrate American computer systems using "backdoors" in hardware or software.[365] Geoffrey Stone, a panel member, said there was no evidence that the bulk collection of phone data had stopped any terror attacks.[366]
Court rulings
Klayman v. Obama
In the wake of Snowden's leaks, conservative public interest lawyer and Judicial Watch founder Larry Klayman filed a lawsuit claiming that the federal government had unlawfully collected metadata for his telephone calls and was harassing him. On December 16, 2013, US District Judge Richard J. Leon ruled that bulk collection of American telephone metadata likely violates the Constitution of the United States. The judge wrote, "I cannot imagine a more 'indiscriminate' and 'arbitrary' invasion than this systematic and high-tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen for purposes of querying and analyzing it without prior judicial approval ... Surely, such a program infringes on 'that degree of privacy' that the founders enshrined in the Fourth Amendment."[367] Leon, the first judge to examine an NSA program outside of the secret FISA court on behalf of a non-criminal defendant, described the technology used as "almost Orwellian", referring to the George Orwell novel,Nineteen Eighty-Four, in which the world has come under omnipresent government surveillance . In the 68-page ruling, Leon said that he had "serious doubts about the efficacy" of the program.[368] The US government was unable to cite "a single instance in which analysis of the NSA's bulk metadata collection actually stopped an imminent attack, or otherwise aided the government in achieving any objective that was time-sensitive." The judge ruled that a 1979 case, Smith v. Maryland, which established that phone metadata is not subject to the Fourth Amendment, did not apply to the NSA program as the US Justice Department has claimed, citing the NSA's vast scope and 'the evolving role of phones and technology'. Judge Leon's opinion, according to the is its recognition that the Fourth Amendment needs to adapt to the digital age.[369] Judge Leon stayed the ruling, giving the US government 6 months to appeal.[370]
On the ruling, the Washington Post printed: "NSA officials, who rarely miss a chance to cite Snowden's status as a fugitive from the law, now stand accused of presiding over a program whose capabilities were deemed by the judge to be “Orwellian" and likely illegal. Snowden's defenders, on the other hand, have new ammunition to argue that he is more whistleblower than traitor."[371]
Debates regarding offering amnesty to Snowden began to appear in publications and on the Internet immediately following Leon's ruling. Some of the reasons suggested in a The New Yorker article included benefits for the NSA.[372]
Snowden said in a statement that the ruling justified his discloser:
"I acted on my belief that the NSA’s mass surveillance programs would not withstand a constitutional challenge, and that the American public deserved a chance to see these issues determined by open courts. Today, a secret program authorized by a secret court was, when exposed to the light of day, found to violate Americans’ rights. It is the first of many."[373]
ACLU v. Clapper
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit against Director of National Intelligence James Clapper alleging that the NSA's phone records program was unconstitutional. On December 28, 2013, Judge William Pauley dismissed the suit. In the court's opinion regarding the ACLU's claim that the NSA was exceeding the bounds of section 215 of the Patriot Act Judge Pauley wrote:
"The ACLU would never have learned about the section 215 order authorizing collection of telephone metadata related to its telephone numbers but for the unauthorized disclosures of Edward Snowden. Congress did not intend that targets of section 215 order would ever learn of them. And the statutory scheme also makes clear that congress intended to preclude suits by targets even if they discovered section 215 orders implicating them. It cannot possibly be that lawbreaking conduct by a government contractor that reveals state secrets—including the means and methods of intelligence gathering—could frustrate Congress's intent. To hold otherwise would spawn mischief: recipients of orders would be subject to 215's secrecy protocol confining challenges to the FISC while targets could sue in any federal district court. A target's awareness of section 215 does not alter the Congressional calculus. The ACLU's statutory claim must therefore be dismissed."[374]
Judge Pauley said that the U.S. government's global telephone data-gathering system is needed to thwart potential terrorist attacks, and that it can only work if everyone's calls are swept in. The judge also concluded that the telephone data being swept up by NSA did not belong to telephone users, but to the telephone companies. And further he ruled that, when NSA obtains such data from the telephone companies, and then probes into it to find links between callers and potential terrorists, this further use of the data was not a search under the Fourth Amendment. He also concluded that the controlling precedent is Smith v. Maryland: "Smith's bedrock holding is that an individual has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information provided to third parties".[375][376][377]

Recognition

Edward Snowden was voted as The Guardian's person of the year 2013, garnering four times the number of votes than any other candidate.[378]
The 2013 list of leading Global Thinkers,[379] published annually by Foreign Policy placed Snowden in first place due to the impact of his revelations. FP's "Global Conversation visualization"[380] showed that Snowden "occupied a role in 2013's global news media coverage just slightly less important than President Barack Obama himself".[381]
Snowden was named Time'Person of the Year runner-up in 2013, behind Pope Francis.[382] TIME was criticized for not placing him in the top spot.[383][384][385]
Snowden headed the Ten Tech Heroes of 2013 at TechRepublic, the site of an on-line newsletter circulated among IT professionals. Editor Jack Wallen placed Snowden in the number one position of his list and wrote, "Ed Snowden was a whistle blower the likes of which the world has never seen. Many consider him a villain. I, on the other hand, hold him up in the hero category for one simple reason: His disclosure of classified documents unveiled the NSA's mass surveillance program. Snowden's goal was "...to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them." Prior to this leak, the public was unaware of the depth of surveillance and the true nature of government secrecy. His disclosures have also had major implications for those in the technology field."[386]
Snowden joined the board of directors of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, co-founded by Daniel Ellsburg, in January 2014. Journalists Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras serve as staff members of the organization.[387]
Nominated in January 2014 as one of five candidates for the Rector of the University of Glasgow, Snowden is a "strong favourite" to be elected for the three-year post.[388][389] Elections are scheduled for February 2014. The nomination was arranged by a group of Glasgow students along with the help of Snowden's Russian lawyer.[388] A student from the campaign to elect Snowden as their representative stated, "We're giving students a stage, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to voice their own discontent with mass surveillance. By electing Edward Snowden, we're sending a clear message, also to our government, that we will not allow this kind of surveillance."[390]

German "Whistleblower Prize"

Edward Snowden was awarded the biennial German "whistleblower prize" in August 2013, in absentia, with an accompanying award equal to 3,000 euro. Established in 1999, the award is sponsored by the German branch of the International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms and by the Association of German Scientists.[391] Organizers in Berlin said the prize was to acknowledge his "bold efforts to expose the massive and unsuspecting monitoring and storage of communication data, which cannot be accepted in democratic societies".[392] Snowden responded to the award, saying it was "a great honor to be recognized for the public good created by this act of whistleblowing", and that it was not he, but the public who effected "this powerful change to abrogation of basic constitutional rights by secret agencies".[393]

Sam Adams Award

Edward Snowden during theSam Adams Award ceremony in Moscow, October 2013
The Sam Adams Award was presented to Snowden by a group of four American former intelligence officers and whistleblowers in October 2013. After two months as an asylee, Snowden made his first public appearance in Moscow to accept the award, a candlestick holder meant to symbolize "bringing light to dark corners".[282] One of the presenters, FBI whistleblower Jesselyn Radack of the Government Accountability Project, told The Nation, "We believe that Snowden exemplifies Sam Adams's courage, persistence and devotion to truth—no matter what the consequences. We wanted Snowden to know that, as opposed to the daily vitriol from the US government and mainstream media, 60 percent of the United States supports him, including thousands in the national security and intelligence agencies where we used to work."[394][395][396]

Alternative Christmas Message

Snowden was chosen to give Britain's 2013 "Alternative Christmas Message", Channel 4's alternative to the Royal Christmas Message by Queen Elizabeth II.[397] The Message is normally given by non-establishment figures.[398][399] In what was Snowden's first television appearance since arriving in Russia, the address focussed on the importance of privacy and the need for an end to government surveillance.[400] The piece was filmed, edited and produced by Laura Poitras.[401]

Technology

The owner of a secure email service which Snowden used, Lavabit, shut down the business after being forced to release the secure keys to his site to the FBI, exposing all 410,000 users to FBI's resulting ability to read all email routed via Lavabit.[402] The move was mirrored days later by a similar email provider called Silent Circle.[403] Three months later, owners of the two companies joined forces and announced their new email service, "Dark Mail Alliance",[404] designed to be resistant to government surveillance.[405][406]
The so-called Snowden Effect had a profound impact on the technology industry after it was revealed that the NSA was tapping into the information held by some US cloud-based services. GoogleCisco, and AT&T lost business internationally due to the "outcry" over their role in NSA spying. The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation has estimated that the cloud-based computing industry could lose up to $35 billion in the next three years.[407] Wall Street Journal reported that the "Snowden Effect" was the top tech story of 2013, saying the Snowden leaks "taught businesses that the convenience of the cloud cuts both ways". The Journal predicted the 'effect' would top 2014 news as well, given the amount of documents yet to be revealed.[408] In China, the most profitable country for US tech companies, all are "under suspicion as either witting or unwitting collaborators" in the NSA spying, and are "on the defensive", according to the director of the Research Center for Chinese Politics and Business at Indiana University.[409] The effect was also seen in changes to investment in the industry, with security "back on the map". After revelations that German Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile was being tapped, the tech industry rushed to create a secure cell phone.[410] According to TechRepublic, revelations from the NSA leaks have "rocked the IT world" and have had a "chilling effect". The three biggest impacts were seen as: increased interest in encryption, business leaving US companies, and a reconsideration of the safety of cloud technology.[411]

In popular culture

Snowden's passage through Hong Kong inspired a local production team to produce a low-budget five-minute film entitledVerax. The film, depicting the time Snowden spent hiding in the Mira Hotel while being unsuccessfully tracked by the CIA andChina's Ministry of State Security, was uploaded to YouTube on June 25, 2013.[412][413]
A dramatic thriller about Edward Snowden, Classified: The Edward Snowden Story, is scheduled for release on September 19, 2014. The film is being crowdfunded and plans are to release the final product as a free download. The feature-length film is directed by Jason Bourque and produced by Travis Doering; actor Kevin Zegers plays the character of Edward Snowden. Michael Shanks stars as journalist Glenn Greenwald and Carmen Aguirre plays filmmaker Laura Poitras.[414]
In September 2013, the TV series South Park parodied the Snowden revelations, with Eric Cartman standing in for Snowden. The episode, titled "Let Go, Let Gov", received the highest ratings for the show in two years.[415][416]

See also

Notes

  1. Jump up ^ Hong Kong's Secretary for Justice Rimsky Yuen argued that government officials did not issue a provisional arrest warrant for Snowden due to "discrepancies and missing information" in the paperwork sent by US authorities. Yuen explained that Snowden's full name was inconsistent, and his US passport number was also missing.[202] Hong Kong also wanted more details of the charges and evidence against Snowden to make sure it was not a political case. Secretary for Justice Rimsky Yuen said he spoke to US Attorney General Eric Holder by phone to reinforce the request for details "absolutely necessary" for detention of Snowden. Yuen said "As the US government had failed to provide the information by the time Snowden left Hong Kong, it was impossible for the Department of Justice to apply to a court for a temporary warrant of arrest. In fact, even at this time, the US government has still not provided the details we asked for."[203]

References

  1. Jump up ^ Greenwald, Glenn; MacAskill, Ewen; Poitras, Laura (June 10, 2013). "Edward Snowden: the whistleblower behind the NSA surveillance revelations"The Guardian (London). "The individual responsible for one of the most significant leaks in US political history is Edward Snowden, a 29-year-old former technical assistant for the CIA and current employee of the defense contractor Booz Allen Hamilton. Snowden has been working at the National Security Agency for the last four years as an employee of various outside contractors, including Booz Allen and Dell."
  2. Jump up ^ "Former U.S. officials give NSA whistleblower Snowden award in Russia"Haaretz. October 10, 2013.
  3. Jump up to: a b "Interview with Whistleblower Edward Snowden on Global Spying"Der Spiegel. July 8, 2013. Retrieved December 18, 2013.
  4. Jump up ^ Greenwald, Glenn. "Edward Snowden: the whistleblower behind the NSA surveillance revelations"The Guardian. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  5. Jump up ^ Risen, James. "Snowden Says He Took No Secret Files to Russia"New York Times. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  6. Jump up ^ Hartman, Rachael Rose. "Assange: Snowden is ‘healthy and safe’; has applied for asylum in Ecuador, Iceland"Yahoo. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  7. Jump up ^ Williams, Stuart. "Snowden 'chose not to release' most damaging data"Fox News. AFP. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  8. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden a 'hero' for NSA disclosures, Wikipedia founder says | World news. The Guardian (November 25, 2013).
  9. Jump up ^ Why Edward Snowden Is a Hero. The New Yorker.
  10. Jump up ^ Oliver Stone defends Edward Snowden over NSA revelationsThe Guardian. (July 5, 2013).
  11. Jump up ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/02/opinion/edward-snowden-whistle-blower.html?ref=editorials&_r=0
  12. Jump up ^ Daniel Ellsberg: Edward Snowden Was Right To Leave The U.SHuffington Post.
  13. Jump up ^ Amash: Snowden a whistle-blower, 'told us what we need to know'. Fox News (August 4, 2013).
  14. Jump up ^ "As Edward Snowden Receives Asylum in Russia, Poll Shows Americans Sympathetic to NSA 'Whistle-Blower' – Washington Whispers". usnews.com. August 1, 2013.
  15. Jump up ^ "В Госдуме Э.Сноудена назвали новым диссидентом и борцом с системой ("Some in State Duma has called E. Snowden a dissident and fighter against the system")"RBC Daily. July 26, 2013. ""Head of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs, Alexei Pushkov, has called Edward Snowden, whistleblower on the US intelligence services, a new dissident fighting the system."
  16. Jump up ^ LoGiurato, Brett (June 11, 2013). "John Boehner: Edward Snowden Is A 'Traitor'"San Francisco Chronicle.
  17. Jump up ^ de Nesnera, Andre (August 8, 2013). "Is NSA Leaker Edward Snowden a Traitor?". Washington: Voice of America.
  18. Jump up ^ Etpatko, Larisa. "Former Defense Secretary Gates calls NSA leaker Snowden a 'traitor'"NewsHour. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  19. Jump up ^ Klein, Ezra. "Edward Snowden, patriot"The Washington Post.
  20. Jump up ^ "Opinion: Edward Snowden is a patriot – Trevor Timm". Politico.Com.
  21. Jump up ^ Goodman, Amy. ""Edward Snowden is a Patriot": Ex-NSA CIA, FBI and Justice Whistleblowers Meet Leaker in Moscow"Democracy Now. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
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  23. Jump up ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/06/us/politics/senators-differ-sharply-on-penalty-for-snowden.html?_r=0
  24. Jump up to: a b Johnson, Benny. "America’s Spies Want Edward Snowden Dead"Buzzfeed. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  25. Jump up ^ Mackey, Robert. "Video From Snowden’s German TV Interview"NYT. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  26. Jump up ^ Germany wants Snowden to give evidence in Moscow, not Berlin. Reuters.
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  28. Jump up ^ "Report: Snowden has document to enter Russia"WVEC. July 24, 2013. "Edward Snowden, who was born in Elizabeth City, NC, is wanted in the U.S. for espionage."
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  30. Jump up ^ Itkowitz, Colby; Sheehan, Daniel Patrick (June 10, 2013). "Edward Snowden's father, stepmother plan to make public statement"The Morning Call (Allentown, PA).
  31. Jump up to: a b Toppo, Greg (June 10, 2013). "Former neighbor remembers Snowden as 'nice kid'"USA Today(Washington, D.C.).
  32. Jump up ^ "Edward Snowden's father, a Lehigh County resident, tells network he's concerned for son's well-bei".Leheigh Vally Express Times.
  33. Jump up to: a b "Edward Snowden's Father Speaks Out To Fox About Media 'Misinformation,' Asks Son To Stop Leaking". Mediaite. May 26, 2013.
  34. Jump up ^ "TIMELINE: Edward Snowden's Life As We Know It". ABC News. June 13, 2013.
  35. Jump up to: a b "Profile: Edward Snowden". BBC News. June 10, 2013.
  36. Jump up ^ Leger, Donna Leinwand (June 9, 2013). "NSA contractor: 'I know I have done nothing wrong'"USA Today(Washington DC).
  37. Jump up ^ "U.S. Fears Edward Snowden May Defect to China: Sources". ABC News. June 13, 2013. p. 3.
  38. Jump up ^ "Snowden's Life Surrounded By Spycraft". Associated Press. June 15, 2013.
  39. Jump up ^ Cooke, Kristina; Shiffman, Scott (June 12, 2013). "Exclusive: Snowden as a teen online: anime and cheeky humor". Reuters. "Long before he became known worldwide as the NSA contractor who exposed top-secret U.S. government surveillance programs, Edward Snowden worked for a Japanese anime company run by friends and went by the nicknames "The True HOOHA" and "Phish.""
  40. Jump up ^ Yoshida, Reiji (June 15, 2013). "Snowden Web manga profile still online"Japan Times (Tokyo).
  41. Jump up ^ Broder, John M.; Shane, Scott (June 15, 2013). "For Snowden, a Life of Ambition, Despite the Drifting"The New York Times. "Mr. Snowden, who has taken refuge in Hong Kong, has studied Mandarin, was deeply interested in martial arts, claimed Buddhism as his religion and once mused that "China is definitely a good option career wise.""
  42. Jump up to: a b c d e f Gellmann, Barton (December 24, 2013). "Edward Snowden, after months of NSA revelations, says his mission's accomplished"The Washington Post. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  43. Jump up ^ Malkin, Bonnie (June 11, 2013). "Edward Snowden's girlfriend revealed to be former ballet dancer"The Daily Telegraph (London).
  44. Jump up ^ MacAskill, Ewen (June 9, 2013). "NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden: 'I do not expect to see home again'".The Guardian (London).
  45. Jump up ^ Blake, Aaron (June 10, 2013). "Edward Snowden apparently a Ron Paul supporter"The Washington Post.
  46. Jump up ^ Zara, Christopher (June 9, 2013). "NSA Whistleblower Revealed: Edward Snowden Donated $500 To Ron Paul's 2012 Presidential Campaign: Does NSA Whistleblower Have Libertarian Leanings?"International Business Times.
  47. Jump up ^ Mullin, Joe. (June 13, 2013) "NSA leaker Ed Snowden's life on". Ars Technica.
  48. Jump up ^ Shane, Scott (June 26, 2013). "Under Snowden Screen Name, 2009 Post Berated Leaks"The New York Times.
  49. Jump up ^ Welch, William M. (June 27, 2013). "Report: Snowden slammed leakers in online chats in 2009"USA Today.
  50. Jump up ^ Mullin, Joe (June 26, 2013). "In 2009, Ed Snowden said leakers "should be shot." Then he became one..".arstechnica.
  51. Jump up ^ Hall, Ellie. "Edward Snowden's Online Past Revealed"BuzzFeed.
  52. Jump up ^ Lam, Lana (June 13, 2013). "Whistle-blower Edward Snowden talks to South China Morning Post"South China Morning Post (Hong Kong).
  53. Jump up to: a b Broder, John M.; Shane, Scott (June 15, 2013). "For Snowden, a Life of Ambition, Despite the Drifting".The New York Times.
  54. Jump up ^ Ackerman, Spencer. "Edward Snowden did enlist for special forces, US army confirms"The Guardian.
  55. Jump up ^ Gaskell, Stephanie (June 10, 2013). "Records show Army discharged Edward Snowden after five months".Politico.
  56. Jump up ^ Leger, Donna Leinwand (June 10, 2013). "Who is NSA whisteblower Edward Snowden?"USA Today.
  57. Jump up ^ "Edward Snowden: Ex-CIA worker comes forward as leaker, says he was protecting 'basic liberties'"Chicago Tribune. Reuters. June 10, 2013.
  58. Jump up ^ Williams, Rob. "Revealed: Whistleblower Edward Snowden posted comments attacking citizen surveillance while working for CIA." The Independent. Friday June 14, 2003. Retrieved on January 31, 2014.
  59. Jump up ^ Jijo, Jacob. "Edward Snowden Scandal: 'CIA Sent Him Home But NSA Hired Him Later'." International Business Times. October 11, 2013. Retrieved on January 30, 2014.
  60. Jump up ^ Memmott, Mark (June 10, 2013). "Who Is Edward Snowden, The Self-Styled NSA Leaker?"NPR.
  61. Jump up ^ Bütikofer, Christian (June 10, 2013). "Wie die CIA sich in Genf Bankdaten beschaffte" [How the CIA acquired bank data in Geneva]Handelszeitung (in German) (Zürich).
  62. Jump up ^ Der Sonntag and SonntagsBlick newspapers[which?]
  63. Jump up ^ "Swiss president would back criminal probe against NSA leaker". Reuters. June 16, 2013.
  64. Jump up ^ Schmitt, Eric. "C.I.A. Warning on Snowden in ’09 Said to Slip Through the Cracks." The New York Times. October 10, 2013. Retrieved on January 30, 2014.
  65. Jump up ^ Schmitt, Eric. "C.I.A. Disputes Early Suspicions on Snowden"NYT. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  66. Jump up ^ Masnick, Mike. "Snowden's Negative Writeup By The CIA Was For Whistleblowing; Taught Him Why Going Through Proper Channels Gets Punished"TechDirt. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  67. Jump up ^ Drew, Christopher and Shane, Scott. Résumé Shows Snowden Honed Hacking SkillsThe New York Times, July 4, 2013.
  68. Jump up ^ Harding, Luke (1 Feb 2014). "How Edward Snowden went from loyal NSA contractor to whistleblower". The Guardian.
  69. Jump up ^ Mark Hosenball (August 15, 2013), Snowden downloaded NSA secrets while working for Dell, sources sayReuters
  70. Jump up ^ Greenberg, Andy (June 18, 2013). "NSA Implementing 'Two-Person' Rule To Stop The Next Edward Snowden"Forbes (New York).
  71. Jump up ^ Flock, Elizabeth (September 25, 2012). "NSA Whistleblower Reveals How to Beat a Polygraph Test".Washington Whispers blog (Washington DC: US News and World Report).
  72. Jump up ^ Snowden 'took an ECSA course from Koenig Solutions'The Times of India.
  73. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden 'attended hacking course in India'The Daily Telegraph.
  74. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden 'sharpened his skills at Koenig Solutions'Hindustan Times.
  75. Jump up ^ Drew, Christopher; Scott Shane (July 4, 2013). "Résumé Shows Snowden Honed Hacking Skills"The New York Times. "In 2010, while working for a National Security Agency contractor, Edward J. Snowden learned to be a hacker. He took a course that trains security professionals to think like hackers and understand their techniques, all with the intent of turning out "certified ethical hackers" who can better defend their employers' networks."
  76. Jump up ^ Gayathri, Amrutha (June 21, 2013). "USIS That Vetted Snowden Under Investigation; Booz Allen Hamilton Overlooked Snowden Resume Discrepancies"International Business Times.
  77. Jump up ^ Sakthi Prasad (2014-01-23). "U.S. brings fraud charges against firm that vetted Snowden"ReutersArchivedfrom the original on 2014-01-24. Retrieved 2014-01-25. "The U.S. Justice Department accused United States Investigations Services (USIS), the largest private provider of security checks for the government, of bilking millions of dollars through improper background verifications."
  78. Jump up ^ Serge Schemann (2014-01-24). "Distrust in America, War in Syria and Protests in Ukraine"New York Times.Archived from the original on 2014-01-25. "The complaint filed by the United States government against USIS thus underscored how extensively the government relied on contractors not only to do its secret work, but also to vet those very contractors."
  79. Jump up ^ Masnick, Mike. "DOJ Says Company That Vetted Snowden Faked 665,000 Background Checks"TechDirt. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  80. Jump up ^ "Edward Snowden: NSA whistleblower answers reader questions"The Guardian (London). June 14, 2013.
  81. Jump up ^ "Statement on Reports of Leaked Information" (Press release). Booz Allen. June 9, 2013.
  82. Jump up ^ Borger, Julian (June 9, 2013). "Booz Allen Hamilton: Edward Snowden's U.S. contracting firm"The Guardian(London).
  83. Jump up ^ Gertz, Bill (June 13, 2013). "Officials Worried Snowden Will Pass Secrets to Chinese"Washington Free BeaconArchived from the original on June 14, 2013.
  84. Jump up to: a b Bacon, John. "Contractor fires Snowden from $122,000 per-year job"USA Today.
  85. Jump up ^ Shane, Scott; Sanger, David E. (June 30, 2013). "Job Title Key to Inner Access Held by Snowden"The New York Times.
  86. Jump up to: a b Greenwald, Glenn (June 17, 2013). "Edward Snowden Q&A: Dick Cheney traitor charge is 'the highest honor'"Guardian Security and Liberty blog.
  87. Jump up ^ Lam, Lana (June 24, 2013). "Snowden sought Booz Allen job to gather evidence on NSA surveillance." South China Morning Post (Hong Kong).
  88. Jump up ^ Mark Hosenball and Warren Strobel (November 7, 2013), Snowden persuaded other NSA workers to give up passwords – sources Reuters
  89. Jump up ^ Mark Mazzetti and Michael S. Schmidt (December 15, 2013), Officials Say U.S. May Never Know Extent of Snowden's Leaks The New York Times
  90. Jump up ^ Andy Greenberg (December 16, 2013), An NSA Coworker Remembers The Real Edward Snowden: 'A Genius Among Geniuses' Forbes
  91. Jump up to: a b c Snowden, Edward. "Live Q&A wiyh Edward Snowden"FreeSnowden.is. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  92. Jump up ^ Golgowski, Nina (June 11, 2013). "NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden FIRED from $122,000 per-year job with defense contractor Booz Hamilton"Daily News (New York).
  93. Jump up ^ Gellman, Barton. "Edward Snowden, after months of NSA revelations, says his mission's accomplished"The Washington Post.
  94. Jump up to: a b c "Booz Allen hired Snowden despite discrepancies in his résumé." (print title: "Snowden hired despite discrepancies in résumé"). Reuters. South China Morning Post (Hong Kong). June 22, 2013. – Alternate link under title: "Exclusive: NSA contractor hired Snowden despite concerns about resume discrepancies" by Hosenball, Mark (Editing by David Lindsey and Stacey Joyce).
  95. Jump up ^ "An NSA Coworker Remembers The Real Edward Snowden: 'A Genius Among Geniuses'"Forbes. December 16, 2013.
  96. Jump up ^ Cameron Stewart and Paul Maley (5 December 2013). "Edward Snowden stole up to 20,000 Aussie files".The Australian. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  97. Jump up ^ "David Miranda row: Seized files 'endanger agents'"BBC. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  98. Jump up ^ Chris Strohm and Del Quentin Wilber (10 January 2014). "Pentagon Says Snowden Took Most U.S. Secrets Ever: Rogers"Bloomberg News. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  99. Jump up to: a b Peter Maass (August 18, 2013), How Laura Poitras Helped Snowden Spill His Secrets The New York Times
  100. Jump up to: a b How Edward Snowden led journalist and film-maker to reveal NSA secrets | World newsThe Guardian.
  101. Jump up to: a b Carmon, Irin (June 10, 2013). "How we broke the NSA story"Salon.
  102. Jump up ^ Poitras, Laura (August 22, 2012) [1]The New York Times.
  103. Jump up ^ U.S. filmmaker repeatedly detained at borderSalon. (April 8, 2012).
  104. Jump up to: a b Weinger, Mackenzie (June 10, 2013). "Barton Gellman, Glenn Greenwald feud over NSA leaker"Politico.
  105. Jump up to: a b c d e Gellman, Barton (June 10, 2013). "Code name 'Verax': Snowden, in exchanges with Post reporter, made clear he knew risks"The Washington Post.
  106. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden Interview: The NSA and Its Willing Helpers Der Spiegel
  107. Jump up ^ "Edward Snowden vows more disclosures about U.S. surveillance"Los Angeles Times. June 17, 2013.
  108. Jump up to: a b Smith, Matt; Pearson, Michael (June 10, 2013). "NSA leaker holed up in Hong Kong hotel, running low on cash". CNN.
  109. Jump up ^ "U.S.leaker Edward Snowden 'defending liberty'". BBC News. June 10, 2013.
  110. Jump up ^ Yang, Jia Lynn (June 10, 2013). "Edward Snowden faces strong extradition treaty if he remains in Hong Kong".The Washington Post.
  111. Jump up ^ "Everything We Learned From Edward Snowden in 2013". NationalJournal.com. December 31, 2013.
  112. Jump up ^ "Timeline of Edward Snowden's revelations | Al Jazeera America". Al Jazeera.
  113. Jump up ^ "NSA Primary Sources"Electronic Frontier Foundation. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
  114. Jump up ^ Greenwald, Glenn. "Snowden docs reveal British spies snooped on YouTube and Facebook".NBCAngryBirds. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  115. Jump up to: a b c Gellman, Barton; Soltani, Ashkan. "NSA infiltrates links to Yahoo, Google data centers worldwide, Snowden documents say"The Washington Post.
  116. Jump up to: a b Gellman, Barton (November 4, 2013). "How we know the NSA had access to internal Google and Yahoo cloud data"The Washington Post.
  117. Jump up ^ Greenwald, Glenn and Ewen MacAskill. "Boundless Informant: the NSA's secret tool to track global surveillance data"The Guardian. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  118. Jump up ^ Tim Leslie and Mark Corcoran. "Explained: Australia's involvement with the NSA, the US spy agency at heart of global scandal"Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved December 18, 2013.
  119. Jump up ^ Julian Borger. "GCHQ and European spy agencies worked together on mass surveillance"The Guardian. Retrieved December 18, 2013.
  120. Jump up ^ Greg Weston, Glenn Greenwald, Ryan Gallagher. "Snowden document shows Canada set up spy posts for NSA"Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved December 13, 2013.
  121. Jump up ^ McGregor, Richard (5 February 2014). "‘The Snowden Files’, by Luke Harding"Financial Times. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  122. Jump up ^ BBC News – Only 1% of Snowden files published – Guardian editor. BBC.co.uk (December 3, 2013).
  123. Jump up ^ Snowden spy leaks: worst yet to come, says Defence Minister David JohnstonThe Sydney Morning Herald.
  124. Jump up ^ Walt, Vivienne. (October 14, 2013) Greenwald on Snowden Leaks: The Worst Is Yet to ComeTime.
  125. Jump up ^ ITAR-TASS: World – Snowden's father: the worst of the leaks are yet to come. En.itar-tass.com (June 4, 2011).
  126. Jump up ^ Mazzetti, Mark and Schmidt, Michael S. (December 14, 2013) Officials Say U.S. May Never Know Extent of Snowden's LeaksThe New York Times
  127. Jump up ^ Hosenball, M. (November 14, 2013). NSA chief says Snowden leaked up to 200,000 secret documents. Reuters.
  128. Jump up ^ "EXCLUSIVE – After 'cataclysmic' Snowden affair, NSA faces winds of change". Yahoo! News. Reuters. December 14, 2013.
  129. Jump up ^ "NSA slides explain the PRISM data-collection program"The Washington Post. July 10, 2013.
  130. Jump up ^ Levy, Steven. "How the NSA Almost Killed the Internet | Threat Level"Wired.
  131. Jump up ^ Greenwald, Glenn; MacAskill, Ewen (June 6, 2013). "NSA Prism program taps in to user data of Apple, Google and others"The Guardian.
  132. Jump up ^ Shane, Scott; Somaiya, Ravi (June 16, 2013). "New Leak Indicates U.S. and Britain Eavesdropped at '09 World Conferences"The New York Times.
  133. Jump up ^ Greenwald, Glenn. "NSA collecting phone records of millions of Verizon customers daily"The Guardian.
  134. Jump up ^ AFP/The Local (ben.mcpartland@thelocal.com). "US spy agency 'taped millions of French calls'". Thelocal.fr.
  135. Jump up ^ Chrisafis, Angelique; Jones, Sam. "Snowden leaks: France summons US envoy over NSA surveillance claims"The Guardian.
  136. Jump up ^ France in the NSA's crosshair : phone networks under surveillanceLe Monde.
  137. Jump up ^ Greenwald, Glenn. "XKeyscore: NSA tool collects 'nearly everything a user does on the internet'"The Guardian.
  138. Jump up ^ Gellman, Barton; Soltani, Ashkan. "NSA collects millions of e-mail address books globally"The Washington Post.
  139. Jump up ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/08/us/broader-sifting-of-data-abroad-is-seen-by-nsa.html?_r=1&
  140. Jump up ^ Gellman, Barton; Soltani, Ashkan. "NSA tracking cellphone locations worldwide, Snowden documents show".The Washington Post.
  141. Jump up ^ Nicole Perlroth; Jeff Larson; Scott Shane (September 5, 2013). "N.S.A. Foils Much Internet Encryption"The New York Times.
  142. Jump up ^ Ball, James; Borger, Julian; Greenward, Glenn (September 5, 2013). "U.S. and UK spy agencies defeat privacy and security on the internet"The Guardian.
  143. Jump up ^ NSA uses Google cookies to pinpoint targets for hacking
  144. Jump up ^ Elliott, Justin (December 9, 2013). "World of Spycraft: NSA and CIA Spied in Online Games". ProPublica.
  145. Jump up to: a b Peterson, Andrea (December 31, 2013). "Here's what we learned about the NSA's spying programs in 2013"The Washington Post.
  146. Jump up ^ "NSA Officers Spy on Love Interests – Washington Wire"The Wall Street Journal. August 23, 2013.
  147. Jump up ^ "Top-Secret Document Reveals NSA Spied on Porn Habits As Part of Plan To Discredit 'Radicalizers'".Huffington Post. November 26, 2013.
  148. Jump up ^ Jonathan Watts. "NSA accused of spying on Brazilian oil company Petrobras"The Guardian.
  149. Jump up ^ James Ball and Nick Hopkins. "GCHQ and NSA targeted charities, Germans, Israeli PM and EU chief"The Guardian.
  150. Jump up ^ Allam, Hannah. (October 25, 2013) WASHINGTON: World’s anger at Obama policies goes beyond Europe and the NSA | Europe. McClatchy DC.
  151. Jump up ^ Weisberg, Timothy. (October 23, 2013) Snowden's Paper Trail: Where in the World Is the NSA?. NBC Bay Area.
  152. Jump up ^ "NSA Hacked Email Account of Mexican President – SPIEGEL ONLINE"Der Spiegel. October 20, 2013.
  153. Jump up ^ British spy agency taps cables, shares with NSA – Guardian. Reuters.
  154. Jump up ^ Bradsher, Keith (June 14, 2013) Snowden's Leaks on China Could Affect Its Role in His FateThe New York Times
  155. Jump up ^ Privacy Scandal: NSA Can Spy on Smart Phone Data – SPIEGEL ONLINEDer Spiegel.de (September 7, 2013).
  156. Jump up ^ Report: US spied on millions of phone calls in Spain over one month. NBC News.
  157. Jump up ^ NSA monitored calls of 35 world leaders after US official handed over contacts | World newsThe Guardian.
  158. Jump up ^ Baker, Luke (October 24, 2013). "Merkel frosty on the U.S. over 'unacceptable' spying allegations". Reuters.
  159. Jump up ^ Traynor, Ian; Lewis, Paul. "Merkel compared NSA to Stasi in heated encounter with Obama"The Guardian.
  160. Jump up ^ Gellman, Barton; Miller, Greg. "'Black budget' summary details U.S. spy network's successes, failures and objectives"The Washington Post.
  161. Jump up ^ Post Store (May 17, 2011). "NSA paying U.S. companies for access to communications networks"The Washington Post.
  162. Jump up ^ "Snowden leaks intelligence 'black budget' to Washington Post | Al Jazeera America". Al Jazeera. August 29, 2013.
  163. Jump up ^ Latest Snowden leak reveals NSA's goal to continually expand surveillance abilities. Rt.com (November 23, 2013).
  164. Jump up ^ Risen, James and Poitras, Laura (November 22, 2013) N.S.A. Report Outlined Goals for More PowerThe New York Times
  165. Jump up ^ Barchfield, Jenny (July 14, 2013). "Greenwald: Snowden docs contain NSA 'blueprint'". Associated Press.
  166. Jump up ^ HPSCI Chairman Mike Rogers and Ranking Member C.A. Dutch RuppersbergerL “Snowden’s acts of betrayal truly place America’s military men and women in greater danger around the world” U.S. House Intelligence Committee 9 January 2014
  167. Jump up ^ Eli Lake (30 January 2014), Did an Angry Birds Leak Risk Spies’ Lives? The Daily Beast
  168. Jump up ^ "Snowden's open letter offers to help Brazil look into NSA surveillance". CNN.
  169. Jump up ^ MacAskill, Ewen (June 12, 2013). "Edward Snowden: how the spy story of the age leaked out"The Guardian(London).
  170. Jump up to: a b Cornell, Lauren (October–November 2013). "Primary Documents". Mousse 40: 62–73.
  171. Jump up ^ "NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden: 'I don't want to live in a society that does these sort of things'" (video).The Guardian (London). June 9, 2013.
  172. Jump up to: a b "Edward Snowden's statement to human rights groups in full"The Daily Telegraph. July 12, 2013.
  173. Jump up ^ Gellman, Barton. (June 9, 2013) "Code name 'Verax': Snowden, in exchanges with Post reporter, made clear he knew risks"The Washington Post.
  174. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden: US would have buried NSA warnings forever | World newsThe Guardian. (October 18, 2013).
  175. Jump up to: a b Risen, James (October 18, 2013) Snowden Says He Took No Secret Files to RussiaThe New York Times
  176. Jump up ^ "Federal Judge Rules Against N.S.A. Phone Data Program"The New York Times. December 16, 2013.
  177. Jump up to: a b "Snowden-Interview: Transcript". Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  178. Jump up to: a b Janet Reitman (4 December 2013), Snowden and Greenwald: The Men Who Leaked the SecretsRolling Stone
  179. Jump up ^ Gellman, Barton; Blake, Aaron; Miller, Greg (June 9, 2013). "Edward Snowden comes forward as source of NSA leaks"The Washington Post.
  180. Jump up ^ "Called a defector, NSA leaker defends his decision". CNN. June 10, 2013.
  181. Jump up ^ Pomfret, James; Roantree, Anne Marie (June 12, 2013). "American who leaked NSA secrets is a free man in Hong Kong – for now". Reuters. "Sources at Hong Kong law firms have said Snowden has approached human rights lawyers in the city and may be digging in his heels for a legal fight in preparation for the United States laying charges against him."
  182. Jump up ^ Lam, Lana (June 12, 2013). "Whistle-blower Edward Snowden tells SCMP: 'Let Hong Kong people decide my fate'"South China Morning Post (Hong Kong).
  183. Jump up ^ Lam, Lana (June 13, 2013). "Whistleblower Edward Snowden talks to South China Morning Post"South China Morning Post. "He vowed to fight any extradition attempt by the U.S. government, saying: 'My intention is to ask the courts and people of Hong Kong to decide my fate. I have been given no reason to doubt your system.'"
  184. Jump up ^ Eli Lake (June 25, 2013) Greenwald: Snowden's Files Are Out There if 'Anything Happens' to Him The Daily Beast
  185. Jump up ^ Will Englund (August 26, 2013) Report: Snowden stayed at Russian consulate while in Hong Kong
  186. Jump up ^ Angela Shunina (September 6, 2013), Snowden "asked Russian diplomats in Hong Kong for help" – PutinRussia Beyond the Headlines
  187. Jump up ^ Snowden is in 'safe place' waiting for his father to discuss future Information Telegraph Agency of RussiaAugust 31, 2013
  188. Jump up ^ Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena: Exchanging Snowden for Bout or Yaroshenko is impossibleInformation Telegraph Agency of Russia, July 21, 2013
  189. Jump up ^ Общественный совет при ФСБ России. Osfsb.ru.
  190. Jump up ^ "It's Now Clear That Russian Intelligence Speaks For Edward Snowden"Business Insider. July 22, 2013.
  191. Jump up ^ Lukas I. Alpert (September 4, 2013),Putin Admits Early Snowden Contact The Wall Street Journal
  192. Jump up to: a b c Mayer, Jane. "Snowden Calls Russian-Spy Story “Absurd”"The New Yorker. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  193. Jump up ^ NSA Leaker Edward Snowden Seeks Asylum in Ecuador ABC News June 23, 2013
  194. Jump up ^ US revokes NSA leaker Edward Snowden's passport, as he reportedly seeks asylum in Ecuador Fox News Channel June 23, 2013
  195. Jump up ^ Shane, Scott (June 23, 2013). "Offering Snowden Aid, WikiLeaks Gets Back in the Game"The New York TimesArchived from the original on June 24, 2013.
  196. Jump up ^ Makinen, Julie (June 23, 2013). "Snowden leaves Hong Kong; final destination unclear"Los Angeles Times.
  197. Jump up ^ Perlez, Jane; Bradsher, Keith (June 24, 2013). "China Said to Have Made Call to Let Leaker Depart"The New York Times. p. A9 (US edition)Print title: "China Said to Have Made Call to Let Leaker Depart"
  198. Jump up ^ "HKSAR Government issues statement on Edward Snowden" (Press release). Hong Kong Government. June 23, 2013.
  199. Jump up ^ Baker, Peter; Barry, Ellen (June 23, 2013). "N.S.A. 'Leaker Leaves Hong Kong, Local Officials Say'"The New York Times.
  200. Jump up ^ "Snowden left HK lawfully: CE". Hong Kong Information Services Department. June 24, 2013.
  201. Jump up ^ "No delay in Snowden case: SJ". Hong Kong Information Services Department. June 25, 2013. Archived from the original on June 26, 2013.
  202. Jump up ^ "Hong Kong did not assist Snowden's departure"Global PostAgence France-Presse. June 25, 2013. "Yuen also said there were discrepancies and missing information in documents used to identify Snowden. 'On the diplomatic documents, James was used as the middle name, on the record upon entering the border, Joseph was used as the middle name, on the American court documents sent to us by the American Justice department, it only said Edward J Snowden,' he said. Hong Kong authorities also noticed that documents produced by the US did not show Snowden's American passport number."
  203. Jump up ^ Luk, Eddie (June 26, 2013). "Justice chief spells it out"The Standard (Hong Kong).
  204. Jump up ^ Daily Press Briefing United States Department of State June 24, 2013
  205. Jump up ^ Pomfret, James; Torode, Greg (June 24, 2013). "Behind Snowden's Hong Kong exit: fear and persuasion". Reuters.
  206. Jump up ^ Michael Kelley (January 4, 2014), Julian Assange Gave A Very Peculiar Response When He Was Asked About 'Getting Snowden Out Of The US' Business Insider
  207. Jump up ^ Самолет с Эдвардом Сноуденом приземлился в "Шереметьево" NEWSru, June 23, 2013.
  208. Jump up ^ "Snowden on the run, seeks asylum in Ecuador". CNN.
  209. Jump up ^ Sergei L. Loiko (June 23, 2013). "Snowden stopping in Moscow en route to Cuba, Russian says"Los Angeles Times.
  210. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden lands in Moscow, likely bound for Ecuador. CBS News (June 23, 2013).
  211. Jump up ^ "Face the Nation transcripts December 29, 2013: Hayden, Drake, Radack, Gellman – Page 4". CBS News. December 29, 2013.
  212. Jump up ^ AP Source: State Department revokes NSA leaker Snowden's passport Associated Press June 23, 2013
  213. Jump up ^ Jill Lawless (June 26, 2013), Will Snowden join ranks of airport denizens? Associated Press
  214. Jump up ^ Germany's Quandary: The Debate over Asylum for Snowden Der Spiegel November 4, 2013
  215. Jump up ^ Max Fisher (June 25, 2013),Russia’s own visa rules say Moscow has had legal right to seize Snowden for past 24 hours The Washington Post
  216. Jump up ^ Statement from Edward Snowden in Moscow. Wikileaks.org (July 1, 2013).
  217. Jump up ^ Why Snowden's Passport Matters | Norman SolomonHuffington Post. (October 23, 2013).
  218. Jump up ^ Peter Baker and Ellen Barry (23 June 2013), Snowden, in Russia, Seeks Asylum in Ecuador The New York Times
  219. Jump up ^ Fidel Castro labels libelous report Cuba blocked Snowden travel Reuters August 28, 2013
  220. Jump up ^ "Evo Morales se abre a ceder asilo a Edward Snowden si lo solicita" [Evo Morales prepared to give asylum to Edward Snowden if requested]El Mercurio (in Spanish) (Santiago). EFE. July 1, 2013.
  221. Jump up ^ Gruber, Angelika. "Snowden still in Moscow despite Bolivian plane drama". Reuters.
  222. Jump up ^ Fisher, Max (July 3, 2013). "Evo Morales's controversial flight over Europe, minute by heavily disputed minute".The Washington Post.
  223. Jump up ^ Portas: Portugal autorizou o sobrevoo de Morales Sol Online, July 9, 2013 (Portuguese)
  224. Jump up ^ Bolivia says European nations 'kidnapped' Evo Morales in hunt for NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden – Europe – World. The Independent (July 4, 2013).
  225. Jump up ^ "Spain 'told Edward Snowden was on Bolivia president's plane'". BBC News. July 5, 2013.
  226. Jump up ^ Rerouted Morales plane has South American leaders irateUSA Today. (July 5, 2013).
  227. Jump up to: a b c "Edward Snowden seeks asylum in 20 nations, but gets no immediate takers"CBS News. Associated Press. July 2, 2013.
  228. Jump up ^ Gladstone, Rick (July 1, 2013). "Snowden Is Said to Claim U.S. Is Blocking Asylum Bids"The New York Times.
  229. Jump up ^ Alleged Snowden Statement: Obama Administration 'Using Citizenship As A Weapon' « CBS DC. Washington.cbslocal.com (July 1, 2013).
  230. Jump up ^ Galeno, Luis. "Venezuela, Nicaragua offer asylum to NSA leaker Snowden"Reuters.
  231. Jump up ^ Spain Says It Was Told Snowden Was Aboard Bolivian Leader's Blocked JetThe Wall Street Journal. (July 5, 2013).
  232. Jump up ^ "Poland, India, Brazil snub Snowden asylum application". Polish Radio English Section. July 3, 2013.
  233. Jump up ^ "France rejects Snowden asylum request". United States: Fox News Channel. July 4, 2013.
  234. Jump up ^ "Italy rejects Snowden asylum request". Reuters. July 4, 2013.
  235. Jump up ^ Österreichische Regierung sieht Formalfehler bei Asylantrag von Snowden. Derstandard.at.
  236. Jump up ^ "Teeven: geen asiel voor Snowden" (in Dutch). Novum Nieuws. July 2, 2013. "De Amerikaanse klokkenluider Edward Snowden kan fluiten naar een Nederlandse asielvergunning. [Fred] Teeven heeft het verzoek ontvangen, zegt hij. Maar het is 'niet-ontvankelijk' want de aanvraag is niet in Nederland gedaan."
  237. Jump up ^ "Ecuador cools on Edward Snowden asylum as Assange frustration grows"The Guardian. June 28, 2013.
  238. Jump up ^ "Ecuador 'helped Snowden by mistake,' asylum in doubt"RT. July 2, 2013.
  239. Jump up ^ "Ecuador says it blundered over Snowden travel document"The Guardian. July 3, 2013.
  240. Jump up to: a b "Путин признал: Сноуден – в Москве. И посоветовал США не "стричь поросенка""NEWSru. June 25, 2013.
  241. Jump up ^ "Putin: Snowden still in Moscow airport transit zone, won't be extradited"RT. June 25, 2013.
  242. Jump up to: a b "Putin says Snowden at Russian airport, signals no extradition". Reuters. June 25, 2013.
  243. Jump up ^ "WikiLeaks и спецслужбы провели в Москве операцию «Сноуден»"Izvestia (Moscow). June 23, 2013.
  244. Jump up ^ Julia Ioffe, (June 25, 2013). "Edward Snowden's going to stay in Russia, just you wait" The New Republic
  245. Jump up ^ Pearson, Michael; Smith, Matt; Mullen, Jethro (July 2, 2013). "Snowden's asylum options dwindle". CNN.
  246. Jump up ^ "Vladimir Putin: Edward Snowden must stop leaking secrets to stay in Russia"Politico. Associated Press. July 1, 2013.
  247. Jump up ^ Elder, Miriam (July 2, 2013). "Edward Snowden withdraws Russian asylum request"The Guardian (London).
  248. Jump up ^ Herszenhorn, David M. (July 16, 2013). Leaker Files for Asylum to Remain in Russia The New York Times
  249. Jump up ^ Stanglin, Doug (July 12, 2013). "Snowden has 'no regrets,' seeks asylum in Russia"USA Today.
  250. Jump up to: a b "Fugitive Edward Snowden applies for asylum in Russia". BBC. July 16, 2013.
  251. Jump up to: a b Edward Snowden Makes No-Leak Promise in Asylum Bid: Lawyer – ABC News. ABC News.com (July 16, 2013).
  252. Jump up ^ Snowden plans to settle and work in Russia – lawyer to RTRT, July 23, 2013
  253. Jump up ^ "Venezuela Offers Asylum to Snowden"The New York Times. July 5, 2013.
  254. Jump up ^ "Пребывание, несовместимое с визитом". Kommersant. July 8, 2013.
  255. Jump up ^ "U.S. says allowing Snowden to leave airport would be disappointing". Reuters. July 24, 2013.
  256. Jump up ^ "U.S. vague on whether Obama will go to Moscow amid Snowden flap". Reuters. July 17, 2013.
  257. Jump up ^ "Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 7/12/2013"The White House. July 12, 2013.
  258. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden requests temporary asylum in Russia in compromise – Los Angeles TimesLos Angeles Times. (July 16, 2013).
  259. Jump up to: a b c "US attorney general's letter to Russian justice minister". BBC. July 26, 2013.
  260. Jump up ^ "U.S. won't seek death penalty for Snowden"USA Today.
  261. Jump up ^ "Russia and US security services 'in talks' over Snowden". BBC. July 26, 2013.
  262. Jump up ^ "Вести от Путина: Сноуденом не занимается, удивляется фото "куратора Пу". И целует гигантскую щуку".NEWSru. July 26, 2013.
  263. Jump up ^ Finn, Peter; Horwitz, Sari (June 21, 2013). "U.S. charges Snowden with espionage"The Washington Post.
  264. Jump up ^ "Snowden out of airport, still in Moscow". CNN.
  265. Jump up ^ Richter, Paul and Loiko, Sergei L. (August 1, 2013). "Snowden asylum may presage rocky period in U.S.-Russia ties"Los Angeles Times.
  266. Jump up ^ "Edward Snowden asylum: US 'disappointed' by Russian decision"The Guardian.
  267. Jump up to: a b "NSA spy leaks: US fury at Snowden's Russian asylum". London: BBC. August 1, 2013.
  268. Jump up ^ "White House 'Extremely Disappointed' in Russia's Asylum Offer to Snowden"The Voice of America (USA). August 1, 2013.
  269. Jump up ^ "Statement by the Press Secretary on the President's Travel to Russia"The White House (USA). August 7, 2013.
  270. Jump up ^ "Obama cancels Putin meeting over Snowden asylum". USA: BBC. August 7, 2013.
  271. Jump up ^ "Barack Obama cancels meeting with Vladimir Putin over Edward Snowden"The Daily Telegraph. August 7, 2013.
  272. Jump up ^ Russia 'disappointed' by Obama cancelling Putin meeting: Kremlin Reuters
  273. Jump up ^ "Russia "disappointed" bilateral talks with US cancelled". BBC. August 7, 2013.
  274. Jump up ^ Report: FBI wanted to fly Edward Snowden's father to Moscow. CNN, July 31, 2013.
  275. Jump up ^ "Edward Snowden better off in Russia than US, his father says." Associated Press at The Guardian. July 27, 2013.
  276. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden's father pleased with son's Moscow life. CNN.
  277. Jump up ^ "Report: Snowden's lawyer says former NSA leaker now has a tech job at a Russian website". Associated Press.
  278. Jump up ^ NSA Fugitive Snowden Gets Job In Russia. Forbes.
  279. Jump up ^ NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden to work for one of Russia's most popular websites – Americas – World. The Independent (October 31, 2013).
  280. Jump up ^ Hosenball, Mark (October 11, 2013). "Laptops Snowden took to Hong Kong, Russia were a 'diversion'". Reuters.
  281. Jump up ^ Rusbridger, Alan (November 21, 2013). "The Snowden Leaks and the Public"The New York Review of Books: 31–34.
  282. Jump up to: a b Edward Snowden back in the limelight? Father, US whistleblowers visit Moscow (+video)The Christian Science Monitor. (October 10, 2013).
  283. Jump up ^ 4 Americans meet Snowden to give him awardUSA Today. (October 10, 2013).
  284. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden says NSA surveillance programmes 'hurt our country' | World newsThe Guardian.
  285. Jump up ^ Obama knew of NSA spying on Merkel and approved it, report says. Fox News (October 27, 2013).
  286. Jump up ^ Snowden Ready to Testify About US Spying on Merkel – German Lawmaker | Russia | RIA Novosti. En.ria.ru.
  287. Jump up ^ Troianovski, Anton. (November 18, 2013) German Opposition Demands Snowden Be Let into Country to Testify – WSJ.comThe Wall Street Journal.
  288. Jump up ^ German MP meets Snowden, says he is willing to come to Germany for inquiry. Reuters.
  289. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden gets website job in Russia, lawyer says. CNN.
  290. Jump up ^ Snowden may aid Germany on US spying details. Is Berlin visit in the cards?The Christian Science Monitor. (November 1, 2013).
  291. Jump up ^ WikiLeaks: Snowden ally Sarah Harrison leaves Russia, won't return to UK over prosecution fear. Fox News (November 6, 2013).
  292. Jump up ^ Statement by Sarah Harrison. Wikileaks.org (November 6, 2013).
  293. Jump up ^ Vargas, Natasha. (October 24, 2013) Enemy of the State. Advocate.com.
  294. Jump up ^ US spying interview. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.au (October 29, 2013).
  295. Jump up ^ Germany wants Snowden to give evidence in Moscow, not Berlin. Reuters.
  296. Jump up ^ John Robles (18 January 2014), Regarding Snowden: US lies and lies and lies - Jesselyn Radack Voice of Russia
  297. Jump up ^ John Robles (14 January 2014), US continues to attempt to “get” Edward Snowden – Jesselyn Radack Voice of Russia
  298. Jump up ^ Post Store. "Snowden's open letter to Brazil: Read the text"The Washington Post.
  299. Jump up ^ "Snowden's open letter offers to help Brazil look into NSA surveillance". CNN.
  300. Jump up ^ "As Brazil's fury over NSA mounts, U.S. vows to work through tensions". CNN.
  301. Jump up to: a b c "Brazilian senator urges asylmu for Snowden"The Washington Post. Associated Press. December 18, 2013.
  302. Jump up to: a b c Romero, Simon (December 17, 2013). "Snowden offers help to Brazil in spy case"The New York Times.
  303. Jump up to: a b c "Brazil says not considering Snowden asylum"Chicago Tribune. March 4, 2012.
  304. Jump up ^ "Brazil says it is not considering asylum for Edward Snowden". CBS News. Reuters. December 17, 2013.
  305. Jump up ^ [2]. The Washington Post (December 23, 2013).
  306. Jump up to: a b "Snowden to ask Russian police for protection after US threats – lawyer"Russia Today. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  307. Jump up to: a b Zaks, Dmitry. "Fugitive US leaker Snowden 'fears for his life'"AFP. Yahoo.com. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  308. Jump up ^ Masnick, Mike. "The Fact That The US Intelligence Community So Readily Admits To Fantasies Of Killing Ed Snowden Shows Why They Can't Be Trusted"TechDirt. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  309. Jump up ^ Arkhipov, Ilya. "Snowden Denies Working as Foreign Spy, New Yorker Reports"Bloomberg. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  310. Jump up ^ "Snowden exklusiv - Das Interview | NDR (English) (January 26, 2014)"Internet Archive. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  311. Jump up ^ "Snowden talks industrial espionage, death threats in German interview"France24. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  312. Jump up ^ Gregory, David. "January 19: Dianne Feinstein, Mike Rogers, Alexis Ohanian, John Wisniewski, Rudy Giuliani, Robert Gates, Newt Gingrich, Andrea Mitchell, Harold Ford Jr., Nia-Malika Henderson"Meet The Press. MSNBC. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  313. Jump up ^ Savage, Charlie. "Snowden Denies Suggestions That He Was a Spy for Russia"NYT. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  314. Jump up ^ Serwer, Adam. "Feinstein: No evidence Snowden is a Russian spy"MSNBC. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  315. Jump up ^ Knight, Ben. "Snowden's battles with the US media"Der Speigel. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  316. Jump up ^ "US hints at Edward Snowden plea bargain to allow return from Russia"Guardian. 23 January 2014. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
  317. Jump up ^ "Daniel Ellsberg Calls Edward Snowden A 'Hero,' Says NSA Leak Was Most Important in American History".Huffington Post.
  318. Jump up ^ Ellsberg, Daniel (June 10, 2013). "Edward Snowden: saving us from the United Stasi of America"The Guardian.
  319. Jump up to: a b Board of Directors (14 January 2014). "Edward Snowden To Join Daniel Ellsberg, Others on Freedom of the Press Foundation’s Board of Directors"Freedom of the Press Foundation. Retrieved 15 January 2014. "The secrecy system in this country is broken. No one is punished for using secrecy to conceal dangerous policies, lies, or crimes, yet concerned employees who wish to inform the American public about what the government is doing under their name are treated as spies. Our ‘accountability’ mechanisms are a one-sided secret court, which acts as a rubber stamp, and a Congressional ‘oversight’ committee, which has turned into the NSA’s public relations firm. Edward Snowden had no choice but to go to the press with information. Far from a crime, Snowden’s disclosures are a true constitutional moment, where the press has held the government to account using the First Amendment, when the other branches refused."
  320. Jump up ^ Twitter / DanielEllsberg: Edward Snowden has done more
  321. Jump up ^ Pecquet, Julian (June 27, 2013). "US won't 'scramble jets' to capture 'hacker' Snowden, Obama says"The Hill.
  322. Jump up ^ "Obama refuses to barter for Edward Snowden". BBC News. 2013-06-27. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  323. Jump up ^ "Obama downplays Snowden case, says US not 'scrambling jets' to get 'hacker'". Fox News Channel. June 27, 2013.
  324. Jump up to: a b Wolf, Z. Byron (August 13, 2013). "Fact-checking Obama's claims about Snowden". CNN.
  325. Jump up ^ David Remnick (January 2014) Going the Distance: On and off the road with Barack Obama The New Yorker
  326. Jump up ^ Transcript Of President Obama's Speech On NSA Reforms NPR 17 January 2014
  327. Jump up ^ Why I Don't Care About Edward Snowden-Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont
  328. Jump up ^ Frank Snepp (31 January 2014),Edward Snowden's weasel ways The Los Angeles Times
  329. Jump up ^ "Ex-CIA director: Snowden should be ‘hanged’ if convicted for treason". Fox News Channel.
  330. Jump up ^ "Face the Nation transcripts December 29, 2013: Hayden, Drake, Radack, Gellman – Page 3". CBS News. December 29, 2013.
  331. Jump up ^ Ex-NSA/CIA chief Hayden jokes of putting Snowden on kill list—RT USA
  332. Jump up ^ Dilanian, Ken (January 9, 2014). "Snowden leaks severely hurt U.S. security, two House members say"Los Angeles Times.
  333. Jump up ^ "Lawmakers: Snowden’s leaks may endanger US troops"The Washington Post. Associated Press.
  334. Jump up ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/02/opinion/edward-snowden-whistle-blower.html?_r=0
  335. Jump up ^ "Rieder: Why Edward Snowden should get clemency"USA Today. January 2, 2014.
  336. Jump up ^ http://publiceditor.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/01/02/weeks-in-the-making-an-editorial-on-snowden-may-go-beyond-what-is-realistic/
  337. Jump up ^ "Snowden affair: the case for a pardon"The Guardian. May 17, 2013.
  338. Jump up ^ Satter, Raphael. "2 newspapers call for clemency for Edward Snowden". Associated Press.
  339. Jump up ^ Baker, Peter, "Moves to Curb Spying Help Drive the Clemency Argument for Snowden", The New York Times, January 5, 2014, page A16
  340. Jump up ^ Fisher, Max (January 3, 2014). "The three types of NSA snooping that Edward Snowden revealed"The Washington Post. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  341. Jump up ^ Blogguest, TED (November 30, 2013). "Obama's 'outside experts' surveillance review panel has deep ties to gov't"TED. Drones, warfare, science fiction and cybercrime. A conversation with P.W. Singer
  342. Jump up ^ Snowden: NSA's indiscriminate spying 'collapsing' – The Washington Post[dead link]
  343. Jump up ^ "United Nations Resolution 68/167M". United Nations. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  344. Jump up ^ Williams, Carol J. (December 19, 2013). "U.N. votes to protect online privacy; Edward Snowden leaks credited"Los Angeles Times.
  345. Jump up ^ Brazil, Germany Drafting UN Anti-Spying Resolution To General Assembly To Curb U.S. Surveillance By NSA.Huffington Post.
  346. Jump up ^ UN advances digital privacy resolution after reports of US eavesdropping. Fox News (November 26, 2013).
  347. Jump up ^ NSA spying: Germany and Brazil produce draft UN resolution | World newsThe Guardian. (November 2, 2013).
  348. Jump up ^ "European parliament invites Edward Snowden to testify via video"The Guardian. Associated Press (Brussels). January 9, 2014.
  349. Jump up ^ Peter, Gregor (December 12, 2013). "Edward Snowden to Make Video Appearance to European Parliament".Der Spiegel.
  350. Jump up ^ Rieder: Snowden's NSA bombshell sparks debateUSA Today. (June 12, 2013).
  351. Jump up ^ Spy chief lauds Snowden-sparked debate .. The Australian (August 29, 2013).
  352. Jump up ^ 'Patriot Act' Author Seeks 'USA Freedom Act' to Rein In NSA – US News and World Report. Usnews.com (October 10, 2013).
  353. Jump up ^ Kerry: Some NSA surveillance work reached 'too far' and will be stopped. Star Tribune (November 1, 2013).
  354. Jump up ^ US surveillance by NSA has sometimes 'reached too far,' says Kerry. DW.DE (October 31, 2013).
  355. Jump up ^ NSA phone record collection does little to prevent terrorist attacks, group says - The Washington Post
  356. Jump up ^ Review Of Terrorism Cases Finds NSA Spying Helped Very Little : The Two-Way : NPR
  357. Jump up ^ NSA makes final push to retain most mass surveillance powers | World news | theguardian.com
  358. Jump up ^ Ackerman, Spencer. "US government privacy board says NSA bulk collection of phone data is illegal".Guardian. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  359. Jump up ^ "White House rejects review board finding that NSA data sweep is illegal"Fox/AP. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  360. Jump up ^ Neff, Blake. "Poll: Public turning against NSA practices"The Hill. The Hill. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  361. Jump up ^ Sarlin, Benjy. "RNC condemns NSA spying in huge turnaround"MSNBC. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  362. Jump up ^ Weigel, David. "The New, Snowden-Loving Republican Party"Slate. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  363. Jump up ^ MacAskill, Ewen (August 13, 2013). "White House insists James Clapper will not lead NSA surveillance review"The Guardian.
  364. Jump up ^ Farivar, Cyrus (August 23, 2013). "Obama's 'outside experts' surveillance review panel has deep ties to gov't".Ars Technica.
  365. Jump up ^ Sanger, David E.; Savage, Charlie (December 18, 2013). "Obama panel recommends new limits on N.S.A. spying"The New York Times.
  366. Jump up ^ "NSA program stopped no terror attacks, says White House panel member – Investigations". NBC News.
  367. Jump up ^ Bill Mears and Evan Perez (December 17, 2013). "Judge: NSA domestic phone data-mining unconstitutional". CNN.
  368. Jump up ^ http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/12/17/us/politics/17nsa-ruling.html
  369. Jump up ^ "The NSA on Trial by David Cole | NYRblog"The New York Review of Books. December 18, 2013.
  370. Jump up ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/17/us/politics/federal-judge-rules-against-nsa-phone-data-program.html?pagewanted=1&_r=0
  371. Jump up ^ Post Store. "Officials' defenses of NSA phone program may be unraveling"The Washington Post.
  372. Jump up ^ Davidson, Amy, Why Edward Snowden Deserves Amnesty, The New Yorker, December 19, 2013. This article discusses that an amnesty or pardon could include terms like Snowden giving the NSA a catalog of the leaked data or some hints about the weaknesses in their system and concludes that "Both sides need to let go of some passions; but when they do, both of their paths lead to amnesty."
  373. Jump up ^ Spencer Ackerman and Dan Roberts in Washington (December 16, 2013). "NSA phone surveillance program likely unconstitutional, federal judge rules"The Guardian.
  374. Jump up ^ Pauley III, William H. (December 27, 2013). "United States District Court Southern District of New York: American Civil Liberties Union v. James R. Clapper (13 Civ. 3994) (WHP))". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  375. Jump up ^ Adam Liptak and Michael S. Schmidt (December 27, 2013). "Judge Upholds N.S.A.'s Bulk Collection of Data on Calls"The New York Times. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  376. Jump up ^ Denniston, Lyle (December 27, 2013). "Judge upholds NSA's phone data sweeps (UPDATED)". Scotusblog. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  377. Jump up ^ Horwitz, Sari (December 27, 2013). "NSA collection of phone data is lawful, federal judge rules"The Washington Post. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  378. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden voted Guardian person of the year 2013 The Guardian December 9, 2013
  379. Jump up ^ "The Leading Global Thinkers of 2013"Foreign Policy.
  380. Jump up ^ "The FP Top 100 Global Thinkers | The Global Conversation"Foreign Policy.
  381. Jump up ^ Rothkopf, David (December 31, 2013). "King Snowden and the Fall of Wikileaks". Foreignpolicy.com.
  382. Jump up ^ Scherer, Michael. (December 11, 2013) Runner-Up: Edward Snowden The Dark Prophet | TIME.comTime.
  383. Jump up ^ And the 'Person of the Year' is...the Pope?. MSNBC.
  384. Jump up ^ Time Criticized For Choosing Pope Francis Over Edward Snowden As Person Of The YearHuffington Post. (December 11, 2013).
  385. Jump up ^ Peterson, Andrea (December 11, 2013). "Why Edward Snowden is The Switch's Person of the Year"The Washington Post.
  386. Jump up ^ Wallen, Jack, 10 tech heroes of 2013, TechRepublic, December 19, 2013 – a tech editor of a professional IT publication states his reason for placing Snowdon at the top of his list of Tech Heroes for the year.
  387. Jump up ^ Holpuch, Amanda (January 14, 2014). "Edward Snowden Will Join Freedom of the Press Foundation Board".The GuardianGuardian Media Group.
  388. Jump up to: a b "Edward Snowden bids to become Glasgow University rector"BBC. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  389. Jump up ^ Lay, Kat. "Snowden favourite to be Glasgow rector". Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  390. Jump up ^ Carrell, Severin. "Edward Snowden in running to be Glasgow University rector"Guardian. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  391. Jump up ^ Snowden Gets Whistleblower Award in Germany | News. The Moscow Times.
  392. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden awarded German 'Whistleblower Prize'. NDTV.com (August 31, 2013).
  393. Jump up ^ Snowden wins whistleblower award in Germany—RT News. RT (TV network).
  394. Jump up ^ Radack, Jesselyn (October 17, 2013) My Visit With Edward Snowden. The Nation
  395. Jump up ^ Edward Snowden gets whistleblower award October 11, 2013.
  396. Jump up ^ "FIRST VIDEO: Snowden receives Sam Adams Award in Moscow". Russia: RT. October 11, 2013.
  397. Jump up ^ "Alternative Christmas Message – 4oD". Channel 4. December 25, 2013.
  398. Jump up ^ Hodgson, Claire. "Edward Snowden will deliver Channel 4's Alternative Christmas Message 2013". Mirror TV. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  399. Jump up ^ Molloy, Antonia (December 24, 2013). "Edward Snowden will deliver Channel 4's Alternative Christmas Message"The Independent. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  400. Jump up ^ Times Colonist on Twitter. "A Christmas Message From Edward Snowden". Timescolonist.com.
  401. Jump up ^ Peter Walker. "Edward Snowden to broadcast Channel 4's alternative Christmas Day message"The Guardian.
  402. Jump up ^ "As F.B.I. Pursued Snowden, an E-Mail Service Stood Firm"The New York Times.
  403. Jump up ^ Tsukayama, Hayley. (August 9, 2013) Lavabit, Silent Circle shut down e-mail: What alternatives are left? – Washington PostThe Washington Post.
  404. Jump up ^ Alex Hern. "Email is broken – but Dark Mail Alliance is aiming to fix it | Technology"The Guardian.
  405. Jump up ^ Franceschi, Lorenzo. (October 30, 2013) Silent Circle and Lavabit Team Up to Protect Your Email From the NSA. Mashable.com.
  406. Jump up ^ Green, Matthew. (November 9, 2013) The Daunting Challenge of Secure E-mail. The New Yorker.
  407. Jump up ^ Smith, Gerry. "'Snowden Effect' Threatens U.S. Tech Industry's Global Ambitions"Huffington Post. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  408. Jump up ^ Boulton, Clint. "Snowden Effect Dominates 2013 Tech Industry News"Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  409. Jump up ^ Miller, Matthew. "In China, U.S. tech firms weigh 'Snowden Effect'"Reuters. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  410. Jump up ^ Kanji, Hussein. "The Snowden Effect: Impact on the Tech Sector"Bloomberg. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  411. Jump up ^ Hiner, Jason. "Understanding Snowden's impact on IT... in 2 minutes"TechRepublic. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  412. Jump up ^ JShotVideo (June 25, 2013). "[ v e r a x ] : Edward Snowden / 斯諾登 – Short Film". YouTube.
  413. Jump up ^ Maierbrugger, Arno (June 4, 2013). "Ready at last: Hong Kong director presents Snowden movie"Inside Investor.
  414. Jump up ^ Filmmakers look to crowdfunding for Snowden movie." Arjun Kharpal in CNBC. September 10, 2013.
  415. Jump up ^ Ross, Dalton. (September 26, 2013) 'South Park' NSA surveillance spoof gets big ratingsEntertainment Weekly.
  416. Jump up ^ Eric Cartman becomes the new Edward Snowden on 'South Park'. The Raw Story (September 27, 2013).

Further reading

External links

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

AWESOME This guy has GUTS AND GRITS. John Wayne would love this guy. He's exposing the worst crimes against humanity. The hypocrites of Gov. and the World Banking system. He's in a class of Great Whistleblowers of our century!!! Go Ed Go