Edward Snowden



Saying that you don't care about the right to privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different that saying you don't care about freedom of speech because you have nothing to say. Edward Joseph Snowden (Эдвард Джозеф Сноуден ) is a former US National Security Agency  (NSA) contractor and Central Intelligence Agency employee. He was born in North Carolina and lived in Hawaii in the United States. In 2022, Vladimir Putin granted him Russian citizenship. He is best known for exposing many of the NSA and UK (GCHQ) spying activities conducted on ordinary civilians under the guise of hunting down terrorists. While working at Booz Allen Hamilton, an NSA contractor, he secretly took many thousands of classified documents concerning the NSA's illegal and unconstitutional activities, nearly 99% of which are yet to be revealed to the general public.

These activities involved unlawfully spying on ordinary civilians both inside and outside the United States and the United Kingdom; compromising the security of the Internet by means of weakening encryption; tapping global fiber optic networks; and bribing large corporations (such as Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, Facebook, AT&T, Skype, and Verizon) for information; and authorizing these programs through a secret and undemocratic court (FISA) that was inaccessible to the general public. Google, Apple, and other companies denied any knowledge of the PRISM program and their participation in it, after which The Washington Post quickly and quietly revised its article on the subject.

He left Hawaii for Hong Kong on May 20, 2013, leaving his US$120,000 job, home, family, and girlfriend behind, and met journalists Glenn Greenwald and sharing his trove of documents with them. Greenwald and Poitras began to publish the information in The Guardian and Der Spiegel, respectively, on June 5. Even the initial information, unsurprisingly, sparked national and international outrage directed at the spying agencies. Information is still being revealed and published as of March 2014.

After fleeing from a country that spies on its citizens Snowden was given temporary asylum in Russia, a country that also spies on its citizens and where he currently resides, on July 1, after having been stuck at Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow for 39 days. He claimed that he intended only to transit at Moscow and to continue to Ecuador or Venezuela, with a layover in Cuba. However, US officials have stated that his passport was revoked due to felony charges against him while he was still in Hong Kong, and that he was only able to travel to Moscow because Russia provided him with special travel documents that were personally authorized by Putin. It has also been revealed that Julian Assange, who has been portrayed as a Russian tool, helped Snowden escape by laying a smokescreen of decoy flight purchases for Snowden in Hong Kong.

He has been commended for his actions by many supporters of privacy and security around the world, being called a whistleblower and a hero. In August 2013, he was presented with the German "Whistleblower Prize", for "bold efforts to expose the massive and unsuspecting monitoring and storage of communication data, which cannot be accepted in democratic societies", and in December 2013, he was given the for his actions to protect the people of the United States and elsewhere.

Problems with Snowden's story
Besides how he got to Moscow, other aspects of Snowden's story don't add up. More importantly, Snowden's own version of the story is the one that most people are familiar with.
 * In 2015, he claimed to have evaluated every document that was released but admitted that he had not read every one. This shows either extreme naiveté or a callous disregard for unintended consequences.
 * In 2013, The New York Times reported that Snowden claimed he gave all of the classified documents that he had to the journalists he met in Hong Kong, though an ACLU adviser for Snowden later told Business Insider that this story was inaccurate.
 * In 2014, he told NBC that he destroyed all documents in his possession while he was in Hong Kong.
 * In 2016, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence revealed that Snowden had removed 1.5 million documents from NSA and that he had only given a small fraction of this to journalists.
 * NSA Deputy Director Richard Ledgett stated that Snowden removed the so-called "keys to the kingdom", which included "all requests to the NSA by U.S. intelligence agencies to fill the gaps in their coverage of Russia and other adversary nations".
 * Snowden specifically sought a job with NSA contractor Booz Allen Hamilton in Hawaii because that was the only contractor and location that had access to the deepest ("Level 3") levels of NSA security. Because of this, "the keys, sources and methods that, among other things, allowed the U.S. to see and counter aggressive moves, including cyberattacks, by adversaries were compromised." It is conceivable that Snowden, intentionally or not, enabled Russia to more effectively hack the Democratic National Committee during 2016 U.S. presidential election and tilted it to Trump's favor.

Conspiracies

 * He was allowed to give the information. The "Evidence" for this is that he had to get past "all the firewalls and security codes in an afternoon".


 * He's part of the Illuminati, though this one is to be expected. Everyone is.


 * Alex Jones (who else?) somehow found a way to shoehorn Snowden into the Moon Landing Conspiracy Theory.


 * Mark Dice and friends suspect that the NSA is able to do more than Edward said, such as listen to full phone calls. Unfortunately, this one is plausible, considering the NSA's track record.


 * That Edward was suggesting we go all Revolutionary War on their @$$.


 * He's conspiring with Barack Obama and Nelson Mandela.


 * HAARP


 * One word: ALIENS!!!


 * He's a double agent for Russia. Although Putin certainly doesn't care about Snowden and signaled that he'd use Snowden as a "gift" to Trump, this didn’t happen.


 * There are no "11 days missing in Hong Kong" (HK), by which Snowden only checked in the Mira Hotel 11 days after he fled the US to HK for the leaks. He fled on the 20th of May and checked in another hotel, then the next day changed to the Mira.

Closure of Archive Research
On the 13th of May 2019, the Intercept announced that it was closing its research team into the archives. Edward Snowden did not hear about this until a day later when he was contacted by the journalist Barrett Brown. Glenn Greenwald explained on Twitter that he was looking for an academic partner to share the archive with rather than another news outlet, as he believed that the archive can no longer be considered newsworthy. Over 90% of the archive remains unpublished.

Trivia
During an interview that Neil deGrasse Tyson landed with Snowden, he asked Snowden whether alien civilizations might use encryption and Snowden felt they could be, making it nearly impossible for humans to pick up evidence of their communications via satellites. During a second interview, deGrasse Tyson asked Snowden why he's not on Twitter and suggested the handle "@Snowden." A few days later, Edward Snowden joined Twitter with the handle @Snowden. In his second tweet ever, the wanted man playfully asked deGrasse Tyson: "Thanks for the welcome. And now we've got water on Mars! Do you think they check passports at the border? Asking for a friend."

Back in the 2012 election, Snowden supported libertarian presidential candidate Ron Paul.