One Year After Snowden, What's Really Changed?
The truth is, depressingly little.
The truth is, depressingly little.
It's emerged that Britain has an ultra-secret spy base in the Middle East which taps undersea cables running through the region.
Not only is the NSA interested in all your email and text messages, it would love to know exactly what you look like, too.
Following the EU court ruling earlier this month, Google has received an insane amount of 'right to be forgotten' claims. There were 12,000 requests on day one alone.
I've been speaking to a bunch of people about this over the last couple of days about this attack so I thought I'd collate some info on how it works, what we know and what the possible sources of the attack may be.
We are now able to look at how the NSA's mass surveillance programs fare when compared to the Necessary and Proportionate Principles.
The much anticipated interview between Brian Williams and Edward Snowden aired on Wednesday night. It's interesting. It's also revealing in a nuanced way, bringing flashbacks to 9/11 and vignettes of this past year's worth of NSA revelations. Most of all, though, it's a rare peek into the whistleblower's mind.
NBC News just published some telling quotes from its much anticipated interview with Edward Snowden. Among other self-aggrandising things, Snowden said he "was trained as a spy" and is "a technical expert". Snowden added, "I don't work with people".