Verizon & Obama: all your calls are belong to us.

I am shocked, Camping and Cooking are my two biggest hobbies... :whistling: ... now I wait.
We only visit those where several pieces of data - or a suspicious lack of data - suggests we need more information immediately.

BTW, your windows are pretty dirty. Could use a good cleaning.
 
We only visit those where several pieces of data - or a suspicious lack of data - suggests we need more information immediately.

BTW, your windows are pretty dirty. Could use a good cleaning.
Yeah, my dog and cat keep rubbing their noses.... wait a minute...
 
If you've got nothing to hide, what are you worried about?

Awful.
My brother is a strong supporter of this line of thought. It's impossible to argue against him, either, he won't hear of it. All it sounds like to him is, "You want to be able to get away with crime!"
 
Are we ready to abolish the NSA yet??
I'll be happy if we just rescind (most of) PATRIOT and FISA, actually. The whole "pass more laws because we're scared" mentality has caused sooooo much trouble.

EDIT: Especially with the DHS. I almost feel eliminating the DHS (especially as relates to airlines) would be worth even a 10x increase in the chance of being in an airplane crash*

--Patrick
*Even if you just count just the 39 worst world airlines, the average odds are 1:1.5million that there will be at least one fatality on your flight...and there's still no guarantee you will be that fatality. Just some random person on your plane.
 
Alittle more on X-Keyscore and what it can do: X-Keyscore gives NSA the ability to find and exploit vulnerable systems.

This capability essentially turns X-Keyscore into a sort of passive port scanner, watching for network behaviors from systems that match the profiles of systems for which the NSA’s TSO has exploits constructed, or for systems that have already been exploited by other malware that the TSO can leverage. This could allow the NSA to search broadly for systems within countries such as China or Iran by watching for the network traffic that comes from them through national firewalls, at which point the NSA could exploit those machines to have a presence within those networks.
Privacy and other issues aside, that's pretty damn cool.
 
If we could get some more transparency and accountability built into the system (i.e. no more secret FISA courts, regular audits, etc.), I wouldn't really care about XKeyscore or Prism or any of those. In theory, and the actual leaked documents (not what the Guardian claims they say) seem to suggest this, the legal hoops required to be jumped through to even use the systems are extensive and the physical limitations of the system are prohibitive to the kind of use people are imagining. We need to make sure those hoops are binding and publicly visible.
 
If they only collected information from active suspects, and if they only stored collected information for no more than 12 months once an investigation becomes inactive, then they can collect as much as they want within those limits.

I don't want them collecting all the information all the time and storing it indefinitely. They should NOT have my information in there, at all, unless I'm the subject of an active investigation.
 
I They should NOT have my information in there, at all, unless I'm the subject of an active investigation.
Fair enough. As of September 12, 2001, every man, woman, child, and pet has been the subject of an active and ongoing investigation. Anything else related to said investigation is classified.
 
Today I had some family over, and an 11 year old cousin-in-law wanted to watch the Simpson's movie. It has been awhile since I saw it, but I couldn't stop laugh/crying when they got near the end. Does anyone else find this scene rather... prophetic?

 
Lavabit, provider of encrypted Email, forced to shut down, almost-certainly because of this. Here's the text from the front page of the website: http://lavabit.com/

My Fellow Users,

I have been forced to make a difficult decision: to become complicit in crimes against the American people or walk away from nearly ten years of hard work by shutting down Lavabit. After significant soul searching, I have decided to suspend operations. I wish that I could legally share with you the events that led to my decision. I cannot. I feel you deserve to know what’s going on--the first amendment is supposed to guarantee me the freedom to speak out in situations like this. Unfortunately, Congress has passed laws that say otherwise. As things currently stand, I cannot share my experiences over the last six weeks, even though I have twice made the appropriate requests.

What’s going to happen now? We’ve already started preparing the paperwork needed to continue to fight for the Constitution in the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. A favorable decision would allow me resurrect Lavabit as an American company.

This experience has taught me one very important lesson: without congressional action or a strong judicial precedent, I would _strongly_ recommend against anyone trusting their private data to a company with physical ties to the United States.

Sincerely,
Ladar Levison
Owner and Operator, Lavabit LLC

Defending the constitution is expensive! Help us by donating to the Lavabit Legal Defense Fund here.
Yikes. Wiki page on them, since the front page isn't very descriptive now.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
Stupid NSLs.

Nope.
Honestly, I don't have any huge beef against the NSA, just the people currently driving it. It's like they're doing donuts on my lawn all the while yelling, "Diplomatic immunity!" out the window.

--Patrik
The NSA *is* the people who run it. Otherwise... there wouldn't be an NSA. Power corrupts, and you can bet your ass that such power as afforded them (or as they choose to claim for themselves, at this point) will be abused to its fullest extent whenever it suits them. We've entered a new Dark Age of Liberty.
 
The NSA *is* the people who run it. Otherwise... there wouldn't be an NSA. Power corrupts, and you can bet your ass that such power as afforded them (or as they choose to claim for themselves, at this point) will be abused to its fullest extent whenever it suits them. We've entered a new Dark Age of Liberty.
McCarthyism is bad, and we're heading straight back towards it, in a new jacket. Doesn't mean there weren't any spies/traitors/whatever at the time, just that the reaction was horrible, out of proportion, ill-advised, etc etc etc.

Likewise, shutting down FBI, CIA, NSA, Homeland Security, whatever is all fine and dandy, but it's not going to make anyone feel more secure. You do need a federal government to protect against terrorism. The way they're going about it may be horrible and wrong, but that doesn't mean they're (the institution, not the methods) useless or unnecessary.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
McCarthyism is bad, and we're heading straight back towards it, in a new jacket. Doesn't mean there weren't any spies/traitors/whatever at the time, just that the reaction was horrible, out of proportion, ill-advised, etc etc etc.

Likewise, shutting down FBI, CIA, NSA, Homeland Security, whatever is all fine and dandy, but it's not going to make anyone feel more secure. You do need a federal government to protect against terrorism. The way they're going about it may be horrible and wrong, but that doesn't mean they're (the institution, not the methods) useless or unnecessary.
It's not the FBI and CIA doing this, it's the NSA and the IRS. And "giving up essential liberty for security" yadda yadda. I'm not entirely convinced most of it isn't kabuki at this point anyway. What a coincidence that right as public outrage over the NSA is starting to boil up, all of a sudden Al Qaeda, which has been "on the run" and "unable to rebuild" until a week ago all of a sudden is such an immediate and credible threat we've got to abandon dozens of embassies across the middle east. Maybe it's true, but if it is, it illustrates how little security we're getting in exchange for all that liberty we've given up.
 
It's not the FBI and CIA doing this, it's the NSA and the IRS. And "giving up essential liberty for security" yadda yadda. I'm not entirely convinced most of it isn't kabuki at this point anyway. What a coincidence that right as public outrage over the NSA is starting to boil up, all of a sudden Al Qaeda, which has been "on the run" and "unable to rebuild" until a week ago all of a sudden is such an immediate and credible threat we've got to abandon dozens of embassies across the middle east. Maybe it's true, but if it is, it illustrates how little security we're getting in exchange for all that liberty we've given up.
Oh, I agree - on both counts. It's way too accidental, and the balance between lost freedoms and gained security is buggered.
I'm just saying there's a certain amount of baby in the bathwater as well. NSA/IRS/whoever you want need(s) limitations and correction mechanisms. Checks and balances exist specifically to prevent (small) groups from gathering too much power together, and I'd say that there's already far too much power in too small a group - it's really technically quite possible for certain people to apprehend just about anyone indeterminately, without due process, and without right to a trial, simply by naming them "terrorists". And while I hope/assume that doesn't happen all the time, there's definitely lots of things going on without enough oversight to keep the power hungry from going power mad.
 
It's not the FBI and CIA doing this, it's the NSA and the IRS. And "giving up essential liberty for security" yadda yadda. I'm not entirely convinced most of it isn't kabuki at this point anyway. What a coincidence that right as public outrage over the NSA is starting to boil up, all of a sudden Al Qaeda, which has been "on the run" and "unable to rebuild" until a week ago all of a sudden is such an immediate and credible threat we've got to abandon dozens of embassies across the middle east. Maybe it's true, but if it is, it illustrates how little security we're getting in exchange for all that liberty we've given up.
Countdown had a recurring segment called "The Nexus of Politics and Terror." Every time the administration (of any stripe) got caught with it's hand in the cookie jar for one reason or another, an alert or busted plot made the press to keep us all distracted and afraid.

The segment kept growing and growing and...
 
This whole thing is getting stupid. Honestly, I'm not surprised at how little the public cares about this or what our government is doing in general. This is why I feel more comfortable not engaging in the majority of politics anymore with certain exceptions, because I just don't believe it matters.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
This whole thing is getting stupid. Honestly, I'm not surprised at how little the public cares about this or what our government is doing in general. This is why I feel more comfortable not engaging in the majority of politics anymore with certain exceptions, because I just don't believe it matters.
Actually, more than half of us are rather upset about this.

The other half just wants to clap hands over ears and go "LA LA LA WE DON'T CARE WHEN IT'S OUR GUY DOING IT LA LA LA WAKE ME WHEN THERE'S A REPUBLICAN SCANDAL"[DOUBLEPOST=1376406417,1376406101][/DOUBLEPOST]Also, James Clapper looks like a goblin.

 
Thats a huge part of the problem yeah, the republicans don't care when it's their guy and the dems don't care when it's their guy. This is why the system doesn't work. We have to start holding our politicians responsible no matter what party they are in.
 
I think it's more a symptom than a cause, really. But I agree, the system as it stands is broken, and remains so because reform is not in the interests of those in power.
Sorry, yeah, one of the symptoms is what I meant. Theres many, obviously.
 
In this case the republicans don't care because their guy started it, and the democrats don't care because their guy is expanding it.

But the politicians all now carry at minimum 3 phones with different phone numbers so they can talk to different groups without having them linked together.

Trust me, they'll care when one of them figures out a way to use the system in their election campaign. Can you imagine robodialers looking at all the phone numbers that yielded a donation last election, then calling all their friends, and their friends friends under the assumption that gullible people herd?

Wouldn't it be nice if the American public got a list of every number dialed by the president's phone, and all the numbers dialed by those numbers to the third degree?

Now that the russians most certainly have a copy of most of the data Snowden took with him, they will be hard at work cracking into this huge datastore the NSA are keeping in one nice location, just a ripe cherry suitable for plucking.

Ultimately they call this "increasing security" but as far as I can tell the data aggregation reduces our overall security.
 
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