TOP SECRET Congressional Snowden Report

Date: Thu, 22 Dec 2016 10:36:57 -0500
From: “James M. Atkinson” <jmatk[at]tscm.com>
To: TSCM-L Professionals List <tscm-l2006[at]googlegroups.com>
Subject: Congressional Snowden Report

Please see the attached declassified document

https://cryptome.org/2016/12/congress-snowden-report.pdf

as well as the text snipping included as text in this message. It is wise for a TSCM, CyberSecurity, CyberOperations, TEMPEST, or related counter-intelligence, IC specialists to study this report, because it will allow them to spot other spies in thier workplace, and to detect behaviors and equipment usage patterns that will result in the capture of the spy.

I took the PDF document, and performed a text recognition on it, and then copy and pasted that text into this document (the document actually is unclassifed and redacted, to please see the originl attached PDF file).

-jma

TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 0/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
(U) Review of the Unauthorized Disclosures of
Former National Security Agency Contractor
Edward Snowden
September 15, 2016
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFOR.””‘l
TOP 8ECRET,l/HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
(U) Executive Summary
(U) In June 2013, former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden
perpetrated the largest and most damaging public release of classified information in U.S.
intelligence history. In August 2014, the Chairman and Ranking Member of the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) directed Committee staff to carry out a
comprehensive review of the unauthorized disclosures. The aim of the review was to allow the
Committee to explain to other Members of Congress-and, where possible, the American
people-how this breach occurred, what the U.S. Government knows about the man who
committed it, and whether the security shortfalls it highlighted had been remedied.
(U) Over the next two years, Committee staff requested hundreds of documents from the
Intelligence Community (IC), participated in dozens of briefings and meetings with IC
personnel, conducted several interviews with key individuals with knowledge of Snowden’s
background and actions, and traveled to NSA Hawaii to visit Snowden’s last two work locations.
The review focused on Snowden’s background, how he was able to remove more than 1.5
million classified documents from secure NSA networks, what the 1.5 million documents
contained, and the damage their removal caused to national security.
(U) The Committee’s review was careful not to disturb any criminal investigation or
future prosecution of Snowden, who has remained in Russia since he fled there on June 23, 2013.
Accordingly, the Committee did not interview individuals whom the Department of Justice
identified as possible witnesses at Snowden’s trial, including Snowden himself, nor did the
Committee request any matters that may have occurred before a grand jury. Instead, the IC
provided the Committee with access to other individuals who possessed substantively similar
knowledge as the possible witnesses. Similarly, rather than interview Snowden’s NSA coworkers
and supervisors directly, Committee staff interviewed IC personnel who had reviewed
reports of interviews with Snowden’s co-workers and supervisors. The Committee remains
hopeful that Snowden will return to the United States to face justice.
(U) The bulk of the Committee’s 37-page review, which includes 237 footnotes, must
remain classified to avoid causing further harm to national security; however, the Committee has
made a number of unclassified findings. These findings demonstrate that the public narrative
popularized by Snowden and his allies is rife with falsehoods, exaggerations, and crucial
omissions, a pattern that began before he stole 1.5 million sensitive documents.
(U) First, Snowden caused tremendous damage to national security, and the vast
majority of the documents he stole have nothing to do with programs impacting individual
privacy interests-they instead pertain to military, defense, and intelligence programs of
great interest to America’s adversaries. A review of the materials Snowden compromised
makes clear that he handed over secrets that protect American troops overseas and secrets that
provide vital defenses against terrorists and nation-states. Some of Snowden’s disclosures
exacerbated and accelerated existing trends that diminished the IC’s capabilities to collect
against legitimate foreign intelligence targets, while others resulted in the loss of intelligence
streams that had saved American lives. Snowden insists he has not shared the full cache of 1.5
million classified documents with anyone; however, in June 2016, the deputy chairman of the
TOP 8ECRET//HCS O P/81 GITK//ORCON/NOFORN
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORl’l”
Russian parliament’s defense and security committee publicly conceded that “Snowden did share
intelligence” with his government. Additionally, although Snowden’s professed objective may
have been to inform the general public, the information he released is also available to Russian,
Chinese, Iranian, and North Korean government intelligence services; any terrorist with Internet
access; and many others who wish to do harm to the United States.
(U) The full scope of the damage inflicted by Snowden remains unknown. Over the past
three years, the IC and the Department of Defense (DOD) have carried out separate reviewswith
differing methodologies-of the damage Snowden caused. Out of an abundance of caution,
DOD reviewed all 1.5 million documents Snowden removed. The IC, by contrast, has carried
out a damage assessment for only a small subset of the documents. The Committee is concerned
that the IC does not plan to assess the damage of the vast majority of documents Snowden
removed. Nevertheless, even by a conservative estimate, the U.S. Government has spent
hundreds of millions of dollars, and will eventually spend billions, to attempt to mitigate the
damage Snowden caused. These dollars would have been better spent on combating America’s
adversaries in an increasingly dangerous world.
(U) Second, Snowden was not a whistleblower. Under the law, publicly revealing
classified information does not qualify someone as a whistleblower. However, disclosing
classified information that shows fraud, waste, abuse, or other illegal activity to the appropriate
law enforcement or oversight personnel-including to Congress–does make someone a
whistleblower and affords them with critical protections. Contrary to his public claims that he
notified numerous NSA officials about what he believed to be illegal intelligence collection, the
Committee found no evidence that Snowden took any official effort to express concerns about
U.S. intelligence activities-legal, moral, or otherwise-to any oversight officials within the
U.S. Government, despite numerous avenues for him to do so. Snowden was aware of these
avenues. His only attempt to contact an NSA attorney revolved around a question about the
legal precedence of executive orders, and his only contact to the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) Inspector General (IO) revolved around his disagreements with his managers about
training and retention of information technology specialists.
(U) Despite Snowden’s later public claim that he would have faced retribution for
voicing concerns about intelligence activities, the Committee found that laws and regulations in
effect at the time of Snowden’s actions afforded him protection. The Committee routinely
receives disclosures from IC contractors pursuant to the Intelligence Community Whistleblower
Protection Act of 1998 (IC WP A). If Snowden had been worried about possible retaliation for
voicing concerns about NSA activities, he could have made a disclosure to the Committee. He
did not. Nor did Snowden remain in the United States to face the legal consequences of his
actions, contrary to the tradition of civil disobedience he professes to embrace. Instead, he fled to
China and Russia, two countries whose governments place scant value on their citizens’ privacy
or civil liberties-and whose intelligence services aggressively collect information on both the
United States and their own citizens.
(U) To gather the files he took with him when he left the country for Hong Kong,
Snowden infringed on the privacy of thousands of government employees and contractors. He
obtained his colleagues’ security credentials through misleading means, abused his access as a
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCONINOFORl’t
II
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
systems administrator to search his co-workers’ personal drives, and removed the personally
identifiable information of thousands ofIC employees and contractors. From Hong Kong he
went to Russia, where he remains a guest of the Kremlin to this day.
(U) It is also not clear Snowden understood the numerous privacy protections that govern
the activities of the IC. He failed basic annual training for NSA employees on Section 702 of the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) and complained the training was rigged to be
overly difficult. This training included explanations of the privacy protections related to the
PRISM program that Snowden would later disclose.
(U) Third, two weeks before Snowden began mass downloads of classified
documents, he was reprimanded after engaging in a workplace spat with NSA managers.
Snowden was repeatedly counseled by his managers regarding his behavior at work. For
example, in June 2012, Snowden became involved in a fiery e-mail argument with a supervisor
about how computer updates should be managed. Snowden added an NSA senior executive
several levels above the supervisor to the e-mail thread, an action that earned him a swift
reprimand from his contracting officer for failing to follow the proper protocol for raising
grievances through the chain of command. Two weeks later, Snowden began his mass
downloads of classified information from NSA networks. Despite Snowden’s later claim that the
March 2013 congressional testimony of Director of National Intelligence James Clapper was a
“breaking point” for him, these mass downloads predated Director Clapper’s testimony by eight
months.
(U) Fourth, Snowden was, and remains, a serial exaggerator and fabricator. A close
review of Snowden’s official employment records and submissions reveals a pattern of
intentional lying. He claimed to have left Army basic training because of broken legs when in
fact he washed out because of shin splints. He claimed to have obtained a high school degree
equivalent when in fact he never did. He claimed to have worked for the CIA as a “senior
advisor,” which was a gross exaggeration of his entry-level duties as a computer technician. He
also doctored his performance evaluations and obtained new positions at NSA by exaggerating
his resume and stealing the answers to an employment test. In May 2013, Snowden informed his
supervisor that he would be out of the office to receive treatment for worsening epilepsy. In
reality, he was on his way to Hong Kong with stolen secrets.
(U) Finally, the Committee remains concerned that more than three years after the
start of the unauthorized disclosures, NSA, and the IC as a whole, have not done enough to
minimize the risk of another massive unauthorized disclosure. Although it is impossible to
reduce the chance of another Snowden to zero, more work can and should be done to improve
the security of the people and computer networks that keep America’s most closely held secrets.
For instance, a recent DOD Inspector General report directed by the Committee found that NSA
has yet to effectively implement its post-Snowden security improvements. The Committee has
taken actions to improve IC information security in the Intelligence Authorization Acts for Fiscal
Years 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017, and looks forward to working with the IC to continue to
improve security.
TOP 8ECRET/-/HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/1’lOFORN
111
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G-/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
Table of Contents
Executi.v e su mmary …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 1.
Scope and Methodology ………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 1
Early Life ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 1
CIA Employment ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 3
Transition to NSA Contractor …………………………………………………………………………………………… 6
NSA Hawaii – Contract Systems Administrator …………………………………………………………………. 8
Snowden’ s Downloading and Removal Process ……………………………………………………………….. 10
NSA Hawaii – Gaining More Access and Departing for China and Russia …………………………… 14
Communications with Intelligence Oversight Personnel.. …………………………………………………… 16
Was Snowden a Whistleblower? …………………………………………………………………………………….. 18
Foreign Influence ………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 19
What Did Snowden Take? ……………………………………………………………………………………………… 20
What Damage Did Snowden Cause? ……………………………………………………………………………….. 22
How Has the IC Recovered from Snowden? …………………………………………………………………….. 28
Conclusion – Efforts to Improve Security ………………………………………………………………………… 30
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
iv
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
(U) Scope and Methodology
(U) Since June 2013, the unauthorized disclosures of former NSA contractor Edward
Snowden and the impact of these disclosures on the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC) have been
a subject of continual Committee oversight. The Committee held an open hearing on the
disclosures on June 18, 2013, and, over the next year, held eight additional hearings and
briefings, followed by numerous staff-level briefings on Snowden’s disclosures.
(U) In August 2014, then-Chairman Rogers and Ranking Member Ruppersberger
directed Committee staff to begin a review of the actions and motivations of Edward Snowden
related to his removal of more than 1.5 million classified documents from secure NSA networks.
The intent was not to duplicate the damage assessments already under way in the executive
branch; rather, the report would help explain to other Members of Congress-and, where
possible, the American people-how the “most massive and damaging theft of intelligence
information in our history” occurred, 1 what the U.S. Government knows about the man who
perpetrated it, and what damage his actions caused.
(U) Over the next two years, Committee staff requested hundreds of documents from the
IC, participated in dozens of briefings and meetings with IC personnel, and conducted several
interviews with key individuals with knowledge of Snowden’s background and actions, and
traveled to NSA Hawaii to visit Snowden’s last two work locations.
(U) The Committee’s product is a review, not an investigation, largely in deference to
any criminal investigation or future prosecution. Since he arrived in Russia on June 23, 2013,
Snowden has not returned to the United States to face the criminal charges against him.
Accordingly, the Committee did not interview or seek documents from individuals whom the
Department of Justice identified as possible witnesses at Snowden’s trial, including Snowden
himself, nor did the Committee request any matters that may have occurred before a grand jury.
Instead, the IC provided the Committee with access to other individuals who possessed
substantively similar knowledge. Similarly, rather than interview Snowden’s NSA co-workers
and supervisors directly, Committee staff interviewed IC personnel who had reviewed reports of
interviews with Snowden’s co-workers and supervisors.
(U) The Committee’s review has informed numerous congressionally directed actions
and resource allocation decisions in the enacted Intelligence Authorization Acts for Fiscal Years
2014, 2015, and 2016, and in the House-passed Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2017.
(U) Early Life
(U) Edward Joseph Snowden was born on June 21, 1983, in Elizabeth City, North
Carolina. His parents, Lon Snowde~, a Coast Guard chief petty officer, and Elizabeth Snowden,
1 Testimony of Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper, HPSCI Worldwide Threats Hearing (Open
Session, Feb. 4, 2014).
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
a federal court clerk, moved the family to Annapolis, Maryland, when Edward was a child.2 In
2001, his parents divorced. 3
(U) By his own account, Snowden was a poor student.4 He dropped out of high school in
his sophomore year and began taking classes at the local community college. 5 Snowden hoped
that the classes would allow him to earn a General Education Diploma (GED), but nothing the
Committee found indicates that he did so. To the contrary, on an applicant resume submitted to
NSA in 2012, Snowden indicated that he graduated from “Maryland High School” in 2001;6
earlier, in 2006, Snowden had posted on a public web forum that he did not “have a degree of
ANY type. I don’t even have a high school diploma.” 7
(U) After leaving community college, Snowden eventually enlisted in the Army Reserve
as a special forces recruit. He left after five months, receiving a discharge in September 2004
without finishing training courses. 8 Snowden would later claim he had to leave basic training
because “he broke both his legs in a training accident.” 9 An NSA security official the
Committee interviewed took a different view, telling Committee staff that Snowden was
discharged after suffering from “shin splints,” a common overuse injury. 10
(U) Unable to pursue his preferred military career, Snowden turned to security guard
work. In February 2005, the University of Maryland’s Center for the Advanced Study of
2 “NSA Leaker Edward Snowden Has Ties to North Carolina,” Raleigh News & Observer (Aug. 1, 2013).
3 John M. Broder & Scott Shane, “For Snowden, A Life of Ambition, Despite the Drifting,” New York Times (June
15, 2013).
4 Glenn Greenwald, Ewen MacAskill, and Laura Poitras, “Edward Snowden: the Whistleblower Behind the NSA
Surveillance Revelations,” The Guardian (June 11, 2013), available at
https:/ /www .theguardian.com/world/2013/j un/09/edward-snowden-nsa-whistleblower-surveillance ( accessed June
28, 2016).
5 Matthew Mosk, et al., “TIMELINE: Edward Snowden’s Life As We Know It,” ABC News, (June 13, 2013).
6 See, e.g., Edward Snowden Resume. Regarding “High School Education,” the resume Snowden submitted to
NSA’s Tailored Access Operations unit says as follows: For “Grad/Exit dt,” Snowden wrote “2001-06-21 ;” For his
“School,” Snowden wrote “Maryland High School”; and for “Level Achieved”, Snowden wrote “High School
Graduate.”
7 See supra, note 3. One of Snowden’ s associates claims to have reviewed official educational records that
demonstrate Snowden’s passage ofa high school equivalency test and receipt of high school equivalency diploma in
June 2004. Any receipt of such a diploma in 2004 stands in tension with Snowden’s 2006 claim to not have a
“degree of any type [or] … even a high school diploma”; and with his 2012 resume, which stated that he either left or
graduated from “Maryland High School” in 2001.
8 “What We Know About NSA Leaker Edward Snowden,” NBC News (June 10, 2013), available at
http://usnews.nbcnews.com/ _ news/2013/06/10/18882615-what-we-know-about-nsa-Jeaker-snowden?lite (accessed
June 28, 2016); see also “Edward Snowden Did Enlist For Special Forces, US Army Confirms,” The Guardian
(June 10, 2013), available at http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jun/10/edward-snowden-army-special forces
(accessed September 15, 2016).
9 “Edward Snowden Did Enlist For Special Forces, US Army Confirms,” The Guardian (June 10, 2013), available
at http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jun/l 0/edward-snowden-army-special forces (accessed September 15,
2016).
10 See supra, note 6. If untreated, shin splints can progress into stress fractures, but the Committee found no
evidence that Snowden was involved in a training accident.
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORl’t
2
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/t>l”OFORN
Language (CASL) sponsored Snowden for a Top Secret security clearance. 11 The investigation
for that clearance turned up only one piece of derogatory information: ~ of
Snowden’s said she did not recommend him for access to classified information. Snowden
sought counseling ~’ and the counselor recommended him for a position
of trust with no reservations. The favorable investigation, combined with a successful
polygraph test, enabled Snowden to work at CASL’s lobby reception desk as a “security
specialist.” He worked there for four months, until he was hired by BAE Systems to work on a
CIA Global Communications Services Contract.
(S//NF) Snowden’s stint as a BAE Systems contractor was similarly short-lived. For less
than a year, he worked as a systems administrator who “managed installations and application
rollouts” in the Washington, DC, area.14 In August 2006, he converted from a contractor to a
CIA employee. As part of that conversion, Snowden went through an “entrance on duty”
s chological evaluation.
(U) CIA Employment
(U) Snowden was not, as he would later claim, a “senior advisor” at CIA. 16 Rather, his
only position as a CIA employee was as a Telecommunications Information Systems Officer, or
TISO. The job description for a TISO makes clear that the position is an entry-level IT support
function, not a senior executive. TISOs “operate, maintain, install, and manage
telecommunications systems,” and “provide project management and systems integration for
voice and data communications systems,” including “support to customers after installation.” 17
Even so, the position may have appealed to Snowden because TISOs “typically spend 60-70% of
their career abroad.” 18
(U) In November 2006–less than three months after starting with CIA-Snowden
contacted the Agency’s Inspector General (IG) seeking “guidance” because he felt he was “being
11 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014). Overall document classified Cl/NF; cited portion classified
U//FOUO.
12 NSA, FBI, and NCSC, “‘Negative Information’ Found in Edward Snowden’s Personnel Security File,” (Sept. 30,
2014). Overall document classified U//FOUO.
13 Id.
14 CIA Office of Security, “Response to HPSCI Staffer Meeting,” (Nov. 18, 2014). Overall document classified
S//NF; cited portion classified S//NF.
is Id.
16 Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwald, “NSA Whistleblower Edward Snowden: ‘I Don’t Want To Live in a Society
that Does These Sorts of Things,” The Guardian (Jun. 9, 2013), available at
http://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2013/jun/09/nsa-whistleblower-edward-snowden-interview-video
(accessed May 2, 2016).
17 CIA, Careers and Internships, “Telecommunications Information Systems Officer – Entry/Developmental,”
www.cia.gov (Oct. 2, 2015).
is Id.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
3
TOP SECRET,l/HCS O P/SI G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
unfairly targeted” by his supervisor. 19 After entering on duty, Snowden believed there were
“morale and retention issues” among his fellow TISOs.20 He raised those concerns with his
training supervisor, the chief of the communications training unit, but “felt they were left
unaddressed.” 21 He next tried the chief and deputy chief of his operational group, but was
similarly dissatisfied with their response. 22
(U) Undeterred, Snowden spent the next week surveying the other TISOs who entered on
duty at the same time as him.23 He wrote up his findings and sent them to the CIA’s Strategic
Human Capital Office. Then, instead of attempting to raise his concerns again with his
supervisor or work collaboratively with other TISOs to resolve the concerns, Snowden sent his
concerns to the Deputy Director of CIA for Support-the head of the entire Directorate of
Support and one of the ten most senior executives of CIA.24
(U) In his e-mail, Snowden complained about the process of assigning new TISOs to
overseas locations, the pay of TIS Os compared to contractors who performed similar work, and
the difficulty for TISOs to transfer laterally to other jobs. 25
~ Despite his lack of experience, the 23-year-old Snowden told the Deputy Director he
felt “pretty disenfranchised” because his immediate supervisors did not take his unsolicited
recommendations to heart. 26
(U) Snowden told the IG that, after he contacted the Deputy Director for Support, his
supervisors pulled him in to their offices for unscheduled counseling. In his view, they were
“extremely hostile” and “seem[ ed] to believe I have trouble bonding with my classmates.” 27
Those counseling sessions prompted Snowden to contact the IG to help protect him from
“reprisal for speaking truth to power.”
(U) One day after receiving his complaint, an IG employee responded to Snowden and
,recommended he contact the CIA’s Ombudsman, an official who could help Snowden sort
through the options available to him and mediate disputes between managers and employees. 28
The IG employee also directed Snowden to the relevant Agency regulation regarding the factors
managers could consider when deciding to retain an employee beyond the initial three-year trial
period.29 Whether that response satisfied Snowden is unclear; shortly after receiving it, Snowden
sent another message to the IG employee instructing him to disregard the initial request because
19 E-mail from Snowden to CIA Office of Inspector General (Nov. 2, 2006), Overall document classified S; cited
portion marked U//AIUO.
20 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion not portion-marked.
21 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion not portion-marked.
22 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion not portion-marked.
23 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion not portion-marked.
24 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion not portion-marked.
25 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion not portion-marked.
26 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion classified C.
27 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion not portion-marked
28 E-mail from CIA Office oflnspector General to Edward Snowden (Nov. 3, 2006). Overall document classified S;
cited portion classified U//AIUO.
29 Id. Overall document classified S; cited portion classified U//AIUO.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON4’J:OFORN
4
TOP 8ECRET,l/HC8 0 P/81 GITK//ORCON/NOFORN
the issue had been “addressed.” 30 During the rest of his time at CIA, Snowden did not contact
the IG.
f8) After the completion of his training, Snowden was assigned to – in March 2007
for his first TISO assignment. 31 Snowden was, in the words of his supervisor, “an energetic
officer” with a “plethora” of experience on Microsoft operating systems, but he “often does not
positively respond to advice from more senior officers, … does not recognize the chain of
command, often demonstrates a lack of maturity, and does not appear to be embracing the CIA
culture. “32
f8) A few months after starting in_, Snowden asked to apply for a more senior
position in – as a regional communications officer. His supervisor did not endorse his
application. When he was not selected for the position, Snowden responded by starting “a
controversial e-mail exchange with very senior officers” in which he questioned the selection
board’s professionaljudgment. 33 Years later, when characterizing his experience as a CIA TISO,
Snowden would write that he was “specially selected by [CIA’s] Executive Leadership Team for
[a] high-visibility assignment” that “required exceptionally wide responsibility.” 34 The
description is in tension with his supervisor’s account of a junior officer who “needed more
experience before transitioning to such a demanding position. “35
f8) Snowden also modified CIA’s performance review software in connection with his
annual performance review, by manipulating the font. 36 This behavior led to Snowden’s recall
for “professional consultations” with the head of all CIA technical officers in Europe. 37 This was
the first but not the only time more senior CIA officers attempted to correct Snowden’s behavior.
His supervisor in – cataloged six counseling sessions between October 2007 and April
2008, nearly one per month, regarding his behavior at work. 38 In September 2008, Snowden
requested to leave – “short of tour,” that is, before his scheduled rotation date to a new
assignment. 39 The request was denied. Disobeying orders, Snowden traveled back to the
Washington, D.C., area for his and his fiancee’s medical appointments. Because of his
disobedience, Snowden’s supervisors recommended he not return to __ 40
30 E-mail from Snowden to CIA Office oflnspector General (Nov. 3, 2006). Overall document classified S; cited
portion classified U//AIUO.
31 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014); overall document classified C//NF; cited portion classified
Cl/NF.
32 Memorandum for the Record by Senior Telecommunications Officer – Europe, “TISO –Edward
Snowden” (Sept. 4, 2008).
33 CIA Office of Security, “Response to HP SCI Staffer Meeting,” (Nov. 18, 2014).
34 Edward Snowden Resume.
35 Memorandum for the Record by Senior Telecommunications Officer – Europe, “TISO –Edward
Snowden” (Sept. 4, 2008). Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion classified S.
36 Id. Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion classified S.
37 Id. Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion classified S.
38 Memorandum for the Record by Office in Charge, -· “TISO –Edward Snowden” (Dec. 18, 2008).
Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion classified S.
39 Id. Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion classified S.
40 Id. Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion classified S.
TOP 8ECRET,l/HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
5
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK,l/ORCON/NOFORN
(8//NF) In January 2009, CIA submitted a “fitness for duty” report for Snowden, an
administrative tool to determine whether Snowden had any work-related medical issues.41 The
Agency also assigned him to a ~osition in the Washington, D.C., area so he could be available
for any medical appointments. 4
(8//NF) Several years later, Snowden claimed that, while in_, he had ethical
qualms about working for CIA.43 None of the memoranda for the record detailing his numerous
counseling sessions mention Snowden expressing any concerns about
-· Neither the CIA IG nor any other CIA intelligence oversight official or manager
has a record of Snowden expressing any concerns about the legality or morality of CIA activities.
(U) Transition to NSA Contractor
(C,l/NF) Around the same time that Snowden returned to the D.C. area, he applied for a
position with an NSA contractor, Perot Systems, as a systems administrator. He was still a CIA
employee at the time and his clearance remained in good standing with no derogatory
information.44 On March 25, 2009, Perot Systems sponsored Snowden for employment; six days
later, on March 31, NSA Security checked the Intelligence Community-wide security database,
“Scattered Castles,” to verify Snowden’s clearance.45
(U) Seeing no derogatory information in Scattered Castles, NSA Security approved
Snowden for access eight days later, on April 7.46
(8//NF) On April 16, Snowden formally resigned as a CIA employee. 47 CIA’s Security
Office u dated his Scattered Castles record on April 20,
. Because NSA had checked the
database three weeks earlier, NSA Security did not learn of the – in his record at that
time.49 It is unclear ifNSA Security would have treated Snowden’s onboarding any differently
had NSA been aware of
41 CIA Office of Security, “Response to HPSCI Staffer Meeting,” (Nov. 18, 2014). Overall document classified
SI/NF; cited portion classified SI/NF.
42 Id. Overall document classified SI/NF; cited
43
NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014). Overall document classified Cl/NF; cited portion classified
Cl/NF.
45 Id. Overall document classified Cl/NF; cited portion classified UI/FOUO.
46 Id. Overall document classified Cl/NF; cited portion classified UI/FOUO.
47 Id. Overall document classified Cl/NF; cited portion classified Cl/NF.
48 CIA Office of Security, “Response to HPSCI Staffer Meeting,” (Nov. 18, 2014). Overall document classified
SI/NF.
49 NSA, Edward Snowden Time Ii~ 30, 2014 ). Overall document classified Cl INF; cited portion classified
Cl/NF. The alerting function for – in Scattered Castles has since been fixed.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G,qK,l/ORCffi>UNOFORN
6
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/l’JOFORN
(U) From May 2009 to February 2012, Snowden worked in a variety of roles supporting
IC contracts for Dell, which had purchased Perot Systems in 2009. He worked as an IT systems
administrator at NSA sites in .. for a little more than a year, where he supported NSA’s
Agency Extended Information Systems Services (AXISS) contracts. 50
(U) One co-worker recalled that while he was working in .. , Snowden traveled to
Thailand to learn how to be a ship’s captain, but never finished the training course. According to
another co-worker, at some point before he was stationed in .. , Snowden took a trip to China
and spoke about his admiration for the Chinese people and Chinese martial arts. 51 The same coworker
remembered Snowden expressing his view that the U.S. government had overreached on
surveillance and that it was illegitimate for the government to obtain data on individuals’
personal computers. 52 There are no indications of how Snowden attempted to square this belief
with his continued employment in support of the foreign signals intelligence mission ofNSA.
(U) Other co-workers from Snowden’s time in 1111rec alled him as someone frustrated
with his lack of access to information. One remembered Snowden complaining how he lacked
access at CIA;53 another recalled him attemptin~ to gain access to information about the war in
Iraq that was outside of his job responsibilities. 4 Although Snowden did not obtain the
information he was looking for, he later claimed it was “typical” of the U.S. government to cover
up embarrassing information. 55
(C//NF) In September 2010, Snowden returned to the United States and Dell attempted to
move him to a position where he would support IT systems at CIA. Because of the ~ in
Scattered Castles, however, CIA refused to grant Snowden access to its information. Dell put
Snowden on leave for three months while waiting for a position that did not require a security
clearance to open up. Eventually, one did: In December 2010, Snowden started work in an
uncleared “systems engineer/pre-sales technical role” for Dell supporting a CIA contract. 57
(U) Snowden was also due for a periodic background reinvestigation in the fall of 2010.
OPM contractor U.S. Information Services completed that review in May 2011, finding no
derogatory information. According to an after-the-fact review by the National
Counterintelligence Executive, the reinvestigation was “incomplete” and “did not present a
complete picture of Mr. Snowden.” 58 Among its other flaws, the investigation never attempted
to verify Snowden’s CIA employment or speak to his CIA supervisors, nor did it attempt to
independently verify Snowden’s self-report of a past security violation-areas where further
so Id. Overall document classified C//NF; cited portion classified U//FOUO.
51 Interview with NSA Atto~(Feb. 8, 2016) (report of interview with-·
52 Id. The same co-worker, -· also mentioned that Snowden considered himself a privacy advocate.
” Interview with NSA Attom,b. 8, 2016) (report of interview with -·
54 Id. (report of interview with .
55 Id. (report of interview with .
56 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014). Overall document classified C//NF; cited portion classified
Cl/NF.
57 Id. Overall document classified C//NF; cited portion classified C//NF.
58 National Counterintelligence Executive, Technical and quality review of the April 2011 Single Scope Background
Investigation- Periodic Reinvestigation on Mr. Snowden,” (Aug. 23, 2013); overall document classified U//FOUO.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON!l’tOFORN
7
TOP 8ECRETh’HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
information could have alerted NSA to CIA’s concerns. 59 Contrary to best practices, the
investigation also failed to develop any character references beyond the two people Snowden
himself listed, his mother and his girlfriend. 60
(8) From August 31, 2011, to January 11, 2012, Snowden took a leave of absence from
His Dell co-workers offered conflicting accounts of how he spent his leave, 61
(U) NSA Hawaii – Contract Systems Administrator
(U) Snowden returned from leave in early 2012 and took a position as a general systems
administrator supporting Dell’s AXISS work at NSA’s Hawaii Cryptologic .Center.62 As part of
the change in station, he took a counterintelligence polygraph examination. The first exam was
“inconclusive,” but did not lead to NSA Security developing any further information; the second
was successful. 63 At the end of March 2012, Snowden moved to Hawaii.
(U) The job Snowden performed in Hawaii was similar to his duties during the previous
three years with Dell. He was a field systems administrator, working in technical support office
ofNSA Hawaii. Some of his work involved moving large numbers of files between different
internal Microsoft SharePoint servers for use by other NSA Hawaii employees. Although most
NSA Hawaii staff had moved to a new building at the start of 2012, Snowden and other technical
support workers remained in the Kunia “tunnel,” an underground facility originally built for
aircraft assembly during World War Two.
(U) Snowden had few friends among his co-workers at NSA Hawaii. 64 Those co-workers
described him as “smart” and “nerdy,” but also someone who was “arrogant,” “introverted,” and
“squirrelly”; an “introvert” who frequently ‘jumped to conclusions. “65 His supervisors found his
work product to be “adequate,” but he was chronically late for work, frequently not showing up
until the afternoon. 66 Snowden claimed he had trouble waking up on time because he stayed up
late playing video games. 67
(U) Few of Snowden’s Hawaii co-workers recall him expressing political opinions. One
remembered a conversation in which Snowden claimed the Stop Online Piracy Act and the
59 Id.
60 Id.
61 Interview with NSA Attorney (Feb. 8, 2016).
62 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014). Dell Federal was a subcontractor to CACI International for
NSA’s AXISS Field IT support contracts. E-mail from NSA Legislative Affairs to HPSCI Staff, “Responses to
Your Questions on Read and Return Documents for HPSCI Media Leaks Review,” (Dec. 2, 2014, at 3:47 PM).
Overall document cited U//FOUO; cited portion classified U//FOUO. ·
63 Id.
64 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
65 Interview with NSA Attorney (Jan. 28, 2016).
66 Id.
61 Id.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
8
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
Protect Intellectual Property Act would lead to online censorship. 68 In the same conversation,
Snowden told his colleague that he had not read either bill.69 The same co-worker recalled
Snowden once claiming that, based on his meetings with Chinese hackers at a conference, the
United States caused problems for China but China never caused problems for the United
States.70 Although no other co-worker in Hawaii recalled Snowden expressing any sympathy for
foreign governments, a different co-worker from the Kunia tunnel remembered that Snowden
defended the actions of Private Bradley Manning. 71
(U) One incident early in Snowden’s time at NSA Hawaii merits further description. In
June 2012, Snowden installed a patch to a group of servers on classified networks that supported
NSA field sites, including NSA Hawaii. Although the patch was intended to fix a vulnerability
to the classified servers, the patch caused the servers to crash, resulting in a loss of network
access for several NSA sites.72 One ofNSA’s senior technical support managers, a government
employee, fired off an e-mail to a number of systems administrators, asking who had installed
the troublesome patch and sarcastically chiding that individual for failing to test the patch before
loading it. 73
(U) Snowden replied to all the recipients and added the deputy head ofNSA’s technical
services directorate to the e-mail thread. This individual was several levels above the immediate
government supervisors whom Snowden could have contacted first. Calling the initial e-mail
“not appropriate and … not helpful,” Snowden accused the middle manager of focusing on
“evasion and finger-pointing rather than problem resolution.” 74
(U) Snowden received a quick rebuke. The NSA civilian employee in Washington
responsible for managing field AXISS contracts sent Snowden an e-mail telling him his response
was “totally UNACCEPTABLE” because “[u]nder no circumstances will any contractor call out
or point fingers at any government manager whether you agree with their handling of an issue or
not.”75 She further instructed Snowden that ifhe “felt the need to discuss with any management
it should have been done with the site management you are working with and no one else.” 76
~ That weekend, Snowden came in to work
77
68 Interview with NSA Attorney (Jan. 28, 2016) (citing co-worker 111111).
69 Id. (citing co-worker
70 Id. (citing co-worker
71 Id.; Interview with N ttomey (Feb. 8, 2016) ( citing co-worker.).
72 Interview with (Oct. 28, 2015).
73 E-mail from , “RE: (U) ICA-tcp issues with KB2653956,” (Jun. 21, 2012, at 1:20AM). Overall
document classified U//FOUO.
74 E-mail from Edward Snowden, “RE: (U) ICA-tcp issues with KB2653956,” (Jun. 21, 2012, at 1 :OOPM). Overall
document classified U//FOUO.
75 E-mail from_, “(U) E-mail you sent in response to ICA-tcp issues with a patch,” (Jun. 22, 2012, at
3:26AM). Overall document classified U//FOUO.
76 Id.
77 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/N.OFORN
9
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
(U) The following Monday, he sent an e-mail to the NSA middle manager saying he
“understood how bad this e-mail looked for what was intended to be a relatively benign
message” and acknowledging that the e-mail “never should have happened in the first place.” 78
The manager accepted the apology, explaining that his problem with the message “had nothing
to do with the content but with distribution” because he did not understand “the elevation of the
issue to such a high management level”; that is, to the deputy head ofNSA’s technical services
directorate. 79
(U) Snowden would later publicly claim that his “breaking point”-the final impetus for
his unauthorized downloads and disclosures of troves of classified material-was March 2013
congressional testimony by Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. 80
(SI/REL TO USA, FVEY) But only a few weeks after his conflict with NSA managers,
on July 12, 2012-eight months before Director Clapper’s testimony-Snowden began the
unauthorized, mass downloading of information from NSA networks. 81
(U) Snowden ‘s Downloading and Removal Process
(U) Snowden used several methods to gather information on NSA networks, none of
which required advanced computer skills.
(U) At first, Snowden used blunt tools to download files en masse from NSA networks.
Two non-interactive downloading tools, commonly known as “scraping” tools, called “wget”
and DownThemAll! were available on NSA classified networks for legitimate system
administrator purposes. 84 Both tools were designed to allow users to download large numbers of
files over slow or unstable network connections. 85 Snowden used the two tools with a list of
website addresses, sometimes writing simple programming scripts to generate the lists. For
78 E-mail from Edward Snowden, “RE: (U) ICA-tcp issues with KB2653956” (Jun. 25, 2012, at 2:31AM). Overall
document classified U//FOUO.
79 E-mail from_, “RE: (U) ICA-tcp issues with KB2653956” (Jun. 25, 2012, at 1:51AM). Overall
document classified U//FOUO.
80 “Transcript: ARD Interview with Edward Snowden,” (Jan. 26, 2014), available at
https://edwardsnowden.com/20 14/01/27 /video-and-interview-with-edward-snowden.
81 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014). Overall document classified C//NF; cited portion classified
C//REL TO USA, FVEY.
82 NSA, “Methods Used by Edward Snowden To Remove Documents from NSA Networks,” (Oct. 29, 2014).
Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited ortion classified S//REL.
83
NSA, “Methods Used by Edward Snowden To Remove Documents from NSA Networks,” (Oct. 29, 2014).
Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified U//FOUO
85 Id. Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified U//FOUO
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
10
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 GffK//ORCOl’UNOFORN
instance, ifNSA webpages were set up in numerical order (i.e., page 1, page 2, page 3, and so
on), Snowden programmed a script to automatically collect the pages. 86 Neither scraping tool
targeted areas of potential privacy or civil liberties concerns; rather, Snowden downloaded all
information from internal NSA networks and classified webpages of other IC elements. 87
(U) Exceeding the access required to do his job, Snowden next began using his systems
administrator privileges to search across other NSA employees’ personal network drives and
copy what he found on their drives.91 Snowden also enlisted his unwitting colleagues to help
him, asking several of his co-workers for their securit1 credentials so he could obtain
information that they could access, but he could not.9 One of these co-workers subsequently
lost his security clearance and resigned from NSA employment. 93
(8//REL) Snowden infringed the privacy of at least • NSA personnel by searching
their network drives without their permission, removing a co y of any documents he found to be
of interest. 94 5 •
86 Id. Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified U//FOUO
87 Id. Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified U//FOUO
88 NSA, “HPSCI Recollection Summary Paper,” (Jan. 26, 2015). Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion
classified S//NF. See infra for a more detailed description of the files Snowden removed.
89 NSA, “Methods Used by Edward Snowden To Remove Documents from NSA Networks,” (Oct. 29, 2014).
Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited ortion classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY.
90 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
91 NSA, “Methods Used by Edward Snowden To Remove Documents from NSA Networks,” (Oct. 29, 2014).
Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified U//FOUO.
92 HPSCI Memorandum for the Record, NSA Briefing to HPSCI Staff(July 22, 2013).
93 NSA Legislative Affairs Memorandum to Staff Director and Minority Staff Director (Feb. 10, 2014). Overall
document classified U; document not portion-marked.
94 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016); NSA, “Number of Personal Network Drives Searched,”
(Mar. 14, 2016). Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL TO USA,
FVEY.
95 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
96 Id.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFOIOt
11
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFOR1’l
(U) Snowden’s searches quickly expanded beyond surveillance programs. Some of the
personal network drives Snowden searched belonged to individuals involved in the hiring
decision for a job for which Snowden had applied. On these individuals’ network drives,
Snowden searched for human resources files and files related to the promotion and hiring
decisions.97
(S//REL) Snowden first saved the information he gathered on his personal network
drive.98 At some point in 2012, a fellow systems administrator noticed that Snowden’s personal
drive used a significantly larger amount of memory than most other employees and asked him
what he was doing. 99 Snowden responded that he was downloading system atches for NSA
networks, a task that was consistent with his job responsibilities. 100
(U) In late August 2012, Snowden requested a ”thin-on-thick” machine for his desk. 102
At the time, NSA Hawaii was in the middle of a transition from “thick clients,”-physical
desktop computers at each worker’s desk, to “thin clients,”-virtual desktops hosted on servers.
On a ”thin client,” there is no traditional desktop computer at workers’ desks, rather, each user
has a client that provides a display and input, with computing processors, memory, and storage
on network servers. Snowden’s “thin-on-thick” setup meant that he had a physical desktop
computer at his desk, but he only used its computing power and hard drive to operate a virtual
computer. This “thin-on-thick” setup allowed NSA Hawaii to reap some of the benefits of thin
clients, such as uniform security policies and improved information sharing, without the cost of
buying new thin client devices. NSA Hawaii could also make use of a large quantity of “thick
client” desktop computers it had recently purchased. 103 Yet the thin-on-thick setup opened up a
loophole for Snowden to exploit.
(S//NF) Snowden knew NSA’s networks recorded and logged every action by users on
thick client workstations while connected to the network. 104 He also knew that auditing controls
97 NSA, “Number of Personal Network Drives Searched,” (Mar. 14, 2016). Overall document classified S//REL TO
USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY.
98 NSA, “Methods Used by Edward Snowden To Remove Documents from NSA Networks,” (Oct. 29, 2014).
Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY.
99 Interview with NSA Attorney (Jan. 28, 2016).
100 Id.
101 NSA, “Methods Used by Edward Snowden To Remove Documents from NSA Networks,” (Oct. 29, 2014).
Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY.
102 NSA Response to HPSCI Question on Thin-on-Thick Computer at Snowden’s Workstation (Mar. 2, 2016).
Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion classified S//NF. Because thin-on-thick workstations were
prevalent at NSA Hawaii at the time, Snowden did not have to go through any special approval process to obtain a
thin-on-thick workstation.
103 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
104 NSA, “Response to HPSCI Document Re uest – Question # IO” (Ma
S//NF; cited ortion classified S//NF.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORl’l
12
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 GITKJ/ORCON/NOFORN
would send an alert to network security ersonnel if he tried to remove data from the network.
106
(SI/REL) There is no evidence that NSA was aware of this specific vulnerability to its
networks. Because Snowden’s legitimate work responsibilities involved transferring large
amounts of data between different SharePoint servers, the large quantities of data he copied as
Step I of the exfiltration process did not trigger any NSA alerts for abnormal network traffic. 109
105 NSA, “Purpose of Functioning CD-ROM and USB Drive,” (Mar. 14, 2016). Overall document classified S//REL
USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL USA, FVEY.
106 NSA, “Methods Used by Edward Snowden To Remove Documents from NSA Networks,” (Oct. 29, 2014).
Overall document classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY. See also id
for additional details on the NSA forensics rocess that allowed for the reconstruction of Snowden’ s methods.
107
Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
109 NSA, “Response to HPSCI Document Request – Question# 1 O” (May 1, 2015). Overall document classified
S//REL USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL USA, FVEY. Although Snowden, as a systems administrator,
was authorized to transfer large quantities of data on the NSA network, he was not authorized to remove data from
the network for his intended purpose of later transferring it to removable media so he could disclose it.
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 G-/TK//ORCON/NOFORN:
13
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 onK/IOR:CON/NOFORN
(U) NSA Hawaii – Gaining More Access and Departing for China and Russia
(U) After he began removing documents in the summer of 2012, Snowden spent several
months applying for employment as a NSA civilian. In September 2012, he took a test to obtain
a position in the Tailored Access Operations office, or TAO, the group within NSA responsible
for computer network exploitation operations. After finding the test and its answers among the
documents he had taken off of NSA networks, he passed the test. 111 Based on the test result and
his exaggerated resume, 112 TAO offered him a position. The pay grade TAO offered, howevera
GS-12 position that would have paid around $70,000 per year-was not sufficient for
Snowden. He instead believed he should have been offered a GS-15 position that would have
paid nearly $120,000 per year. 113
(U) In early December 2012, Snowden attempted to contact journalist Glenn Greenwald.
To hide his identity, Snowden used the pseudonym “Cincinnatus” and asked Greenwald for his
public encryption key so Snowden could send him documents securely. 115 In January 2013, he
contacted filmmaker Laura Poitras. 116
(U) In late March 2013, Snowden finally obtained a new position, not with NSA as a
civilian but with Booz Allen Hamilton as a contractor. 117 He would be a SIGINT Development
Analyst, meaning he analyzed foreign networks and cyber operators to help NSA’s National
Threat Operation Center (NTOC) in its cyber defense efforts. NTOC’s operations helped defend
U.S. military networks from attacks by foreign cyber actors, including Russia and China.
110 NSA, “Purpose of Functioning CD-ROM and USB Drive,” (Mar. 14, 2016).
111 Bryan Burrough, Sarah Ellison, and Suzanna Andrews, “The Snowden Saga: A Shadow land of Secrets and
Light,” Vanity Fair (May 2014), available at www.vanityfair.com/news/politics/2014/05/edward-snowden-politicsinterview
(quoting NSA Deputy Director Rick Ledgett).
112 Edward Snowden Resume (June 28, 2012). Snowden described himself as a “Senior Advisor” at
“Dell/NSNCIA/DIA” rather than as a systems administrator. Resume inflation was a habit for Snowden-in the
files he sent to Glenn Oreenwald, he described himself as an NSA Special Advisor “under corporate cover” and as a
former CIA “field officer.” See Glenn Greenwald, No Place to Hide at 32.
113 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
114 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014).
115 Glenn Greenwald, No Place to Hide at 7 (2014).
116 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014).
117 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014).
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 G/TK/,lQR:CON/NOFORN
14
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I GITKJ/ORCON/NOFORN
(C//NF) In his new position, Snowden had access to more documents on NSA networks,
many of which he later removed. 118 Because there was not a thin-on-thick workstation at
Snowden’s new desk, he had to return after hours to his old desk-located at a different NSA
facility a twenty-minute drive away-to exfiltrate documents 119
His NTOC job did not require him to visit his old building, so he had no reason other than
document removal to return. 120
(U) On May 15, 2013, Snowden told his Booz Allen Hamilton supervisor that he needed
to take two weeks of leave without pay to return to the continental United States for medical
reasons. 121 According to his supervisor, Snowden had previously claimed he suffered from
epilepsy, 122 although he never presented evidence of a diagnosis from any doctor. 123 Four days
later, Snowden flew to Hong Kong without telling either his girlfriend or his mother (who was in
Hawaii at the time visiting him) where he was going. 124 The Committee found no conclusive
evidence indicating why Snowden chose Hong Kong as his destination, but, according to later
accounts, Snowden believed he would be safe in the city based on its tradition of free speech. 125
(U) On Friday May 31, Snowden’s leave without pay ended. The following Monday,
June 3, Booz Allen Hamilton started looking for him. 126 Two days later, on June 5, Booz Allen
reported Snowden to NSA’s Office of Security and Greenwald published the first ofSnowden’s
disclosures. 127
(U) Four days after the fir

t Greenwald articles were published, Snowden revealed
himself as the source of the disclosures. 128 According to press reports, between June 10 and June
23, Snowden hid in the apartments of refugees in Hong Kong while his lawyer worked to arrange
transit for him out of the city. 129 On June 23, 2013, he flew from Hong Konf< to Moscow’s
Sheremetyvevo airport, accompanied by Wikileaks activist Sarah Harrison. 1 0 The next day, he
failed to appear on a flight to Havana and disappeared from public view until August 1, 2013,
when Russia granted him asylum and he left the airport. 131 As of September 15, 2016, Snowden
remains in Russia.
118 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
119 NSA, “Response to HPSCI Document Request – Question #2” (June 24, 2015). Overall document classified
S//NF; cited portion classified C//REL.
120 Id. Cited portion classified C//REL.
121 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014).
122 Interview with NSA Attorney (Jan. 28, 2016) (citing BAH supervisor).
123 Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
124 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014); Interview with NSA Security Official (Jan. 28, 2016).
125 See Luke Harding, The Snowden Files (2014) at 108.
126 NSA, Edward Snowden Timeline (Sept. 30, 2014).
127 Glenn Greenwald, “Verizon Order: NSA Collecting Phone Records of Millions of Americans Daily,” The
Guardian (June 5, 2013).
128 See Luke Harding, The Snowden Files (2014) at 146-52.
129 Theresa Tedesco, “How Snowden Escaped,” National Post (Sept. 6, 2016), available at
http://news.nationalpost.com/features/how-edward-snowden-escaped-hong-kong/
130 Luke Harding, The Snowden Files (2014) at 224.
131 Id. at 229-30, 250.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TKJ/ORCON/NOFORN
15
TOP SECRETPHCS O P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
Additionally, although
Snowden’s objective may have been to inform the public, the information he released is also
available to Russian, Chinese, Iranian, and North Korean intelligence services; any terrorist with
Internet access; and many others who wish to do harm to the United States.
(S//NF) When he fled Hong Kong, Snowden left a number of encrypted com uter hard
drives behind.
-133
(U) Communications with Intelligence Oversight Personnel
(U) In March 2014 public testimony to the European Parliament, Snowden claimed that
he reported his concerns about “clearly problematic programs to more than ten distinct officials”
at NSA. 134 Snowden also publicly stated that he “specifically expressed concern about [NSA’ s]
suspect interpretation of the law,” inviting “members of Congress to request a written answer to
this question [from the NSA].” 135 The Committee requested such an answer from NSA, 136 and
found no evidence to support these claims. The Committee further found no evidence that
Snowden attempted to communicate concerns about the legality or morality of intelligence
activities to any officials, senior or otherwise, during his time at either CIA or NSA.
(U) As already described, one of Snowden’s Hawaii co-workers recalls him defending
Bradley Manning’s actions, 137 another remembered him criticizing bills under consideration in
Congress that he regarded as harmful to online privacy 138 and criticizing U.S. foreign policy
toward China. 139 None of his co-workers or his supervisors, however, recall Snowden raising
concerns about the legality or morality of U.S. intelligence activities. 140
132 DIA, Information Review Task Force-2, “Initial Assessment” (Dec. 26, 2013), at 3. Overall document classified
TS//Sl//RSEN/OC/NF; cited portion classified S//NF.
133 HPSCI Memorandum for the Record, Insider Threat/Counterintelligence Monthly Briefing (Feb. 4, 2014).
134 Edward Snowden, Testimony to the European Parliament (Mar. 7, 2014) at 6.
135 Bryan Burrough, Sarah Ellison, and Suzanna Andrews, “The Snowden Saga: A Shadowland of Secrets and
Light,” Vanity Fair (May 2014), available at www.vanityfair.com/news/politics/20l4/05/edward-snowden-politicsinterview.
136 Letter from HPSCI Chairman Mike Rogers to Director James Clapper (Aug. 5, 2014) (requesting, among other
things, “[a]ll communications between Edward Snowden and any IC or Department of Defense compliance, legal, or
Inspector General personnel”).
137 See supra, note 71.
138 See supra, note 68.
139 See supra, note 70.
140 Interview with NSA Attorney (Jan. 28, 2016) (citing supervisors, co-workers). The co-worker who recalled
Snowden defending Manning expressly mentioned that Snowden did not believe Americans’ privacy rights were
being violated and that Snowden had no qualms about the legality of the NSA mission. See Interview with NSA
Attorney (Feb. 8, 2016) ( citing co-worker •.
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 onK//ORCON/NOFORN
16
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I GITK//ORCON/NOFORN
(U) Neither did Snowden raise any concerns with IC oversight personnel. As previously
discussed, Snowden contacted the CIA IG within a few months of his start at the Agency to
complain about training issues and management style, but he later dropped the complaint. 141 He
did not contact the NSA IG, the Department of Defense (DOD) IG, or the Intelligence
Community (IC) IG, all of whom could have responded to a complaint regarding unlawful
intelligence activities. Nor did Snowden attempt to contact the Committee or the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence through the procedures available to him under the Intelligence
Community Whistleblower Protection Act (IC WP A). He could have done this anonymously if
he feared retribution.
(U) Snowden did, however, contact NSA personnel who worked in an internal oversight
office about his personal difficulty understanding the safeguards against unlawful intelligence
activities. While on a trip to NSA headquarters at Ft. Meade in June 2012, Snowden visited a
training officer in the internal oversight and compliance office of the Signals Intelligence
Directorate. The training officer remembered that Snowden was upset because he had failed
NSA’s internal training course on how to handle information collected under FISA Section 702,
the legal authority by which the government can target the communications of non-U.S. persons
outside the United States. 142
(U) The internal training is a rigorous computer-based course that walks NSA employees
and contractors through the laws and regulations that govern the proper handling of information
collected under the authority of FISA Section 702, including information collected under the
programs Snowden would later disclose, PRISM and “upstream” collection. At the end of the
course, NSA personnel take a scenario-based test to gauge their comprehension of the material;
if they do not receive a minimum score on the test, they must retake the computer-based training
course. All of the answers to the test questions can be found within the training material. After
three failures of the computer-based course, the individual must attend an in-person training
course to ensure they are able to understand the rules governing Section 702, including privacy
protections.
(U) According to the training officer, Snowden had failed the computer-based training
course and was afraid of the consequences. 143 He was also upset because he believed the course
was rigged. 144 After the training officer explained to Snowden that he could take the course
again-and that careful reading would allow him to find all of the answers to the test-Snowden
became calm and left the oversight and compliance office. 145 At no point during his visit to the
compliance office did Snowden raise any concerns about how NSA used Section 702, PRISM, or
“upstream” collection. 146
141 See supra, notes 19 through 30.
142 NSA, “OVSC1203 Issue Regarding Course Content and Trick Questions,” overall document classified TS/INF;
cited portion classified U//FOUO.
143 Interview with – (Oct. 28, 2015).
144 Id
14s Id.
146 Id.
TOP 8ECRETJ/HC8 0 P/8I GITK//ORCON/1′>J:OFORN
17
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
(U) In April 2013-after he had removed documents multiple times from NSA systemsSnowden
contacted the NSA Office of General Counsel with a question about a different training
course. 147 He was curious about the mandatory training on United States Signals Intelligence
Directive 18, which is the foundational authority for NSA’s collection activities overseas
targeting foreigners. 148 Specifically, he believed the training erroneously accorded the same
precedence to statutes and executive orders. A few days later, an NSA attorney clarified that
while executive orders have the force of law, they cannot trump a statute. 149 Snowden did not
respond to that e-mail; he also did not raise any concerns about the legality or morality of U.S.
intelligence activities. 150
(U) Was Snowden a Whistlehlower?
(U) As a legal matter, during his time with NSA, Edward Snowden did not use
whistleblower procedures under either law or regulation to raise his objections to U.S.
intelligence activities, and thus, is not considered a whistleblower under current law. He did not
file a complaint with the DOD or IC IG’s office, for example, or contact the intelligence
committees with concerns about fraud, waste, abuse, mismanagement, or violations of law.
Instead, Snowden disclosed classified information to the press.
(U) Snowden, however, has argued that even a lawful disclosure would have resulted in
retaliation against him.
(U) Among other things, Snowden has argued that he was unable to raise concerns about
NSA programs because he was not entitled to protection as an IC whistleblower given his status
as a contractor. (He was with Booz Allen at the time of his leaks to the press.) But the 1998 IC
WP A applies to IC employees as well as contractors. Although the statute does not explicitly
prohibit reprisals, the IC WPA channel nevertheless enables confidential, classified disclosures
and oversight, as well as a measure of informal source protection by Congress. The statute
specifically authorizes IC contractors to inform the intelligence committees of adverse actions
taken as a consequence of IC WPA-covered disclosures.
(U) Moreover, explicit protection against such actions was conferred on Snowden by
DoD regulation 5240 1-R. Snowden’s unauthorized disclosures involved Executive Order (EO)
12333 activities as well as activities conducted under FISA. At least with respect to intelligence
activities authorized under E.O. 12333-and, according to the DoD Senior Intelligence
Oversight Official, activities conducted under other authorities-5240 1-R requires employees
and contractors of a DoD intelligence element to report “questionable activities,” or “conduct
that constitutes, or is related to, [an] intelligence activity that may violate the law, any Executive
147 E-mail from Edward Snowden to NSA Office of General Counsel (Apr. 5, 2013, at 4:11PM), overall document
classified U//FOUO; cited portion classified U//FOUO.
148 Id., cited portion classified U//FOUO.
149 E-mail from NSA Office of General Counsel Attorney to Edward Snowden (Apr. 8, 2013, at 1 :37PM), overall
document classified U//FOUO; cited portion classified U//FOUO.
150 IC on the Record, “Edward J. Snowden email inquiry to the NSA Office of General Counsel,” (May 29, 2014)
(“There was not additional follow-up noted.”).
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
18
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/8I G/TKJ/ORCON/NOFORN
Order or Presidential directive … or applicable DoD policy[.]” 151 5240 1-R also says that DoD
senior leaders shall “ensure that no adverse action is taken against any employee [ or contractor]
because the employee reports [questionable activities]” pursuant to the regulation. 152 The IC
IG’s Executive Director for Intelligence Community Whistleblowing & Source Protection
(ICW&SP), a former employee of the DoD IG’s staff, has advised HPSCI staff that these
procedures applied to Snowden during his employment as an NSA contractor and would have
helped to shield him from retaliation for voicing his objections internally.
(U) Finally, Snowden also likely was covered by 10 U.S.C. § 2409 (Section 2409). As
written at the time of Snowden’s leaks, 153 Section 2409 was primarily focused on protecting
DoD contractors from reprisals if they properly disclosed a “violation of law related” to a DoD
contract. However, Snowden has not advanced any contract-related claims about NSA
surveillance. Rather, he generally disagreed with NSA surveillance programs on policy and
constitutional grounds.
(U) If Snowden did have concerns with programs related to a DoD contract, then the
prior version of Section 2409 authorized him to raise those concerns without fear of retaliation
with a “Member of Congress, a representative of a Committee of Congress, an Inspector
General, the Government Accountability Office, a Department of Defense employee responsible
for contract oversight or management, or an authorized official of an agency or the Department
of Justice[.]”
(U) Foreign Influence
151 Department of Defense Regulation 5240 1-R, Procedures Governing the Activities of DoD Intelligence
Components that Affect U.S. Persons, C.15.2.1, 3.1.1 (Dec. 7, 1982) (emphasis added).
152 Id at C.14.2.3.2.
153 Important amendments to Section 2409, which took effect in July 2013, substantially altered the statute. Among
other things, the updates extended reprisal protections to DoD subcontractors as well as contractors, and widened the
list of persons to whom contractors and subcontractors could make disclosures. At the same time, the amendments
also narrowed Section 2409’s coverage by explicitly excluding employees and contractors ofIC elements. However,
that limitation, like other alterations to Section 2409, did not take effect until July 2013-after Snowden had
unlawfully disclosed NSA material to journalists.
154 See, e.g., Testimony of Gen. Keith Alexander at 30, HPSCI Hearing (Jun. 13, 2013) (“It is not clear to us if there
is a foreign nexus. There [are] some things; it does look odd that someone would go to Hon Kong to do this.”)
155
15
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
19
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
(TS//HCS/OC/NF) Since Snowden’s arrival in Moscow, he has had, and continues to
have, contact with Russian intelligence services.
and in June 2016,
the deputy chairman of the Russian parliament’s defense and security committee asserted that
“Snowden did share intelligence” with his government. 161
(U) What Did Snowden Take?
In light of the volume at stake, it is likely that even
Snowden does not know the full contents of all 1.5 million documents he removed.
(U) One thing that is clear, however, is that the IC documents disclosed in public are
merely the tip of the iceberg.
(S//NF) As of August 19, 2016, press outlets had published or referenced_
taken by Snowden. 164 This represents less than one-tenth of one percent of the nearly 1.5 million
documents the IC assesses Snowden removed. 165
160 Id. Cited material classified S//OC//NF.
161 Mary Louise Kelly, “During Tenure in Russia, Edward Snowden Has Kept A Low Profile,” National Public
Radio (June 29, 2016), available at http://www.npr.org/2016/06/29/483890378/during-tenure-in-russia-edwardsnowden-
has-ke t-a-low- rofile.
16
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 GITK//ORCON/NOFORN
20
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TKJ/ORCON+NOFORN
(U) The 1.5 million documents came from two classified networks, an internal NSA
network called NSANet and an IC-wide Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information
network called the Joint Warfighter Information Computer System (JWICS). If printed out and
stacked, these documents would create a pile more than three miles high. 166
165 NSA, “HPSCI Recollection Summary Paper,” (Jan. 26, 2015) Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion
classified S//NF.
166 Testimony of Mr. Scott Liard, Deputy Director for Counterintelligence, Defense Intelligence Agency, HPSCI
Hearing (Jan. 27, 2014), at 7-8. The 1.5 million document count does not include 374,000 blank documents
Snowden downloaded from the Department of the Army Intelligence Information Service (DAIIS) Message
Processing System. See DIA, Information Review Task Force-2, “Fourth Quarter Report, 2014” (Dec. 31, 2014), at
xvii.
167 NSA, “HPSCI Recollection Summary Paper,” (Jan. 26, 2015). Overall document classified S//NF; cited portion
classified S//NF.
168 NSA, “Timing of Recollection and Security Flags,” (Mar. 14, 2016). Overall document classified S//REL TO
USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL.
169 Id.
110 Id.
171 NSA, “HPSCI Recollection Summary Paper,” (Jan. 26, 2015).
172 Id.; see also DIA, Information Review Task Force-2, “Fourth Quarter Report, 2014” (Dec. 31, 2014), at xvii.
173 Id; see also DIA, Information Review Task Force-2, “Fourth Quarter Report, 2014” (Dec. 31, 2014), at xvii.
174 Id; see also DIA, Information Review Task Force-2, “Fourth Quarter Report, 2014” (Dec. 31, 2014), at xvii.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TKJ/ORCON/1’tOFORN
21
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/SI G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
(8) The vast majority of the documents Snowden removed were unrelated to electronic
surveillance or any issues associated with privacy and civil liberties.
(U) What Damage Did Snowden Cause?
(S/INF) Over the past three years, the Intelligence Community and the Department of
Defense (DoD) have carried out separate reviews-with differing methodologies-of the
contents of all 1.5 million documents Snowden removed. It is not clear which of the documents
Snowden removed are in the hands of a foreign government. All of the documents that have
been publicly disclosed 176–can be accessed b foreign militaries
and intelligence services as well as the public.
(U) Out of an abundance of caution, DoD therefore reviewed all 1.5 million documents to
determine the maximum extent of the possible damage.
(TS/INF) As of June 2016, the most recent DoD review identified 13 high-risk issues,
which are identified in the following table. 179 Eight of the 13 relate to
capabilities ofDoD; if the Russian or Chinese
governments have access to this information, American troops will be at greater risk in any
future conflict. 180
E-mail from NSA Legislative Affairs (Aug. 22, 2016, at 4:48PM). Overall document classified S//REL TO
USA, FVY; cited portion classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY.
177 DIA, Information Review Task Force-2, “Initial Assessment” (Dec. 26, 2013), at 3. Overall document classified
TS//SV/RSEN/OC/NF; cited portion classified S//NF.
178 Mary Louise Kelly, “During Tenure in Russia, Edward Snowden Has Kept A Low Profile,” National Public
Radio (June 29, 2016), available at http://www.npr.org/2016/06/29/483890378/during-tenure-in-russia-edwardsnowden-
has-kept-a-low-profile.
179 DoD, Mitigation Oversight Task Force, “Quarterly Report” (Oct. 2015), at 8. Overall document classified
TS//Sl/TK//ORCON/NF; cited portion classified TS/INF
180 Id.
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/81 G,qKJlORCON/NOFORN
22
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/l’l”OFORN –


(U) The Intelligence Community, by contrast, has carried out a damage assessment for
only a small subset of the documents Snowden removed. And unlike IC damage assessments for
previous unauthorized disclosures , 181 the IC assessment on Snowden does not contain an
assessment of Snowden ‘s background and motive, an assessment of whether he was the agent of
a foreign intelligence service, or recommendations for how to improve security in the IC. In its
review, the National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC) , a component of the Office
of the Director of National Intelligence, divided the documents Snowden removed into three
“tiers.” 182
181 See, e.g., Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive, “Ana Belen Montes : A Damage Assessment ,”
(July ! , 2004) . Overall document classified S//NF.
182 NCSC, “Intelligence Community Damage Assessment: Unauthorized Disclosures of Classified Information
Attributed to Edward Snowden , 1 January 20 I 5 through 31 August 20 I 5,” (Apr. 8, 2016) , at 5. Overall document
classified TS//HCS-P/Sl-G /TK//OC/NF; cited portion classified U//FOUO.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//ORCON/l’l”OFORN
23
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
(8//REL) Tier One: Documents that have been disclosed in the media, either in whole
or in part. As of August 19, 2016, press outlets had published or referenced 1111fil es taken by
Snowden.183
(TS/181/lOC/NF) Tier Two: Documents that, based on forensic analysis, Snowden
would have collected in the course of collecting Tier One, but have not yet been disclosed to the
ublic. The IC assesses these documents are likel in the hands of the media.
(8//NF) The IC damage assessment of Tier One documents is still ongoing, but, as oflate
May 2016, the IC had no plans to c out a damage assessment of the documents in Tier Two
or Tier Three. 186
As a result, the IC’s
damage assessment cannot be considered a complete accounting of the damage Snowden caused
to U.S. intelligence.
(U) However, even the IC’s limited damage assessment of documents in Tier One
indicates that Snowden’s disclosures caused massive damage to national security. A few
examples, listed below, illustrate the scale of the damage .

183 E-mail from NSA Legislative Affairs (Aug. 22, 2016, at 4:48PM). Overall document classified S//REL TO
USA, FVEY; cited portion classified S//REL TO USA, FVEY.
184 NCSC, “Intelligence Community Damage Assessment: Unauthorized Disclosures of Classified Information
Attributed to Edward Snowden, I January 2015 through 31 August 2015,” (Apr. 8, 2016), at 5. Overall document
classified TS//HCS-P/SI-G/TK//OC/NF, cited portion classified TS//SI/OC/NF.
185 Id., cited portion classified TS//SI/OC/NF.
186 HPSCI Staff Briefing with NCSC (May 25, 2016).
187 NCSC, “Intelligence Community Damage Assessment: Unauthorized Disclosures of Classified Information
Attributed to Edward Snowden, I January 2015 through 31 August 2015,” (Apr. 8, 2016), at I. Overall document
classified TS//HCS-P/SI-G/TK//OC/NF; cited portion classified S//NF.
188 HPSCI Staff Memorandum for the Record, “NSA Notification of Resulting
from Recent Media Disclosures,” (July 8, 2014). Overall document classified TS//SI//NF.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
24
1s9 Id.
190 Id.


TOP SECRET//HCS O P/SI G/TKJ/ORCON/NOFOR1’J
0
0
0
191 NCSC, “Intelligence Community Damage Assessment: Unauthorized Disclosures of Classified Inform ation
Attributed to Edward Snowden , I August 2014 through 31 December 2014,” (Dec . 22, 2015) , at 25. Overall
document classified TS//HCS-P/SI-G/TK//OC/NF; cited portion classified S//Sl//NF .
192 Presidential Policy Directive 28, “Signals Intelligence Activities” (Jan . 17, 20 I 4) .
193 Letter from Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper to Chairman Devin Nunes and Ranking Member
Adam Schiff (Jun. 23, 2015). Overall document classified TS//SI//NF, cited portion classified TS//SI//NF .
194 NSA, “Response to Congressionally Directed Action:
_ ,” (Nov . 17, 2014), at 2-4. Overall document classified TS//Sl//NF ; cited portion classified
TS//Sl//NF .
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/SI G/TKJ/ORCON /NOFOR1’J
25
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 GITK//ORCOW/NOFORN

0


195 HPSCI Staff Briefing with ODNI (Sept. 6, 2016).
196 HPSCI Staff Briefing with NCSC, NSA, CIA, and FBI (Jun. 17, 2016).
197 NCSC, “Intelligence Community Damage Assessment: Unauthorized Disclosures of Classified Information
Attributed to Edward Snowden, 1 August 2014 through 31 December 2014 – HCS-0 Annex” (Dec. 22, 2015), .
Overall document classified TS//HCS-0/SI//OC//NF; cited portion classified S//HCS-0//0C/NF.
198 NCSC, “Intelligence Community Damage Assessment: Unauthorized Disclosures of Classified Information
Attributed to Edward Snowden, 1 January 2015 through 31 August 2015,” (Apr. 8, 2016), at 11. Overall document
classified TS//HCS-P/SI-G/TK//OC/NF; cited portion classified TS//SI//NF.
199 HPSCI Staff Briefing with NCSC, NSA, CIA, and FBI (Jun. 17, 2016).
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 GffK//ORCc»YNOFORN
26
TOP SECRET//HCS O P-/SI Q,qKJ/OR:CON/NOFORN
0
0


200 NCSC, “Intelligence Community Damage Assessment: Unauthorized Disclosures of Classified Information
Attributed to Edward Snowden, I January 2015 through 31 August 2015,” (Apr. 8, 2016), at 11. Overall document
classified TS//HCS-P/SI-G/TK//OC/NF; cited portion classified S//HCS-P/SI//OC/NF.
201 Id., cited portion classified S//HCS-P/SI//OC/NF.
202 NSA, “Response to Request for Information Re: ,” (Dec. 16, 2014).
Overall document classified TS//SI//NF; cited portion classified TS//SI//NF.
203 CIA, Memorandum for Congress, “In Response to Questions on Decreased Collection Possibly Caused by
Unauthorized Disclosures since June 2013,” (July 20, 2016), at 2. Overall document classified TS//HCS-0-P
CRD/SI//OC/NF; cited portion classified TS//SI/REL TO USA, FVEY).
204 ODNI, Recouping Intelligence Capabilities Brief (Jun. 7, 2016), at 8. Overall document classified TS//SI//NF;
cited portion classified TS//SI//NF; ODNI Briefing to HPSCI Staff on Recouping Intelligence Capabilities Brief
(July 13, 2016).
20S Id.
206 ODNI, “Remediation of Unauthorized Disclosures” (June 2015), at 3. Overall document classified
TS//SI//OC/NF; cited portion classified TS//SI/OC/NF.
TOP SECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TK//OR:CON/NOFOID>l
27
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/SI G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN


(U) How Has the IC Recovered from Snowden?
(TS//SI//NF) There is no IC-wide estimate for the total cost to the government of
remediating Snowden’s disclosures. However, a mid-2015 study by ODNI’s Systems and
Resources Analysis Group estimated that NSA and CIA will spend over Fiscal
Years 2016 and 2017 to recover from the damage Snowden’s disclosures caused to SIGINT
capabilities. 211
(TS/1-SI//NFA) s a whole, the IC will undoubtedly spend even more. The
estimate represents a conservative assessment of the amount CIA and NSA will spend to rebuild
SIGINT capabilities that were damaged by Snowden’s disclosures. The estimate captures only
two years of spending and does not reflect investments made before Fiscal Year 2016 or planned
investments for Fiscal Year 2018 and beyond. Moreover, it does not capture the costs associated
HPSCI Staff Memorandum for the Record, “Upcoming Unauthorized Disclosures of
~ Overall document classified TS//SI//NF. ·
ODNI SRA, “FYl7 Major Issue Studies- Recouping Intelligence Capabilities,” (June 7, 2016), at 9. Overall
document classified TS//SI//NF; cited portion classified TS//SI//NF.
TOP SECRET,l/HCS O P/SI G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
28
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/SI G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
with the IC’s damaged relationships with foreign and corporate partners, the opportunity cost of
the time and resources the IC and DOD have spent mitigating the damage of the disclosures, or
the costs of improved security measures across the federal government.
(U) Snowden’s actions also exposed significant vulnerabilities in the IC’s information
security. Although it is impossible to reduce the risk of an insider threat like Snowden to zero,
relatively simple changes such as automatically detecting the malicious use of scraping tools like
“wget,” physically disabling removable media from the workstations ofNSA personnel who lack
a work reason to use removable media, and implementing two-person controls to transfer data by
removable media would have dramatically reduced the quantity of files Snowden could have
removed or stopped him altoge~er.
(U) The Committee remains concerned that NSA, and the IC as a whole, have not done
enough to reduce the chances of future insider threats like Snowden.
(Cl/REL TO USA, FVEY) In the aftermath ofSnowden’s disclosures, NSA compiled a
list ofllll security improvements for its networks. These improvements, called the “Secure the
Net” initiatives, contained many steps that would have stopped Snowden, such as two-person
control for transfer of data by removable media, and many broader security improvements, such
as reducing the number of privileged users and authorized data transfer agents, and moving
toward a continuous evaluation model for background investigations. 212 In July 2014, more than
a year after Snowden’s first disclosures, many of these “Secure the Net” initiatives-including
some relatively simple initiatives, such as two-stage controls for systems administrators-had
not been completed. 213 In August 2016, more than three years after Snowden’s first disclosures,
four of the 111i1ni1tia tives remained outstanding. 214
(U) In the House-passed Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016, the
Committee directed the Department of Defense Inspector General (DOD IO) to carry out an
assessment of information security at NSA, including whether NSA had successfully remediated
the vulnerabilities exposed by Snowden.
(U) In August 2016, DOD IO issued its report, finding that NSA needed to take
additional steps to effectively implement the privileged access-related “Secure the Net”
initiatives.215
· (U) In particular, DOD IO found that NSA had not: fully implemented technology to
oversee privileged user activities; effectively reduced the number of privileged access users; or
effectively reduced the number of authorized data transfer agents. In addition, contrary to the
212 NSA, “Secure the Net Initiatives,” (Aug. 22, 2016). Overall document classified C//REL TO USA, FVEY.
213 NSA, “Secure the Net Initiatives,” (July 2014). Overall document classified C//REL TO USA, FVEY.
214 NSA, “Secure the Net Initiatives,” (Aug. 22, 2016). Overall document classified C//REL TO USA, FVEY.
215 Department of Defense Inspector General, Report 2016-129, “The National Security Agency Should Take
Additional Steps in Its Privileged Access-Related Secure the Net Initiatives” (Aug. 29, 2016). Overall document
classified S//NF, cited portion classified U//FOUO.
TOP SECRET//HCS O P/SI G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
29
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 GITKJ/ORCON/NOFORN
“Secure the Net” initiatives, NSA did not consistently secure server racks and other sensitive
equipment in data centers, and did not extend two-stage authentication controls to all high-risk
users.216 Recent security breaches at NSA underscore the necessity for the agency to improve its
security posture.
(U) And even though NSA has been the victim ofrecent breaches, it is not the only IC
agency where information security needs to be improved. For instance, a recent CIA Inspector
General report found that CIA has not yet implemented multi-factor authentication controls such
as a physical token for general or privileged users of the Agency’s enterprise or mission
systems.217
(U) As a recent Committee report concluded, the introduction of the Intelligence
Community Information Technology Enterprise (IC ITE) should produce an improved security
environment in the IC.218 And as that report noted, although IC data will be more secure and
better protected under IC ITE than it is today, from both internal and external threats, IC ITE will
also increase risks in different areas.219 These risks will require dedicated attention to ensure IC
ITE reaches its full potential for an improved security environment.
(U) Conclusion – Efforts to Improve Security
(U) Although it is impossible to reduce the chance of another Snowden to zero, more
work can and should be done to improve the security of the people and computer networks that
keep America’s most closely held secrets.
(U) Since the beginning of Snowden’s disclosures, the Committee has directed the IC to
carry out a number of studies and security improvements to reduce the risk of another insider
threat. Among its other oversight efforts, the Committee has:
• (U) Authorized an additional for insider threat detection efforts in Fiscal
Year 2014. Consistent with a spend plan and updated insider threat strategy provided to
Congress, 60 percent of these funds were to be used for insider threat detection and the
remaining 40 percent toward continuous evaluation; 220 .
• (U) Directed the DNI to ensure that the President’s National Insider Threat Policy and
Minimum Standards were fully implemented on TS/SCI networks and all NIP-funded
216 Id., cited portion classified C//REL TO USA, FVEY.
217 CIA Office oflnspector General, “Review of National Security Systems Required by the Cybersecurity Act of
2015,” Report No. 2016-0022-AS (Aug. 2016). Overall report classified S//NF, cited portion classified S//NF.
218 HPSCI Report, “Assessing IC ITE’s Security Posture,” (Feb. 4, 2016). Overall report classified S//NF, cited
portion classified U.
219 Id. at 25, cited portion classified U//FOUO.
22° Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014, P.L. 113-
126, pp. 15-16.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 GITKJ/ORCON/t-l’.OFORN
30
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 PJ8I G/TK//ORCON,’NOFORN
networks at CIA, DIA, NSA, NGA, NRO, FBI, and DOE by October 1, 2014; 221
• (U) Directed the DNI, as the Security Executive Agent, to establish a structure for a
comprehensive continuous evaluation system for holders of TS/SCI within 270 days of
the enactment; 222
• (U) Directed the DNI, in coordination with the USD(I) to review whether the continuous
evaluation process, insider threat auditing tools, and background investigation processes
should consider different kinds of information to detect potential leakers than the current
process collects to detect traditional security threats; 223
• (U) Directed the DNI to review the management controls on privileged access, to include
Systems Administrators; 224
• (U) Directed the NSA to implement a “two person rule” for Tier 3 Systems
Administrators and select Tier 2 Systems Administrators and directed the DNI to report
to the Intelligence Committees on actions he is undertaking to lead the other IC elements
in enacting a similar two person rule, or similar safeguards; 225
• (U) Directed the DNI to attempt to reduce the number of Tier 3 System Administrators
and ensure consistency in tier ratings across the IC;226
• (U) Directed the DNI to expand Scattered Castles to contain all TS/SCI clearance holders
and list any pertinent exceptions or “flags” as close to real-time as possible; 227
• (U) Directed the DNI to ensure that insider threat security measures were fully applied to
contractors and contractor facilities; 228
221 Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014, P.L. I 13-
126, p. 16; Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the House-passed Intelligence Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2014 pp. 32.
222 Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014, P.L. I 13-
126, p. 16; Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the House-passed Intelligence Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2014 pp. 32-33.
223 Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014, P.L. I 13-
126, p. 16; Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the House-passed Intelligence Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2014 p. 33.
224 Id.
22s Id.
226 Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014, P.L. I 13-
126, p. 16; Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the House-passed Intelligence Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2014 p. 34.
221 Id.
22s Id.
TOP SECRETJ/HCS O PJSI GITK//ORCffi-1/l’J”OFORN
31
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
• (U) Required the IC to continuously evaluate the eligibility of personnel to access
classified information, to develop procedures for automatically sharing derogatory
information between agencies, and other improvements to the reinvestigation process; 229
• (U) Encouraged the DNI to make a determination of how periodic reinvestigations will
be handled in concert with a continuous evaluation program; 230
• (U) Directed an IC analysis of private sector policies to reduce insider threats; 231
• (U) Directed a DNI-led review once every three years of all U.S. government positions
with access to classified information; 232
• (U) Directed the DNI, in consultation with the Attorney General, the Secretary of
Defense, and the Director of the Office of Personnel Management, to develop and
implement procedures that govern whether and how publicly available information may
be used in the security clearance process; 233
• (U) Required each IC element to implement a program to enhance security reviews of
individuals applying for access to classified information; 234
• (U) Required the Inspector General of each federal agency that operates national security
systems to report on, among other things, information security practices to detect data
exfiltration and other threats; 235
• (U) Directed NSA to produce a plan for completing security improvements to its
networks by the end of Calendar Year 2018, including enclaves and systems used outside
ofNSA-controlled facilities; and236
229 Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014, P.L. 113-126, Title V.
23° Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014, P.L. 113-
126, p. 16
231 Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015, P.L. 113-293, § 308.
232 Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015, P.L. 113-
293, p.11.
233 Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015, P.L. 113-
293, pp. 11-12.
234 Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016, Division M, Consolidated Appropriations Act for Fiscal
Year 2016, P.L. 114-113, § 306.
235 Cybersecurity Act of 2015, Division N, Consolidated Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2016, P.L. 114-113,
§ 406
236 Classified Annex to Accompany the Joint Explanatory Statement to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2016, Division M, Consolidated Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2016, P.L. 114-113, p. 19.
TOP 8ECRET//llC8 0 P/81 G/TK//ORCON/NOFORN
32
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/81 G/TKJ/ORCON/NOFORN
• (U) Directed the Intelligence Community Inspector General (IC IG) to carry out an
assessment of post-Snowden information security improvements at CIA, DIA, FBI,
NGA, NRO, and ODNI.237
(U) As the Fiscal Year 2017 Intelligence Authorization Act moves toward enactment and
Congress begins its consideration of the President’s Fiscal Year 2018 budget request, the
Committee looks forward to working with the IC to ensure our nation’s secrets receive the
security they deserve.
237 Classified Annex to Accompany the Report to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017, H.R.
5077, p. 93.
TOP 8ECRET//HC8 0 P/8I G/TKJJ

Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden 2017, Edward Snowden Age, Edward Snowden Antarctica, Edward Snowden Articles, Edward Snowden Actor, Edward Snowden And Trump, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Apush, Edward Snowden Ama, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Biography, Edward Snowden Book, Edward Snowden Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Booz Allen, Edward Snowden Birthday, Edward Snowden Bbc, Edward Snowden Blog, Edward Snowden Birth Chart, Edward Snowden Bernie Sanders, Edward Snowden Bitcoin, Edward Snowden Cia, Edward Snowden Cnn, Edward Snowden Cast, Edward Snowden Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden Current News, Edward Snowden Citizen 4, Edward Snowden Conservative, Edward Snowden China, Edward Snowden Chemtrails, Edward Snowden Contact, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Documentary, Edward Snowden Definition, Edward Snowden Documentary Netflix, Edward Snowden Doc, Edward Snowden Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Dell, Edward Snowden Documentary Hbo, Edward Snowden Date, Edward Snowden David Hoffman, Edward Snowden Essay, Edward Snowden Email, Edward Snowden Ethics, Edward Snowden Ethics Essay, Edward Snowden Early Life, Edward Snowden Effect, Edward Snowden Ecuador, Edward Snowden Education, Edward Snowden Everything About Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Event, Edward Snowden Facts, Edward Snowden Family, Edward Snowden Film, Edward Snowden First Interview, Edward Snowden Facebook, Edward Snowden Father, Edward Snowden Full Movie, Edward Snowden Flat Earth, Edward Snowden First Tweet, Edward Snowden Fox News, Edward Snowden Guardian, Edward Snowden Glenn Greenwald, Edward Snowden Glasses, Edward Snowden Global Warming, Edward Snowden Gif, Edward Snowden Google, Edward Snowden Girlfriend Movie, Edward Snowden Good, Edward Snowden Grandfather, Edward Snowden Genius, Edward Snowden Hero, Edward Snowden Height, Edward Snowden House, Edward Snowden Hawaii, Edward Snowden High School, Edward Snowden Hong Kong, Edward Snowden History, Edward Snowden Heartbeat, Edward Snowden Haarp, Edward Snowden Hbo, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Iq, Edward Snowden Instagram, Edward Snowden Interview 2013, Edward Snowden Imdb, Edward Snowden Interview 2017, Edward Snowden Images, Edward Snowden Interview 2016, Edward Snowden Income, Edward Snowden Iphone, Edward Snowden Job, Edward Snowden Journalist, Edward Snowden Japan, Edward Snowden Julian Assange Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Java, Edward Snowden Journalism, Edward Snowden Joseph Gordon-levitt, Edward Snowden Julian Assange, Edward Snowden John Oliver Passwords, Edward Snowden Jean Michel Jarre, Edward Snowden Kunia, Edward Snowden Kimdir, Edward Snowden Katie Couric Interview, Edward Snowden Katie Couric, Edward Snowden Kaskus, Edward Snowden Kim, Edward Snowden Kasus, Edward Snowden Kfc, Edward Snowden Kim Jest, Edward Snowden Koenig, Edward Snowden Location, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills Moscow, Edward Snowden Laptop, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Living, Edward Snowden Lawyer, Edward Snowden Life, Edward Snowden Latest News, Edward Snowden Latest, Edward Snowden Live Stream, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Movie Netflix, Edward Snowden Movie Cast, Edward Snowden Military, Edward Snowden Movie Online, Edward Snowden Memes, Edward Snowden Middlebury College, Edward Snowden Married, Edward Snowden Moscow, Edward Snowden Medical Condition, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden Now, Edward Snowden News, Edward Snowden New York Times, Edward Snowden Netflix, Edward Snowden Natal Chart, Edward Snowden Nobel Prize, Edward Snowden Nsa Salary, Edward Snowden Npr, Edward Snowden Nationality, Edward Snowden On Trump, Edward Snowden Osama Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Obama, Edward Snowden Oscar, Edward Snowden On Movie, Edward Snowden On Twitter, Edward Snowden Openstack, Edward Snowden On Antarctica, Edward Snowden Os, Edward Snowden Original Interview, Edward Snowden Parents, Edward Snowden Political Views, Edward Snowden Privacy Tips, Edward Snowden Political Party, Edward Snowden Patriot Act, Edward Snowden Pictures, Edward Snowden Podcast, Edward Snowden Phone Case, Edward Snowden Poll, Edward Snowden Putin, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Quizlet, Edward Snowden Questions, Edward Snowden Quien Es, Edward Snowden Quote About Privacy, Edward Snowden Quotes Citizenfour, Edward Snowden Quick Facts, Edward Snowden Qualifications, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Reddit, Edward Snowden Research Paper, Edward Snowden Real Name, Edward Snowden Residence, Edward Snowden Resume, Edward Snowden Robot, Edward Snowden Recommended Apps, Edward Snowden Reporter, Edward Snowden Russian, Edward Snowden Story, Edward Snowden Salary, Edward Snowden Status, Edward Snowden Signal, Edward Snowden Speech, Edward Snowden Security Tips, Edward Snowden Shirt, Edward Snowden Siblings, Edward Snowden Special Forces, Edward Snowden Still Alive, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Today, Edward Snowden Trump, Edward Snowden Timeline, Edward Snowden Ted Talk, Edward Snowden The Guardian, Edward Snowden Trailer, Edward Snowden The Movie, Edward Snowden T Shirt, Edward Snowden Tor, Edward Snowden Update, Edward Snowden Ufo, Edward Snowden Us Army, Edward Snowden University Of Michigan, Edward Snowden Used Tails, Edward Snowden Umich, Edward Snowden University Of Maryland, Edward Snowden Ufo Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Ufo Video, Edward Snowden Urban Dictionary, Edward Snowden Video, Edward Snowden Vpn, Edward Snowden Vice, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden Voice, Edward Snowden And Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Vault 7, Edward Snowden Visa, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Vanity Fair, Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Wired, Edward Snowden William And Mary, Edward Snowden Washington Post, Edward Snowden Who Is He, Edward Snowden Website, Edward Snowden Worth, Edward Snowden Wikileak, Edward Snowden Washington Post 2013, Edward Snowden Youtube, Edward Snowden Young, Edward Snowden Yahoo Answers, Edward Snowden Youtube Channel, Edward Snowden Youtube Documentary, Edward Snowden Yokota, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Yify, Edward Snowden Zodiac Sign, Edward Snowden Zcash, Edward Snowden Zuckerberg, Edward Snowden Zoho, Edward Snowden Zizek, Edward Snowden Zimbabwe, Edward Snowden Zitate, Edward Snowden Zusammenfassung, Edward Snowden Zivilisation, Edward Snowden Zvi\u017eda\u010d

Summary of Report on Snowden Disclosures

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

 

Executive Summary of Review of the Unauthorized Disclosures of Former National Security Agency Contractor Edward Snowden

Page Count: 4 pages
Date: September 15, 2016
Restriction: None
Originating Organization: House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
File Type: pdf
File Size: 764,355 bytes
File Hash (SHA-256):9D2E808E8281494BA8F6FEB6A3CDA09A8A86E8C83C88F3883939A8155007DD70

Download File

In June 2013, former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden perpetrated the largest and most damaging public release of classified information in U.S. intelligence history. In August 2014, the Chairman and Ranking Member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) directed Committee staff to carry out a comprehensive review of the unauthorized disclosures. The aim of the review was to allow the Committee to explain to other Members of Congress–and, where possible, the American people–how this breach occurred, what the U.S. Government knows about the man who committed it, and whether the security shortfalls it highlighted had been remedied.

Over the next two years, Committee staff requested hundreds of documents from the Intelligence Community (IC), participated in dozens of briefings and meetings with IC personnel, conducted several interviews with key individuals with knowledge of Snowden’s background and actions, and traveled to NSA Hawaii to visit Snowden’s last two work locations. The review focused on Snowden’s background, how he was able to remove more than 1.5 million classified documents from secure NSA networks, what the 1.5 million documents contained, and the damage their removal caused to national security.

The Committee,s review was careful not to disturb any criminal investigation or future prosecution of Snowden, who has remained in Russia since he fled there on June 23, 2013. Accordingly) the Committee did not interview individuals whom the Department of Justice identified as possible witnesses at Snowden’s trial, including Snowden himself, nor did the Committee request any matters that may have occurred before a grand jury. Instead, the IC provided the Committee with access to other individuals who possessed substantively similar knowledge as the possible witnesses. Similarly, rather than interview Snowden’s NSA coworkers and supervisors directly, Committee staff interviewed IC personnel who had reviewed reports of interviews with Snowden’s co-workers and supervisors. The Committee remains hopeful that Snowden will return to the United States to face justice.

The bulk of the Committee’s 36-page review, which includes 230 footnotes, must remain classified to avoid causing further harm to national security; however, the Committee has made a number of unclassified findings. These findings demonstrate that the public narrative popularized by Snowden and his allies is rife with falsehoods, exaggerations, and crucial omissions, a pattern that began before he stole 1.5 million sensitive documents.

First, Snowden caused tremendous damage to national security, and the vast majority of the documents he stole have nothing to do with programs impacting individual privacy interests-they instead pertain to military, defense? and intelligence programs of great interest to America,s adversaries. A review of the materials Snowden compromised makes clear that he handed over secrets that protect American troops overseas and secrets that provide vital defenses against terrorists and nation-states. Some of Snowden’s disclosures exacerbated and accelerated existing trends that diminished the IC’s capabilities to collect against legitimate foreign intelligence targets, while others resulted in the loss of intelligence streams that had saved American lives. Snowden insists he has not shared the full cache of 1.5 million classified documents with anyone; however, in June 2016, the deputy chairman of the Russian parliaments defense and security committee publicly conceded that “Snowden did share intelligence” with his government. Additionally, although Snowden’s professed objective may have been to inform the general public, the information he released is also available to Russian, Chinese, Iranian, and North Korean govemment intelligence services; any terrorist with Internet access; and many others who wish to do harm to the United States.

Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden 2017, Edward Snowden Age, Edward Snowden Antarctica, Edward Snowden Articles, Edward Snowden Actor, Edward Snowden And Trump, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Apush, Edward Snowden Ama, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Biography, Edward Snowden Book, Edward Snowden Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Booz Allen, Edward Snowden Birthday, Edward Snowden Bbc, Edward Snowden Blog, Edward Snowden Birth Chart, Edward Snowden Bernie Sanders, Edward Snowden Bitcoin, Edward Snowden Cia, Edward Snowden Cnn, Edward Snowden Cast, Edward Snowden Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden Current News, Edward Snowden Citizen 4, Edward Snowden Conservative, Edward Snowden China, Edward Snowden Chemtrails, Edward Snowden Contact, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Documentary, Edward Snowden Definition, Edward Snowden Documentary Netflix, Edward Snowden Doc, Edward Snowden Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Dell, Edward Snowden Documentary Hbo, Edward Snowden Date, Edward Snowden David Hoffman, Edward Snowden Essay, Edward Snowden Email, Edward Snowden Ethics, Edward Snowden Ethics Essay, Edward Snowden Early Life, Edward Snowden Effect, Edward Snowden Ecuador, Edward Snowden Education, Edward Snowden Everything About Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Event, Edward Snowden Facts, Edward Snowden Family, Edward Snowden Film, Edward Snowden First Interview, Edward Snowden Facebook, Edward Snowden Father, Edward Snowden Full Movie, Edward Snowden Flat Earth, Edward Snowden First Tweet, Edward Snowden Fox News, Edward Snowden Guardian, Edward Snowden Glenn Greenwald, Edward Snowden Glasses, Edward Snowden Global Warming, Edward Snowden Gif, Edward Snowden Google, Edward Snowden Girlfriend Movie, Edward Snowden Good, Edward Snowden Grandfather, Edward Snowden Genius, Edward Snowden Hero, Edward Snowden Height, Edward Snowden House, Edward Snowden Hawaii, Edward Snowden High School, Edward Snowden Hong Kong, Edward Snowden History, Edward Snowden Heartbeat, Edward Snowden Haarp, Edward Snowden Hbo, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Iq, Edward Snowden Instagram, Edward Snowden Interview 2013, Edward Snowden Imdb, Edward Snowden Interview 2017, Edward Snowden Images, Edward Snowden Interview 2016, Edward Snowden Income, Edward Snowden Iphone, Edward Snowden Job, Edward Snowden Journalist, Edward Snowden Japan, Edward Snowden Julian Assange Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Java, Edward Snowden Journalism, Edward Snowden Joseph Gordon-levitt, Edward Snowden Julian Assange, Edward Snowden John Oliver Passwords, Edward Snowden Jean Michel Jarre, Edward Snowden Kunia, Edward Snowden Kimdir, Edward Snowden Katie Couric Interview, Edward Snowden Katie Couric, Edward Snowden Kaskus, Edward Snowden Kim, Edward Snowden Kasus, Edward Snowden Kfc, Edward Snowden Kim Jest, Edward Snowden Koenig, Edward Snowden Location, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills Moscow, Edward Snowden Laptop, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Living, Edward Snowden Lawyer, Edward Snowden Life, Edward Snowden Latest News, Edward Snowden Latest, Edward Snowden Live Stream, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Movie Netflix, Edward Snowden Movie Cast, Edward Snowden Military, Edward Snowden Movie Online, Edward Snowden Memes, Edward Snowden Middlebury College, Edward Snowden Married, Edward Snowden Moscow, Edward Snowden Medical Condition, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden Now, Edward Snowden News, Edward Snowden New York Times, Edward Snowden Netflix, Edward Snowden Natal Chart, Edward Snowden Nobel Prize, Edward Snowden Nsa Salary, Edward Snowden Npr, Edward Snowden Nationality, Edward Snowden On Trump, Edward Snowden Osama Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Obama, Edward Snowden Oscar, Edward Snowden On Movie, Edward Snowden On Twitter, Edward Snowden Openstack, Edward Snowden On Antarctica, Edward Snowden Os, Edward Snowden Original Interview, Edward Snowden Parents, Edward Snowden Political Views, Edward Snowden Privacy Tips, Edward Snowden Political Party, Edward Snowden Patriot Act, Edward Snowden Pictures, Edward Snowden Podcast, Edward Snowden Phone Case, Edward Snowden Poll, Edward Snowden Putin, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Quizlet, Edward Snowden Questions, Edward Snowden Quien Es, Edward Snowden Quote About Privacy, Edward Snowden Quotes Citizenfour, Edward Snowden Quick Facts, Edward Snowden Qualifications, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Reddit, Edward Snowden Research Paper, Edward Snowden Real Name, Edward Snowden Residence, Edward Snowden Resume, Edward Snowden Robot, Edward Snowden Recommended Apps, Edward Snowden Reporter, Edward Snowden Russian, Edward Snowden Story, Edward Snowden Salary, Edward Snowden Status, Edward Snowden Signal, Edward Snowden Speech, Edward Snowden Security Tips, Edward Snowden Shirt, Edward Snowden Siblings, Edward Snowden Special Forces, Edward Snowden Still Alive, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Today, Edward Snowden Trump, Edward Snowden Timeline, Edward Snowden Ted Talk, Edward Snowden The Guardian, Edward Snowden Trailer, Edward Snowden The Movie, Edward Snowden T Shirt, Edward Snowden Tor, Edward Snowden Update, Edward Snowden Ufo, Edward Snowden Us Army, Edward Snowden University Of Michigan, Edward Snowden Used Tails, Edward Snowden Umich, Edward Snowden University Of Maryland, Edward Snowden Ufo Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Ufo Video, Edward Snowden Urban Dictionary, Edward Snowden Video, Edward Snowden Vpn, Edward Snowden Vice, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden Voice, Edward Snowden And Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Vault 7, Edward Snowden Visa, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Vanity Fair, Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Wired, Edward Snowden William And Mary, Edward Snowden Washington Post, Edward Snowden Who Is He, Edward Snowden Website, Edward Snowden Worth, Edward Snowden Wikileak, Edward Snowden Washington Post 2013, Edward Snowden Youtube, Edward Snowden Young, Edward Snowden Yahoo Answers, Edward Snowden Youtube Channel, Edward Snowden Youtube Documentary, Edward Snowden Yokota, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Yify, Edward Snowden Zodiac Sign, Edward Snowden Zcash, Edward Snowden Zuckerberg, Edward Snowden Zoho, Edward Snowden Zizek, Edward Snowden Zimbabwe, Edward Snowden Zitate, Edward Snowden Zusammenfassung, Edward Snowden Zivilisation, Edward Snowden Zvi\u017eda\u010d

Revealed – NSA Snowden Releases Tally Update – *6,697 Pages

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

7 June 2016. Add 123 pages to The Intercept. Tally now *6,697 pages of The Guardian first reported 58,000 files; caveat: Janine Gibson, The Guardian NY, said on 30 January 2014 “much more than 58,000 files in first part, two more parts” (no numbers) (tally about ~11.5%). DoD claims 1,700,000 files (~.04% of that released). ACLU lists 525 pages released by the press. However, if as The Washington Post reported, a minimum of 250,000 pages are in the Snowden files, then less than 1% have been released. Note Greenwald claim on 13 September 2014 of having “hundreds of thousands” of documents.

 

16 May 2016. Add 252 pages to The Intercept.

16 May 2016. Kudos, at last: The Intercept is broadening access to the Snowden archive. Here’s why: by Glenn Greenwald

https://theintercept.com/2016/05/16/the-intercept-is-broadening-access-to-the-snowden-archive-heres-why/

14 May 2016. Add 4 pages to The Intercept. Tally now *6,322 pages of The Guardian first reported 58,000 files; caveat: Janine Gibson, The Guardian NY,said on 30 January 2014 “much more than 58,000 files in first part, two more parts” (no numbers) (tally about ~10.6%). DoD claims 1,700,000 files (~.04% of that released). ACLU lists 525 pages released by the press. However, if as The Washington Post reported, a minimum of 250,000 pages are in the Snowden files, then less than 1% have been released. Note Greenwald claim on 13 September 2014 of having “hundreds of thousands” of documents. At Snowden current rate it will take 20-620 years to free all documents.

16 February 2016

[Image]

10 February 2016. Add 99 pages to Boing Boing (released 2 February 2016). Tally now *6,318 pages of The Guardian first reported 58,000 files; caveat: Janine Gibson, The Guardian NY, said on 30 January 2014 “much more than 58,000 files in first part, two more parts” (no numbers) (tally about ~10.6%). DoD claims 1,700,000 files (~.04% of that released). ACLU lists 525 pages released by the press. However, if as The Washington Post reported, a minimum of 250,000 pages are in the Snowden files, then less than 1% have been released. Note Greenwald claim on 13 September 2014 of having “hundreds of thousands” of documents. At Snowden current rate it will take 20-620 years to free all documents.

6 February 2016. (±) False Tallies-the Prisoner’s Dilemma? https://vimeo.com/145453201

2 February 2016. Add 14 pages to The Intercept.

23 December 2015. Add 7 pages to The Intercept

20 November 2015. Add 5 pages to Telesurtv and The Intercept.

28 September 2015. Add 21 pages to The Intercept.

24 September 2015. Add 283 pages to The Intercept.

15 August 2015. Add 74 pages to New York Times-Propublica.

11 August 2015. Add 29 pages to The Intercept.

3 August 2015. Add 10 pages to The Intercept.

16 July 2015. Add 8 pages to The Intercept.

1 July 2015. Add 1,240 pages to The Intercept.

26 June 2015. Add 13 pages to The Intercept.

22 June 2015. Add 250 pages to The Intercept.

13 June 2015. Italian journalist provides correspondence with USG on Snowden documents:

2015-1504.pdf offsite Stefania Maurizi-NSA Snowden Correspondence      June 13, 2015
2015-1503.pdf offsite Stefania Maurizi-DoJ Snowden Correspondence      June 13, 2015
2015-1502.pdf offsite Stefania Maurizi-State Snowden Correspondence    June 13, 2015

12 June 2015. Paul and FVEYDOCS tweet:

https://fveydocs.org/IC off the Record:

https://nsa.gov1.info/dni/

12 June 2015. Aeris tweets:

https://nsa.imirhil.fr/OCRized/indexed/full-text-searchable PDF.

12 June 2015. Christopher Parsons writes:

Saw your tweet re: sources for Snowden docs. I’ve compiled all the relevant Canadian documents, along with summary information of the documents’contents along with indexing information, here:https://www.christopher-parsons.com/writings/cse-summaries/

In the coming months I’m hoping to have equivalent summaries for Australia and New Zealand (and will then be moving on to do similar summary work for US- and UK-based documents).

12 June 2015. Snowden documents compilations (plus this one):

https://search.edwardsnowden.com/
https://edwardsnowden.com/revelations/
http://cjfe.org/snowden
https://github.com/nsa-observer/documents/tree/master/files/pdf
https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-search
http://freesnowden.is/category/revealed-documents/index.html
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources
https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013
http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

If all documents are free somewhere please send pointer to: cryptome[at]earthlink.net

12 June 2015. Add 4 pages to The Intercept.

4 June 2015. Add 91 pages to The New York Times.

28 May 2015. Add 23 pages to The Intercept.

22 May 2015. Add 26 pages to CBC (with The Intercept).

21 May 2015. Edward Snowden was quoted in Forbes on May 10, 2015:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/runasandvik/2015/05/10/what-edward-snowden-said-at-the-nordic-media-festival/2/

“What I did was that I worked in partnership with the journalists who received the material. As a condition of receiving the material they agreed, prior to publication, to run these stories by the government. Not for the government to censor them, but for the government to be able to look at these and go “look, this isn’t going to get anybody killed, this isn’t going to put a human agent behind enemy lines at risk” or something like that. “This isn’t going to make Al Qaeda be able to bomb buildings.” And I think the value of this model has been proven to be quite effective.”

This indicates all stories about document releases have been “run-by governments prior to publication.” Cryptome has filed an FOIA request to NSA for records of these “run-bys.”

https://cryptome.org/2015/05/snowden-media-usg-contacts-4.pdf

21 May 2015. Add 10 pages to The Intercept.

19 May 2015. Add 19 pages to The Intercept.

18 May 2015. Add 6 pages to The Intercept.

8 May 2015. Add 40 pages to The Intercept.

5 May 2015. Add 46 pages to The Intercept.

2 April 2015. Add 7 pages to The Intercept.

30 March 2015. Snowden documents archive by The Courage Foundation:

https://edwardsnowden.com/revelations/

24 March 2015. Add 152 pages to CBC News.

14 March 2015. Add 2 pages to New Zealand Herald.

10 March 2015. Add 12 pages to The Intercept. Add 8 pages to New Zealand Herald.

8 March 2015. Add 35 pages to New Zealand Star Times.

6 March 2015. Add 4 pages to New Zealand Herald.

5 March 2015. Snowden Archive, searchable: http://cjfe.org/snowden

5 March 2015. Add 6 pages to New Zealand Herald.

19 February 2015. Add 32 pages to The Intercept.

10 February 2015. Add 2 pages to The Intercept.

5 February 2015. Add 3 pages to The Intercept.

4 February 2015. Add 5 pages to The Intercept.

30 January 2015. Compilation of Snowden documents:

https://github.com/nsa-observer/documents/tree/master/files/pdf

[Repost] 4 April 2014. ACLU offers NSA documents search: https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-search

Also:

http://freesnowden.is/category/revealed-documents/index.html

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

If more lists please send: cryptome[at]earthlink.net

28 January 2015. Add 21 pages to CBC News.

26 January 2015. Add Citizenfour Snowden Documentary High-Definition, with innumerable images, by Cryptome.

25 January 2015. Add Citizenfour Snowden Documentary by Cryptome, with innumerable images, some 87 extracted by Paul Dietrich in following entry.

22 January 2015. Add 87 pages to Paul Dietrich (via Citizenfour).

17 January 2015. Add 199 pages to Der Spiegel.

28 December 2014. Add 666 pages to Der Spiegel.

22 December 2014. Add 1 page to New York Times.

13 December 2014. Add 67 pages to The Intercept.

4 December 2014. Add 63 pages to The Intercept.

25 November 2014. Add 72 pages to Süddeutsche Zeitung.

6 November 2014. At current rate of release it will take 31 to 908 years for full disclosure.

10 October 2014. Add 69 pages to The Intercept.

17 September 2014. Add 2 pages to The Intercept.

14 September 2014. Add 68 pages to Der Spiegel.

13 September 2014. In video Glenn Greenwald claims to have “hundreds of thousands” of documents (at 9:06 min)

http://www.3news.co.nz/tvshows/thenation/interview-glenn-greenwald-2014091311?ref=video

Audio excerpt: http://youtu.be/xnfIp38AAhM

5 September 2014. Add 32 pages to The Intercept.

31 August 2014. Add 34 pages to Der Spiegel.

25 August 2014. Add 55 pages to The Intercept.

16 August 2014. Add 26 pages to Heise.

12 August 2014. Add 6 pages to The Intercept.

5 August 2014. Add 12 pages to The Intercept.

4 August 2014. Add 23 pages to The Intercept.

25 July 2014. Add 4 pages to The Intercept.

14 July 2014. Add 8 pages to The Intercept.

14 July 2014. “I’m as mad as hell and I’m not going to take this anymore!”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_%28film%29

Cryptome has sent a demand for accounting and public release specifics to holders of the Snowden documents: New York Times, Washington Post, The Guardian, Barton Gellman, Laura Poitrias, Glenn Greenwald, ACLU, EFF and John and Jane Does, US Citizens:

https://cryptome.org/2014/07/snowden-documents-demand-14-0714.pdf

11 July 2014. See related essay, Open the Snowden Files, Krystian Woznicki, 11July 2014:

English: http://berlinergazette.de/wp-content/uploads/Open-the-Snowden-Files_KW_E.pdf
German: http://berlinergazette.de/open-the-snowden-files/

11 July 2014. @PaulMD notes this claim in the Washington Post, 11 July 2014:

We did not have an official NSA list of targets. We had to find them in the pile ourselves. Soltani, an independent researcher, did most of the heavy lifting on that. Because the information was not laid out in rows and columns, the way it might be in a spreadsheet, Soltani wrote computer code to extract what we were looking for from something like a quarter-million pages of unstructured text.

If a minimum of 250,000 pages are in the Snowden files, then less than 1% have been released.

9 July 2014. Add 8 pages to The Intercept.

9 July 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post.

23 June 2014. Add 9 pages to Der Spiegel.

22 June 2014. Add 41 pages to Information-The Intercept.

Revised. This is included in entry above. 18 June 2014. Add 20 pages to The Intercept.

18 June 2014. Add 200 pages to Der Spiegel.

16 June 2014. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel.

1 June 2014. Add 4 pages to New York Times.

23 May 2014. Cryptome placed online No Place to Hide, 310 pages, to compensate for failure to release Snowden documents:

https://cryptome.org/2014/05/npth-freed.htm

https://cryptome.org/2014/05/npth.7z (27MB)

19 May 2014. The Intercept released 12 pages.

13 May 2014. Glenn Greenwald released 107 pages, some new, some previously published, some full pages, some page fragments.

http://hbpub.vo.llnwd.net/o16/video/olmk/holt/greenwald/NoPlaceToHide-Documents-Uncompressed.pdf

5 May 2014. Related tally of redactions of Snowden releases:

https://cryptome.org/2014/05/snowden-redactions.htm

30 April 2014. Add 19 pages to The Intercept.

30 April 2014. Add 2 pages to Dagbladet belatedly.

5 April 2014. Add 21 pages to The Intercept.

4 April 2014. ACLU offers NSA documents search: https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-search

Also:

http://freesnowden.is/category/revealed-documents/index.html

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

If more lists please send: cryptome[at]earthlink.net

2 April 2014.

29 March 2014. Add 1 page to Der Spiegel.

22 March 2014. Add 3 pages to Der Spiegel.

22 March 2014. Add 2 pages to New York Times.

21 March 2014. Add 7 pages to Le Monde.

20 March 2014. Add 6 pages to The Intercept.

18 March 2014. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

13 March 2014. Add 1 page to The Intercept.

12 March 2014. Add 35 pages to The Intercept.

12 March 2014. Add 62 pages to New York Times. Add 2 pages to NRC Handelsblad.

7 March 2014. Add 8 pages to The Intercept.

27 February 2014. Add 3 pages to Guardian.

25 February 2014. Add 11 pages to NBC News.

24 February 2014. Add 4 pages to The Intercept.

24 February 2014. Add *50 pages to The Intercept (7 pages are duplicates of GCHQ Psychology).

18 February 2014. Add *45 pages to The Intercept (37 pages are duplicates of release by NBC News).

Note: Between 10-17 February 2014, The Intercept disclosed fragments of Snowden pages and the New York Times referenced some but as far as known did not release them in full. If available please send link.

10 February 2014. Add 1 page to NRC Handelsblad (via Electrospaces.blogspot.com).

7 February 2014. Add 15 pages NBC News.

5 February 2014. Add 14 pages NBC News.

31 January 2014. Add 27 pages to CBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 47 pages to NBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 18 pages to Anonymous via New York Times.

16 January 2014. Add 8 pages to The Guardian.

* 14 January 2014. Add 21 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

* 13 January 2014. Add 4 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

Related Snowden Document and Page Count Assessment:

https://cryptome.org/2014/01/snowden-count.htm

* 5 January 2014. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel (30 December 2013. No source given for NSA docs). Tally now *962 pages (~1.7%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.50% of that released).

4 January 2014. The source was not identified for *133  pages published by Der Spiegel and Jacob Appelbaum in late December 2013. They are included here but have not been confirmed as provided by Edward Snowden. Thanks to post by Techdirt.

Glenn Greenwald tweeted:

Glenn Greenwald @ggreenwald, 8:05 AM – 29 Dec 13@Cryptomeorg @ioerror I had no involvement in that Spiegel article, ask them – and they don’t say those are Snowden docs.

Matt Blaze tweeted, 11:24 AM – 2 Jan 14

matt blaze @mattblazeIf there are other sources besides Snowden, I hope journalists getting docs are careful to authenticate them (& disclose uncertainty).

3 January 2014. Add 13 pages to Washington Post.

3 January 2014. See also EFF, ACLU and LeakSource accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

2 January 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post published 10 July 2013.

* 31 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 December 2013. Add 50 pages of NSA ANT Catalog by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 21 pages from 30C3 video by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 42 pages (8 duplicates) to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

* 29 December 2013. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

24 December 2013. Add 2 pages to Washington Post.

23 December 2013

http://www.adn.com/2013/12/22/3243451/pincus-snowden-still-has-a-road.html

We’ve yet to see the full impact of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s unauthorized downloading of highly classified intelligence documents.

Among the roughly 1.7 million documents he walked away with — the vast majority of which have not been made public — are highly sensitive, specific intelligence reports, as well as current and historic requirements the White House has given the agency to guide its collection activities, according to a senior government official with knowledge of the situation.

The latter category involves about 2,000 unique taskings that can run to 20 pages each and give reasons for selective targeting to NSA collectors and analysts. These orders alone may run 31,500 pages.

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT). Tally now 797 pages (~1.4%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.40% of that released). Australia press reports “up to 20,000 Aussie files.”

Rate of release over 6 months, 132.8 pages per month, equals 436 months to release 58,000, or 36.3 years. Thus the period of release has decreased in the past month from 42 years.

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.


21 November 2013. See also EFF and ACLU accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013


Timeline of releases:

[See tabulation below for full timeline.]


5 October 2013

26 Years to Release Snowden Docs by The Guardian

Out of reported 15,000 pages, The Guardian has published 192 pages in fourteen releases over four months, an average of 48 pages per month, or 1.28% of the total. At this rate it will take 26 years for full release.


Number Date Title Pages

  The Guardian   276
  27 February 2014 GCHQ Optic Nerve 3
21 16 January 2014 SMS Text Messages Exploit 8
20 9 December 2013 Spying on Games 2
18 18 November 2013 DSD-3G 6
19 1 November 2013 PRISM, SSO
SSO1 Slide
SSO2 Slide
13*
18 4 October 2013 Types of IAT Tor 9
17 4 October 2013 Egotistical Giraffe 20*
16 4 October 2013 Tor Stinks 23
15 11 September 2013 NSA-Israel Spy 5
14 5 September 2013 BULLRUN 6*
13 5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
12 5 September 2013 NSA classification guide 3
11 31 July 2013 XKeyscore 32
10 27 June 2013 DoJ Memo on NSA 16
9 27 June 2013 Stellar Wind 51
8 21 June 2013 FISA Certification 25
7 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit A 9
6 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit B 9
5 16 June 2013 GCHQ G-20 Spying 4
4 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant FAQ 3
3 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant Slides 4
2 7 June 2013 PPD-20 18
1 5 June 2013 Verizon 4

  Washington Post   297
  9 July 2014 NSA Emails 1
  18 March 2014 NSA SCALAWAG 2
  18 March 2014 NSA MYSTIC 2
  2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 2 10
  2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 3
  23 December 2013 NSA/CSS Mission 2
  11 December 2013 Excessive Collection 9
  11 December 2013 SCISSORS 2 7
  11 December 2013 SCISSORS 1 4
  11 December 2013 Yahoo-Google Exploit 6
  11 December 2013 Cable Spying Types 7
  11 December 2013 WINDSTOP 1
  11 December 2013 Co-Traveler 24
  11 December 2013 GSM Tracking 2
  11 December 2013 SIGINT Successes 4
  11 December 2013 GHOSTMACHINE 4
  5 December 2013 Target Location 1
  4 December 2013 FASCIA 2
  4 December 2013 CHALKFUN 1
  26 November 2013 Microsoft a Target? 4
  4 November 2013 WINDSTOP, SSO, Yahoo-Google 14
  30 October 2013 MUSCULAR-INCENSOR Google and Yahoo 4
  14 October 2013 SSO Overview 4
  14 October 2013 SSO Slides 7
  14 October 2013 SSO Content Slides 9
  4 October 2013 Tor 49
  4 October 2013 EgotisticalGiraffe 20*
  4 October 2013 GCHQ MULLENIZE 2
  4 October 2013 Roger Dingledine 2
  30 August 2013 Budget 17
  10 July 2013 PRISM Slide 1
  29 June 2013 PRISM 8
  20 June 2013 Warrantless Surveillance 25*
  7 June 2013 PPD-20 18*
  6 June 2013 PRISM 1

  Der Spiegel   * 1,278
  17 January 2015 NSA Prepares for Cyber Battle 199
  28 December 2014 NSA Attacks on VPN, SSL, TLS, SSH, Tor 197MB 666
  14 September 2014 GCHQ STELLAR 26
  14 September 2014 NSA Treasure Map 38
  14 September 2014 NSA Treasure Map New 4
  31 August 2014 NSA GCHQ Spy Turkey 34
  23 June 2014 NSA German SIGADs 9
  18 June 2014 NSA German Spying-2 200
  16 June 2014 NSA German Spying 4
  29 March 2014 NSA Spy Chiefs of State 1
  22 March 2014 NSA SHOTGIANT 2NSA SHOTGIANT 1 21
  31 December 2013 QFIRE * 16
  30 December 2013 TAO Introduction * 16
  30 Deceber 2013 QUANTUM Tasking (8 duplicates of QUANTUMTHEORY) 28*
  30 December 2013 QUANTUMTHEORY 14
  29 December 2013 TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH (images)
TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH
(DE article)
4
  17 November 2013 ROYAL CONCIERGE (DE)ROYAL CONCIERGE (EN) 2
  29 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 3
  27 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 2
  20 October 2013 Mexico President 1
  20 September 2013 Belgacom 3
  16 September 2013 SWIFT 3
  9 September 2013 Smartphones 5
  1 September 2013 French Foreign Ministry 0
  31 August 2013 Al Jazeera 0

  O Globo Fantastico   ~87
  7 October 2013 CSE Brazil Ministry 7
  8 September 2013 Petrobas ~60
  3 September 2013 Brazil and Mexico 20

  New York Times   216
  15 August 2015 NSA SSO Fairview Stormbrew Blarney (with Propublica) 74
  4 June 2015
4 June 2015
NSA Expands Phone Spying at Borders
NSA Expands Phone Spying at Borders 2
90
1
  22 December 2014 NSA Tracks Zarrar Shah 1
  1 June 2014 NSA Identity Spying 4
  22 March 2014 NSA Huawei SHOTGIANT 2
  12 March 2014 NSA Stellarwind Classification
NSA FISA FAA Classification
AG Dissemination
NSA Cryptanalyist FISA Database
NSA Spying Timeline
37
18
2
4
1
  9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
  23 November 2013 SIGINT Strategy 2012-2016 5
  3 November 2013 SIGINT Mission 2013SIGINT Mission 2017 22
  28 September 2013 Contact Chaining Social Networks 1
  28 September 2013 SYANPSE 1
  5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
  5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
 

  ProPublica   163*
  15 August 2015 NSA SSO Fairview Stormbrew Blarney (with NY Times) 74*
  9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
  5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
  5 September 2103 SIGINT Enabling 3*

  Le Monde   20
  21 March 2014 CSE SNOWGLOBE 7
  25 October 2013 NSA Hosts FR Spies 4
  22 October 2013 Wanadoo-Alcatel 1
  22 October 2013 Close Access Sigads 2
  22 October 2013 Boundless Informant 2
  22 October 2013 PRISM 11

  Dagbladet   15
  April 2014
December 2013
Norway Assistance 2
  19 November 2013 BOUNDLESSINFORMANT 13

  NRC Handelsblad   7
  12 March 2014 NSA Aids Dutch Anti-Piracy 2
  8 February 2014 MIVD BoundlessInformant
Cryptome mirror
1
  30 November 2013 Dutch SIGINT 3
  23 November 2013 SIGINT Cryptologic Platform 1

  Huffington Post   3
  27 November 2013 Muslim Porn Viewing 3

  CBC   214
  22 May 2015 US-UK-CA-AU-NZ Cellphone Spying 26*
  24 March 2015 CSEC Cyber Threats 152
  28 January 2015 CSE LEVITATION-FFU Project 21
  30 January 2014 CSEC IP Profiling 27
  10 December 2013 NSA-CSEC Partnership 1
  10 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 4*
  2 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 3
  29 November 2013 G8-G20 Spying 1

  The Globe and Mail   18
  30 November 2013 CSEC Brazil Spying 18*

  SVT (Swedish TV)   2
  5 December 2013 Sweden Spied Russia for NSA 2

  L’Espresso   3
  6 December 2013 NSA Spies Italy 3

  Trojkan (SVT)   29
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Relationship 1*
  11 December 2013 NSA 5 Eyes Partners 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Agenda 8
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA RU Baltic 1
  11 December 2013 NSA GCHQ Sweden FRA COMINT 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA  XKeyscore Plan 5
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Sources 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Tor et al 3
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Slide 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum 1 1
  11 December 2013 GCHQ Sweden FRA Quantum 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum Accomplishments 2
  9 December 2013 NSA and Sweden Pact 3*

  Jacob Appelbaum   * 71
  30 December 2013 NSA Catalog * 50
  30 December 2013 NSA Catalog Video Clips * 21

  Information.dk   63*
  19 June 2014 NSA Partners 41*
  14 January 2014 SSO (duplicate) 7*
  14 January 2014 PRISM (duplicate) 11*
  13 January 2014 5-Eyes Spy G8-G20 (duplicate) 4*

  Anonymous/
New York Times
  18
  27 January 2014 NSA Smartphones Analysis 14
  27 January 2014 GCHQ Mobile Theme 4

  NBC News   87
  25 February 2014 GCHQ Cyber Effects 11
  7 February 2014 GCHQ Cyber Attack 15
  5 February 2014 GCHQ Anonymous 14
  27 January 2014 GCHQ Squeaky Dolphin 47

  The Intercept   3,083*
  7 June 2016 GCHQ Preston, Digint, Milkwhite, CCD, et al 123
  16 May 2016 NSA SID Today 178 files 252
  14 May 2016 NSA SIGINT to HUMINT 4
  2 February 2016 UAV Programs 14
  23 December 2015 NSA-GCHQ Juniper 7
  17 November 2015 NSA SCS Venezuela 5
  28 September 2015 NSA Rogue Olympics 21
  24 September 2015 NSA-GCHQ 29 Documents 283
  11 August NSA SIGINT Philosopher 29
  3 August 2015 NSA ECHELONGCHQ COMSAT 73
  16 July 2015 NSA Manhunting 8
  1 July 2015 NSA XKeyscore and More 1,264
  26 June 2015 NSA on NYT Warrantless Wiretap Story 13
  22 June 2015 GCHQ 11 Filles 250
  12 June 2015 NSA SID Hacker Interview 4
  28 May 2015 NSA SID Today 23
  22 May 2015 US-UK-CA-AU-NZ Cellphone Spying 26*
  21 May 2015 NSA Medical Spying 10
  19 May 2015 NSA SID NATO 19
  18 May 2015 JTAC Attack Methodology 3
  18 May 2015 NCTC Major Terrorism Figures 1
  18 May 2015 Black Budget Bin Laden Raid 2
  8 May 2015 NSA SKYNET 40
  5 May 2015 NSA Black Budget SID RT10 WG Language 46
  2 April 2015 NSA GCHQ JTRIG Argentina-Iran 7
  10 March 2015 NSA Apple DPA Cryptanalysis 12
  19 February 2015 GCHQ PCS Harvesting At Scale 32
  10 February 2015 NSA Iran GCHQ 2
  5 February 2015 DNI NATO Cyber Panel 3
  4 February 2015 GCHQ Lovely Horse et al 5*
  13 December 2014 GCHQ Belgacom Hack 67
  4 December 2014 NSA AURORA GOLD et al 63
  10 October 2014 10 NSA Releases
Computer Network Exploitation Declass
National Initiative Task Security 2
National Initiative Task Security 1
Exceptionally Controlled Info Compartments
Exceptionally Controlled Info Pawleys
Exceptionally Controlled Information
Sentry Eagle 2
Sentry Eagle 1
Tarex Classification Guide
Whipgenie Classification Guide
69
  17 September 2014 NSA Visit by NZ Spy 2
  5 September 2014 Masterspy Quadrennial Report 2009 32
  25 August 2014 NSA ICREACH 55
  12 August 2014 GCHQ Covert Mobile Phones Policy 6
  5 August 2014 NCTC Terrorist Identifies 12
  4 August 2014 US-NSA Pays Israel $500,000 2
  4 August 2014 NSA-Israel Spying Pact 2013 3
  4 August 2014 Israel-US Spying Pact 1999 16
  25 July 2014 NSA Saudi Arabia 4
  14 July 2014 NSA JTRIG Tools-Techniques 8
  9 July 2014 NSA FISA Accounts 8
  19 June 2014 NSA Partners 41*
  19 May 2014 12 Various Pages 12
  30 April 2014 GHOSTMACHINE-ECHOBASE
NSA Visit by GCHQ Lobban
PRISM with Olympics
14:6+8
4:1+3
1:
  4 April 2014 GCHQ Full Spectrum Cyber
NSA 5-Eyes SIGDEV Conference
19
2
  20 March 2014 NSA Hunt Sysadmins 6
  13 March 2014 NSA Third Party 1
  12 March 2014 NSA HammerchantNSA UK on Mikey and Ibake

 

NSA Turbine and Turmoil

NSA Thousands of Implants

NSA More Than One Way

NSA GCHQ Quantumtheory

NSA Selector Types

NSA Quantum Insert

NSA Analysis of Converged Data

NSA Phishing and MTM Attacks

NSA Menwith Hill xKeyscore

NSA Industry Exploit

NSA 5 Eyes Hacking

43

 

2

1

1

11

1

5

1

3

1

1

1

  7 March 2014 NSA Ask Zelda 8
  24 February 2014 GCHQ Disruption 4
  24 February 2014 GCHQ Online Deception
(7 pages duplicates of GCHQ Psychology)
*50
  18 February 2014 GCHQ Psychology37 Duplicates of NBC News *44
  18 February 2014 NSA-GCHQ Discovery 1
       
  Glenn Greenwald    
  13 May 2014 A variety of documents 107
       
  Cryptome   310
  26 January 2015 Citizenfour Snowden Documentary High Definition (7-Zip MP4) (3.6GB) ~
  25 January 2015 Citizenfour Snowden Documentary (7-Zipped MP4) (1.2GB) ~
  23 May 2014 No Place to Hide (27MB) 310
       
  Heise   26
  16 August 2014 NSA GCHQ CSEC HACIENDA 26
       
  Süddeutsche Zeitung   7
  25 November 2014 Vodafone GCHQ Cables List and Slides 72
       
  Paul Dietrich
@Paulmd199
  87
  22 January 2015 87 Citizenfour Screengrabs 87
       
  New Zealand Herald   20
  14 March 2015 GCSB Targets Solomons 2
  10 March 2015 NSA-New Zealand Relationship 8
  6 March 2015 GCSB XKeyscore 2 4
  5 March 2015 GCSB XKeyscore 6
       
  New Zealand Star Times   35
  8 March 2015 GCSB XKeyscore 3 35
       
  Telesurtv    
  17 November 2015 NSA SCS Venezuela 5*
       
  Boing Boing    
  2 February 2016 GCHQ Malware 99
       

                             
 

 

 

Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden 2017, Edward Snowden Age, Edward Snowden Antarctica, Edward Snowden Articles, Edward Snowden Actor, Edward Snowden And Trump, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Apush, Edward Snowden Ama, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Biography, Edward Snowden Book, Edward Snowden Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Booz Allen, Edward Snowden Birthday, Edward Snowden Bbc, Edward Snowden Blog, Edward Snowden Birth Chart, Edward Snowden Bernie Sanders, Edward Snowden Bitcoin, Edward Snowden Cia, Edward Snowden Cnn, Edward Snowden Cast, Edward Snowden Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden Current News, Edward Snowden Citizen 4, Edward Snowden Conservative, Edward Snowden China, Edward Snowden Chemtrails, Edward Snowden Contact, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Documentary, Edward Snowden Definition, Edward Snowden Documentary Netflix, Edward Snowden Doc, Edward Snowden Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Dell, Edward Snowden Documentary Hbo, Edward Snowden Date, Edward Snowden David Hoffman, Edward Snowden Essay, Edward Snowden Email, Edward Snowden Ethics, Edward Snowden Ethics Essay, Edward Snowden Early Life, Edward Snowden Effect, Edward Snowden Ecuador, Edward Snowden Education, Edward Snowden Everything About Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Event, Edward Snowden Facts, Edward Snowden Family, Edward Snowden Film, Edward Snowden First Interview, Edward Snowden Facebook, Edward Snowden Father, Edward Snowden Full Movie, Edward Snowden Flat Earth, Edward Snowden First Tweet, Edward Snowden Fox News, Edward Snowden Guardian, Edward Snowden Glenn Greenwald, Edward Snowden Glasses, Edward Snowden Global Warming, Edward Snowden Gif, Edward Snowden Google, Edward Snowden Girlfriend Movie, Edward Snowden Good, Edward Snowden Grandfather, Edward Snowden Genius, Edward Snowden Hero, Edward Snowden Height, Edward Snowden House, Edward Snowden Hawaii, Edward Snowden High School, Edward Snowden Hong Kong, Edward Snowden History, Edward Snowden Heartbeat, Edward Snowden Haarp, Edward Snowden Hbo, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Iq, Edward Snowden Instagram, Edward Snowden Interview 2013, Edward Snowden Imdb, Edward Snowden Interview 2017, Edward Snowden Images, Edward Snowden Interview 2016, Edward Snowden Income, Edward Snowden Iphone, Edward Snowden Job, Edward Snowden Journalist, Edward Snowden Japan, Edward Snowden Julian Assange Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Java, Edward Snowden Journalism, Edward Snowden Joseph Gordon-levitt, Edward Snowden Julian Assange, Edward Snowden John Oliver Passwords, Edward Snowden Jean Michel Jarre, Edward Snowden Kunia, Edward Snowden Kimdir, Edward Snowden Katie Couric Interview, Edward Snowden Katie Couric, Edward Snowden Kaskus, Edward Snowden Kim, Edward Snowden Kasus, Edward Snowden Kfc, Edward Snowden Kim Jest, Edward Snowden Koenig, Edward Snowden Location, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills Moscow, Edward Snowden Laptop, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Living, Edward Snowden Lawyer, Edward Snowden Life, Edward Snowden Latest News, Edward Snowden Latest, Edward Snowden Live Stream, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Movie Netflix, Edward Snowden Movie Cast, Edward Snowden Military, Edward Snowden Movie Online, Edward Snowden Memes, Edward Snowden Middlebury College, Edward Snowden Married, Edward Snowden Moscow, Edward Snowden Medical Condition, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden Now, Edward Snowden News, Edward Snowden New York Times, Edward Snowden Netflix, Edward Snowden Natal Chart, Edward Snowden Nobel Prize, Edward Snowden Nsa Salary, Edward Snowden Npr, Edward Snowden Nationality, Edward Snowden On Trump, Edward Snowden Osama Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Obama, Edward Snowden Oscar, Edward Snowden On Movie, Edward Snowden On Twitter, Edward Snowden Openstack, Edward Snowden On Antarctica, Edward Snowden Os, Edward Snowden Original Interview, Edward Snowden Parents, Edward Snowden Political Views, Edward Snowden Privacy Tips, Edward Snowden Political Party, Edward Snowden Patriot Act, Edward Snowden Pictures, Edward Snowden Podcast, Edward Snowden Phone Case, Edward Snowden Poll, Edward Snowden Putin, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Quizlet, Edward Snowden Questions, Edward Snowden Quien Es, Edward Snowden Quote About Privacy, Edward Snowden Quotes Citizenfour, Edward Snowden Quick Facts, Edward Snowden Qualifications, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Reddit, Edward Snowden Research Paper, Edward Snowden Real Name, Edward Snowden Residence, Edward Snowden Resume, Edward Snowden Robot, Edward Snowden Recommended Apps, Edward Snowden Reporter, Edward Snowden Russian, Edward Snowden Story, Edward Snowden Salary, Edward Snowden Status, Edward Snowden Signal, Edward Snowden Speech, Edward Snowden Security Tips, Edward Snowden Shirt, Edward Snowden Siblings, Edward Snowden Special Forces, Edward Snowden Still Alive, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Today, Edward Snowden Trump, Edward Snowden Timeline, Edward Snowden Ted Talk, Edward Snowden The Guardian, Edward Snowden Trailer, Edward Snowden The Movie, Edward Snowden T Shirt, Edward Snowden Tor, Edward Snowden Update, Edward Snowden Ufo, Edward Snowden Us Army, Edward Snowden University Of Michigan, Edward Snowden Used Tails, Edward Snowden Umich, Edward Snowden University Of Maryland, Edward Snowden Ufo Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Ufo Video, Edward Snowden Urban Dictionary, Edward Snowden Video, Edward Snowden Vpn, Edward Snowden Vice, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden Voice, Edward Snowden And Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Vault 7, Edward Snowden Visa, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Vanity Fair, Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Wired, Edward Snowden William And Mary, Edward Snowden Washington Post, Edward Snowden Who Is He, Edward Snowden Website, Edward Snowden Worth, Edward Snowden Wikileak, Edward Snowden Washington Post 2013, Edward Snowden Youtube, Edward Snowden Young, Edward Snowden Yahoo Answers, Edward Snowden Youtube Channel, Edward Snowden Youtube Documentary, Edward Snowden Yokota, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Yify, Edward Snowden Zodiac Sign, Edward Snowden Zcash, Edward Snowden Zuckerberg, Edward Snowden Zoho, Edward Snowden Zizek, Edward Snowden Zimbabwe, Edward Snowden Zitate, Edward Snowden Zusammenfassung, Edward Snowden Zivilisation, Edward Snowden Zvi\u017eda\u010d

 

TOP SECRET from CRYPTOME – 1 Snowden Email Disclosed to 26 Emails & 31 Docs

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

 

Cryptome Eyeball, Cryptome Twitter, Cryptome Wikileaks, Cryptome Archive, Cryptome Trump, Cryptome Wikipedia, Cryptome Secret Service, Cryptome Down, Cryptome Payment Technologies, Cryptome Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Cryptome Archive, Cryptome Area 51, Cryptome Air Force One, Cryptome Archive Download, Cryptome Alien, Cryptome Albania, Cryptome Assange, Cryptome Alternatives, Cryptome Pharmaceuticals Australia, Cryptome Mi6 Agents, Cryptome Boston Marathon, Cryptome Benghazi, Cryptome Bitcoin, Cryptome Brazil, Cryptome Cn, Cryptome Cia, Cryptome China, Cryptome Charlie Hebdo, Cryptome Contact, Crypto Code, Cryptome Citizenfour Download, Citizenfour Cryptome Mirror, Cryptome Down, Cryptome Download, Cryptome Drones, Cryptome Definition, Cryptome Deep Web, Define Cryptome, Cryptome Archive Download, Cryptome Full Disclosure, Cryptome Site Down, Cryptome Citizenfour Download, Cryptome Eyeball, Cryptome Edward Snowden, Cryptome Eyeballing Presidential Protection, Cryptome Que Es, Cryptome Fru, Cryptome Fukushima, Cryptome For Sale, Cryptome Facebook, Cryptome Femen, Cryptome Full Disclosure, Cryptome Feed, Cryptome Free List, Cryptome Fukushima Daiichi, Cryptome Rss Feed, Cryptome Gchq, Cryptome Gang Stalking, Giganews Cryptome, Cryptome Microsoft Spy Guide, Cryptome Hacked, Cryptome White House, Cryptome Sandy Hook, Cryptome Jade Helm, Cryptome Ira Members, Cryptome Ira, Cryptome Isis, Cryptome Iraq, Cryptome Ireland, Cryptome Inspire, Cryptome India, Cryptome Interview, Cryptome Israel, Cryptome Improvised Munitions, Cryptome Jade Helm, Cryptome North Korea, Cryptome Like Sites, Cryptome Legal, Cryptome Libya, Cryptome List, Cryptome Le Siecle, Like Cryptome, Cryptome Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Cryptome Mi6, Cryptome Mirror, Cryptome Microsoft, Cryptome Microsoft Spy Guide, Cryptome Mirror Sites, Cryptome Mk Ultra, Cryptome Boston Marathon, Cryptome Ira Members, Cryptome Improvised Munitions, Citizenfour Cryptome Mirror, Cryptome North Korea, Cryptome Nuclear, Cryptome Northern Ireland, Cryptome Nsa, Cryptome-nov 2015, Cryptome Nedir, Cryptome.org Wikipedia, Cryptome Obama Protection, Cryptome.org Down, Cryptome.org Eyeball, Cryptome Org Fukushima, Cryptome.org Parastoo, Cryptome.org Rss, Cryptome.org Femen, Cryptome.org 9\/11, Cryptome.org 911, Cryptome Photos, Cryptome Payment Technologies, Cryptome Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Cryptome Protection, Cryptome Pgp, Cryptome Parastoo, Cryptome Pharmaceuticals Australia, Cryptome Pdf, Cryptome Prism, Cryptome Pictures, Cryptome Que Es, Cryptome Rss, Cryptome Rheinland Pfalz, Cryptome Secret Service, Cryptome Search, Cryptome Snowden, Cryptome Sandy Hook, Cryptome Satellite, Cryptome Similar Sites, Cryptome Saudi, Cryptome Syria, Cryptome Site, Cryptome Stingray, Cryptome Twitter, Cryptome Trump, Cryptome Tempest, Cryptome Tor, Cryptome Tunisia, Crypto Tool, Cryptome Fukushima Tepco, Cryptome Payment Technologies, Similar To Cryptome, Cryptome Turkey, Cryptome Ufo, Cryptome Ukraine, Cryptome Vs Wikileaks, Cryptome Venezuela, Cryptome Videos, Cryptome Wikileaks, Cryptome Wikipedia, Cryptome White House, Cryptome Vs Wikileaks, Cryptome Deep Web, Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden 2017, Edward Snowden Age, Edward Snowden Antarctica, Edward Snowden Articles, Edward Snowden Actor, Edward Snowden And Trump, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Apush, Edward Snowden Ama, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Biography, Edward Snowden Book, Edward Snowden Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Booz Allen, Edward Snowden Birthday, Edward Snowden Bbc, Edward Snowden Blog, Edward Snowden Birth Chart, Edward Snowden Bernie Sanders, Edward Snowden Bitcoin, Edward Snowden Cia, Edward Snowden Cnn, Edward Snowden Cast, Edward Snowden Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden Current News, Edward Snowden Citizen 4, Edward Snowden Conservative, Edward Snowden China, Edward Snowden Chemtrails, Edward Snowden Contact, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Documentary, Edward Snowden Definition, Edward Snowden Documentary Netflix, Edward Snowden Doc, Edward Snowden Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Dell, Edward Snowden Documentary Hbo, Edward Snowden Date, Edward Snowden David Hoffman, Edward Snowden Essay, Edward Snowden Email, Edward Snowden Ethics, Edward Snowden Ethics Essay, Edward Snowden Early Life, Edward Snowden Effect, Edward Snowden Ecuador, Edward Snowden Education, Edward Snowden Everything About Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Event, Edward Snowden Facts, Edward Snowden Family, Edward Snowden Film, Edward Snowden First Interview, Edward Snowden Facebook, Edward Snowden Father, Edward Snowden Full Movie, Edward Snowden Flat Earth, Edward Snowden First Tweet, Edward Snowden Fox News, Edward Snowden Guardian, Edward Snowden Glenn Greenwald, Edward Snowden Glasses, Edward Snowden Global Warming, Edward Snowden Gif, Edward Snowden Google, Edward Snowden Girlfriend Movie, Edward Snowden Good, Edward Snowden Grandfather, Edward Snowden Genius, Edward Snowden Hero, Edward Snowden Height, Edward Snowden House, Edward Snowden Hawaii, Edward Snowden High School, Edward Snowden Hong Kong, Edward Snowden History, Edward Snowden Heartbeat, Edward Snowden Haarp, Edward Snowden Hbo, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Iq, Edward Snowden Instagram, Edward Snowden Interview 2013, Edward Snowden Imdb, Edward Snowden Interview 2017, Edward Snowden Images, Edward Snowden Interview 2016, Edward Snowden Income, Edward Snowden Iphone, Edward Snowden Job, Edward Snowden Journalist, Edward Snowden Japan, Edward Snowden Julian Assange Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Java, Edward Snowden Journalism, Edward Snowden Joseph Gordon-levitt, Edward Snowden Julian Assange, Edward Snowden John Oliver Passwords, Edward Snowden Jean Michel Jarre, Edward Snowden Kunia, Edward Snowden Kimdir, Edward Snowden Katie Couric Interview, Edward Snowden Katie Couric, Edward Snowden Kaskus, Edward Snowden Kim, Edward Snowden Kasus, Edward Snowden Kfc, Edward Snowden Kim Jest, Edward Snowden Koenig, Edward Snowden Location, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills Moscow, Edward Snowden Laptop, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Living, Edward Snowden Lawyer, Edward Snowden Life, Edward Snowden Latest News, Edward Snowden Latest, Edward Snowden Live Stream, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Movie Netflix, Edward Snowden Movie Cast, Edward Snowden Military, Edward Snowden Movie Online, Edward Snowden Memes, Edward Snowden Middlebury College, Edward Snowden Married, Edward Snowden Moscow, Edward Snowden Medical Condition, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden Now, Edward Snowden News, Edward Snowden New York Times, Edward Snowden Netflix, Edward Snowden Natal Chart, Edward Snowden Nobel Prize, Edward Snowden Nsa Salary, Edward Snowden Npr, Edward Snowden Nationality, Edward Snowden On Trump, Edward Snowden Osama Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Obama, Edward Snowden Oscar, Edward Snowden On Movie, Edward Snowden On Twitter, Edward Snowden Openstack, Edward Snowden On Antarctica, Edward Snowden Os, Edward Snowden Original Interview, Edward Snowden Parents, Edward Snowden Political Views, Edward Snowden Privacy Tips, Edward Snowden Political Party, Edward Snowden Patriot Act, Edward Snowden Pictures, Edward Snowden Podcast, Edward Snowden Phone Case, Edward Snowden Poll, Edward Snowden Putin, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Quizlet, Edward Snowden Questions, Edward Snowden Quien Es, Edward Snowden Quote About Privacy, Edward Snowden Quotes Citizenfour, Edward Snowden Quick Facts, Edward Snowden Qualifications, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Reddit, Edward Snowden Research Paper, Edward Snowden Real Name, Edward Snowden Residence, Edward Snowden Resume, Edward Snowden Robot, Edward Snowden Recommended Apps, Edward Snowden Reporter, Edward Snowden Russian, Edward Snowden Story, Edward Snowden Salary, Edward Snowden Status, Edward Snowden Signal, Edward Snowden Speech, Edward Snowden Security Tips, Edward Snowden Shirt, Edward Snowden Siblings, Edward Snowden Special Forces, Edward Snowden Still Alive, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Today, Edward Snowden Trump, Edward Snowden Timeline, Edward Snowden Ted Talk, Edward Snowden The Guardian, Edward Snowden Trailer, Edward Snowden The Movie, Edward Snowden T Shirt, Edward Snowden Tor, Edward Snowden Update, Edward Snowden Ufo, Edward Snowden Us Army, Edward Snowden University Of Michigan, Edward Snowden Used Tails, Edward Snowden Umich, Edward Snowden University Of Maryland, Edward Snowden Ufo Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Ufo Video, Edward Snowden Urban Dictionary, Edward Snowden Video, Edward Snowden Vpn, Edward Snowden Vice, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden Voice, Edward Snowden And Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Vault 7, Edward Snowden Visa, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Vanity Fair, Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Wired, Edward Snowden William And Mary, Edward Snowden Washington Post, Edward Snowden Who Is He, Edward Snowden Website, Edward Snowden Worth, Edward Snowden Wikileak, Edward Snowden Washington Post 2013, Edward Snowden Youtube, Edward Snowden Young, Edward Snowden Yahoo Answers, Edward Snowden Youtube Channel, Edward Snowden Youtube Documentary, Edward Snowden Yokota, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Yify, Edward Snowden Zodiac Sign, Edward Snowden Zcash, Edward Snowden Zuckerberg, Edward Snowden Zoho, Edward Snowden Zizek, Edward Snowden Zimbabwe, Edward Snowden Zitate, Edward Snowden Zusammenfassung, Edward Snowden Zivilisation, Edward Snowden Zvi\u017eda\u010d

Revealed – NSA Snowden Releases Tally Update – *2,694 Pages

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

8 December 2014

 

4 December 2014. Add 63 pages to The Intercept. Tally now *2,627 pages of The Guardian first reported 58,000 files; caveat: Janine Gibson, The Guardian NY, said on 30 January 2014 “much more than 58,000 files in first part, two more parts” (no numbers) (tally now less than ~4.3%). DoD claims 1,700,000 files (~.015% of that released). ACLU lists 525 pages released by the press. However, if as The Washington Post reported, a minimum of 250,000 pages are in the Snowden files, then less than 1% have been released. Note Greenwald claim on 13 September 2014 of having “hundreds of thousands” of documents.

25 November 2014. Add 72 pages to Süddeutsche Zeitung.

17 November 2014, charts by Cryptome:

[Image]

6 November 2014. At current rate of release it will take 31 to 908 years for full disclosure.

10 October 2014. Add 69 pages to The Intercept.

17 September 2014. Add 2 pages to The Intercept.

14 September 2014. Add 68 pages to Der Spiegel.

13 September 2014. In video Glenn Greenwald claims to have “hundreds of thousands” of documents (at 9:06 min)

http://www.3news.co.nz/tvshows/thenation/interview-glenn-greenwald-2014091311?ref=video

Audio excerpt: http://youtu.be/xnfIp38AAhM

5 September 2014. Add 32 pages to The Intercept. Tally now *2,293 pages of The Guardian first reported 58,000 files; caveat: Janine Gibson, The Guardian NY, said on 30 January 2014 “much more than 58,000 files in first part, two more parts” (no numbers) (tally now less than ~3.5%). DoD claims 1,700,000 files (~.012% of that released). ACLU lists 525 pages released by the press. However, if as The Washington Post reported, a minimum of 250,000 pages are in the Snowden files, then less than 1% have been released.

31 August 2014. Add 34 pages to Der Spiegel.

25 August 2014. Add 55 pages to The Intercept.

16 August 2014. Add 26 pages to Heise.

12 August 2014. Add 6 pages to The Intercept.

5 August 2014. Add 12 pages to The Intercept.

4 August 2014. Add 23 pages to The Intercept.

25 July 2014. Add 4 pages to The Intercept.

14 July 2014. Add 8 pages to The Intercept.

14 July 2014. “I’m as mad as hell and I’m not going to take this anymore!”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_%28film%29

Cryptome has sent a demand for accounting and public release specifics to holders of the Snowden documents: New York Times, Washington Post, The Guardian, Barton Gellman, Laura Poitrias, Glenn Greenwald, ACLU, EFF and John and Jane Does, US Citizens:

http://cryptome.org/2014/07/snowden-documents-demand-14-0714.pdf

11 July 2014. See related essay, Open the Snowden Files, Krystian Woznicki, 11July 2014:

English: http://berlinergazette.de/wp-content/uploads/Open-the-Snowden-Files_KW_E.pdf
German: http://berlinergazette.de/open-the-snowden-files/

11 July 2014. @PaulMD notes this claim in the Washington Post, 11 July 2014:

We did not have an official NSA list of targets. We had to find them in the pile ourselves. Soltani, an independent researcher, did most of the heavy lifting on that. Because the information was not laid out in rows and columns, the way it might be in a spreadsheet, Soltani wrote computer code to extract what we were looking for from something like a quarter-million pages of unstructured text.

If a minimum of 250,000 pages are in the Snowden files, then less than 1% have been released.

9 July 2014. Add 8 pages to The Intercept.

9 July 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post.

23 June 2014. Add 9 pages to Der Spiegel.

22 June 2014. Add 41 pages to Information-The Intercept.

Revised. This is included in entry above. 18 June 2014. Add 20 pages to The Intercept.

18 June 2014. Add 200 pages to Der Spiegel.

16 June 2014. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel.

1 June 2014. Add 4 pages to New York Times.

23 May 2014. Cryptome placed online No Place to Hide, 310 pages, to compensate for failure to release Snowden documents:

http://cryptome.org/2014/05/npth-freed.htm

http://cryptome.org/2014/05/npth.7z (27MB)

19 May 2014. The Intercept released 12 pages.

13 May 2014. Glenn Greenwald released 107 pages, some new, some previously published, some full pages, some page fragments.

http://hbpub.vo.llnwd.net/o16/video/olmk/holt/greenwald/NoPlaceToHide-Documents-Uncompressed.pdf

5 May 2014. Related tally of redactions of Snowden releases:

http://cryptome.org/2014/05/snowden-redactions.htm

30 April 2014. Add 19 pages to The Intercept.

30 April 2014. Add 2 pages to Dagbladet belatedly.

5 April 2014. Add 21 pages to The Intercept.

4 April 2014. ACLU offers NSA documents search: https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-search

Also:

http://freesnowden.is/category/revealed-documents/index.html

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

If more lists please send: cryptome[at]earthlink.net

2 April 2014.

29 March 2014. Add 1 page to Der Spiegel.

22 March 2014. Add 3 pages to Der Spiegel.

22 March 2014. Add 2 pages to New York Times.

21 March 2014. Add 7 pages to Le Monde.

20 March 2014. Add 6 pages to The Intercept.

18 March 2014. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

13 March 2014. Add 1 page to The Intercept.

12 March 2014. Add 35 pages to The Intercept.

12 March 2014. Add 62 pages to New York Times. Add 2 pages to NRC Handelsblad.

7 March 2014. Add 8 pages to The Intercept.

27 February 2014. Add 3 pages to Guardian.

25 February 2014. Add 11 pages to NBC News.

24 February 2014. Add 4 pages to The Intercept.

24 February 2014. Add *50 pages to The Intercept (7 pages are duplicates of GCHQ Psychology).

18 February 2014. Add *45 pages to The Intercept (37 pages are duplicates of release by NBC News).

Note: Between 10-17 February 2014, The Intercept disclosed fragments of Snowden pages and the New York Times referenced some but as far as known did not release them in full. If available please send link.

10 February 2014. Add 1 page to NRC Handelsblad (via Electrospaces.blogspot.com).

7 February 2014. Add 15 pages NBC News.

5 February 2014. Add 14 pages NBC News.

31 January 2014. Add 27 pages to CBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 47 pages to NBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 18 pages to Anonymous via New York Times.

16 January 2014. Add 8 pages to The Guardian.

* 14 January 2014. Add 21 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

* 13 January 2014. Add 4 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

Related Snowden Document and Page Count Assessment:

http://cryptome.org/2014/01/snowden-count.htm

* 5 January 2014. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel (30 December 2013. No source given for NSA docs). Tally now *962 pages (~1.7%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.50% of that released).

4 January 2014. The source was not identified for *133  pages published by Der Spiegel and Jacob Appelbaum in late December 2013. They are included here but have not been confirmed as provided by Edward Snowden. Thanks to post by Techdirt.

Glenn Greenwald tweeted:

Glenn Greenwald @ggreenwald, 8:05 AM – 29 Dec 13@Cryptomeorg @ioerror I had no involvement in that Spiegel article, ask them – and they don’t say those are Snowden docs.

Matt Blaze tweeted, 11:24 AM – 2 Jan 14

matt blaze @mattblazeIf there are other sources besides Snowden, I hope journalists getting docs are careful to authenticate them (& disclose uncertainty).

3 January 2014. Add 13 pages to Washington Post.

3 January 2014. See also EFF, ACLU and LeakSource accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

2 January 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post published 10 July 2013.

* 31 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 December 2013. Add 50 pages of NSA ANT Catalog by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 21 pages from 30C3 video by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 42 pages (8 duplicates) to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

* 29 December 2013. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

24 December 2013. Add 2 pages to Washington Post.

23 December 2013

http://www.adn.com/2013/12/22/3243451/pincus-snowden-still-has-a-road.html

We’ve yet to see the full impact of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s unauthorized downloading of highly classified intelligence documents.

Among the roughly 1.7 million documents he walked away with — the vast majority of which have not been made public — are highly sensitive, specific intelligence reports, as well as current and historic requirements the White House has given the agency to guide its collection activities, according to a senior government official with knowledge of the situation.

The latter category involves about 2,000 unique taskings that can run to 20 pages each and give reasons for selective targeting to NSA collectors and analysts. These orders alone may run 31,500 pages.

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT). Tally now 797 pages (~1.4%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.40% of that released). Australia press reports “up to 20,000 Aussie files.”

Rate of release over 6 months, 132.8 pages per month, equals 436 months to release 58,000, or 36.3 years. Thus the period of release has decreased in the past month from 42 years.

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.


21 November 2013. See also EFF and ACLU accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013


3 November 2013

47 42 Years to Release Snowden Documents

Out of reported 50,000 pages (or files, not clear which), about 446 514 pages (>1% 1%) have been released over 5 months beginning June 5, 2012. At this rate, 89 100 pages per month, it will take 47 42 years for full release. Snowden will be 77 72 years old, his reporters hoarding secrets all dead.

NY Times, 3 November 2013:

Whatever reforms may come, Bobby R. Inman, who weathered his own turbulent period as N.S.A. director from 1977 to 1981, offers his hyper-secret former agency a radical suggestion for right now. “My advice would be to take everything you think Snowden has and get it out yourself,” he said. “It would certainly be a shock to the agency. But bad news doesn’t get better with age. The sooner they get it out and put it behind them, the faster they can begin to rebuild.”


Timeline of releases:

[See tabulation below for full timeline.]


5 October 2013

26 Years to Release Snowden Docs by The Guardian

Out of reported 15,000 pages, The Guardian has published 192 pages in fourteen releases over four months, an average of 48 pages per month, or 1.28% of the total. At this rate it will take 26 years for full release.

Edward Snowden will be 56 years old.
Glenn Greenwald will be 72.
Laura Poitras will be 75.
Alan Rusbridger will be 86.
Barton Gellman will be 78.
Julian Assange will be 68.
Chelsea Manning will be 52.
Keith Alexander will be 88.
Barack Obama will be 78.
Daniel Ellsberg will be 108.
This author will be 103.


Number Date Title Pages

  The Guardian   276
  27 February 2014 GCHQ Optic Nerve 3
21 16 January 2014 SMS Text Messages Exploit 8
20 9 December 2013 Spying on Games 2
18 18 November 2013 DSD-3G 6
19 1 November 2013 PRISM, SSO
SSO1 Slide
SSO2 Slide
13*
18 4 October 2013 Types of IAT Tor 9
17 4 October 2013 Egotistical Giraffe 20*
16 4 October 2013 Tor Stinks 23
15 11 September 2013 NSA-Israel Spy 5
14 5 September 2013 BULLRUN 6*
13 5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
12 5 September 2013 NSA classification guide 3
11 31 July 2013 XKeyscore 32
10 27 June 2013 DoJ Memo on NSA 16
9 27 June 2013 Stellar Wind 51
8 21 June 2013 FISA Certification 25
7 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit A 9
6 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit B 9
5 16 June 2013 GCHQ G-20 Spying 4
4 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant FAQ 3
3 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant Slides 4
2 7 June 2013 PPD-20 18
1 5 June 2013 Verizon 4

  Washington Post   297
  9 July 2014 NSA Emails 1
  18 March 2014 NSA SCALAWAG 2
  18 March 2014 NSA MYSTIC 2
  2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 2 10
  2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 3
  23 December 2013 NSA/CSS Mission 2
  11 December 2013 Excessive Collection 9
  11 December 2013 SCISSORS 2 7
  11 December 2013 SCISSORS 1 4
  11 December 2013 Yahoo-Google Exploit 6
  11 December 2013 Cable Spying Types 7
  11 December 2013 WINDSTOP 1
  11 December 2013 Co-Traveler 24
  11 December 2013 GSM Tracking 2
  11 December 2013 SIGINT Successes 4
  11 December 2013 GHOSTMACHINE 4
  5 December 2013 Target Location 1
  4 December 2013 FASCIA 2
  4 December 2013 CHALKFUN 1
  26 November 2013 Microsoft a Target? 4
  4 November 2013 WINDSTOP, SSO, Yahoo-Google 14
  30 October 2013 MUSCULAR-INCENSOR Google and Yahoo 4
  14 October 2013 SSO Overview 4
  14 October 2013 SSO Slides 7
  14 October 2013 SSO Content Slides 9
  4 October 2013 Tor 49
  4 October 2013 EgotisticalGiraffe 20*
  4 October 2013 GCHQ MULLENIZE 2
  4 October 2013 Roger Dingledine 2
  30 August 2013 Budget 17
  10 July 2013 PRISM Slide 1
  29 June 2013 PRISM 8
  20 June 2013 Warrantless Surveillance 25*
  7 June 2013 PPD-20 18*
  6 June 2013 PRISM 1

  Der Spiegel   * 413
  14 September 2014 GCHQ STELLAR 26
  14 September 2014 NSA Treasure Map 38
  14 September 2014 NSA Treasure Map New 4
  31 August 2014 NSA GCHQ Spy Turkey 34
  23 June 2014 NSA German SIGADs 9
  18 June 2014 NSA German Spying-2 200
  16 June 2014 NSA German Spying 4
  29 March 2014 NSA Spy Chiefs of State 1
  22 March 2014 NSA SHOTGIANT 2NSA SHOTGIANT 1 21
  31 December 2013 QFIRE * 16
  30 December 2013 TAO Introduction * 16
  30 Deceber 2013 QUANTUM Tasking (8 duplicates of QUANTUMTHEORY) 28*
  30 December 2013 QUANTUMTHEORY 14
  29 December 2013 TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH (images)
TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH
(DE article)
4
  17 November 2013 ROYAL CONCIERGE (DE)ROYAL CONCIERGE (EN) 2
  29 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 3
  27 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 2
  20 October 2013 Mexico President 1
  20 September 2013 Belgacom 3
  16 September 2013 SWIFT 3
  9 September 2013 Smartphones 5
  1 September 2013 French Foreign Ministry 0
  31 August 2013 Al Jazeera 0

  O Globo Fantastico   ~87
  7 October 2013 CSE Brazil Ministry 7
  8 September 2013 Petrobas ~60
  3 September 2013 Brazil and Mexico 20

  New York Times   124
  1 June 2014 NSA Identity Spying 4
  22 March 2014 NSA Huawei SHOTGIANT 2
  12 March 2014 NSA Stellarwind Classification
NSA FISA FAA Classification
AG Dissemination
NSA Cryptanalyist FISA Database
NSA Spying Timeline
37
18
2
4
1
  9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
  23 November 2013 SIGINT Strategy 2012-2016 5
  3 November 2013 SIGINT Mission 2013SIGINT Mission 2017 22
  28 September 2013 Contact Chaining Social Networks 1
  28 September 2013 SYANPSE 1
  5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
  5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
 

  ProPublica   89
  9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
  5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
  5 September 2103 SIGINT Enabling 3*

  Le Monde   20
  21 March 2014 CSE SNOWGLOBE 7
  25 October 2013 NSA Hosts FR Spies 4
  22 October 2013 Wanadoo-Alcatel 1
  22 October 2013 Close Access Sigads 2
  22 October 2013 Boundless Informant 2
  22 October 2013 PRISM 11

  Dagbladet   15
  April 2014
December 2013
Norway Assistance 2
  19 November 2013 BOUNDLESSINFORMANT 13

  NRC Handelsblad   7
  12 March 2014 NSA Aids Dutch Anti-Piracy 2
  8 February 2014 MIVD BoundlessInformant
Cryptome mirror
1
  30 November 2013 Dutch SIGINT 3
  23 November 2013 SIGINT Cryptologic Platform 1

  Huffington Post   3
  27 November 2013 Muslim Porn Viewing 3

  CBC   36
  30 January 2014 CESC IP Profiling 27
  10 December 2013 NSA-CSEC Partnership 1
  10 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 4*
  2 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 3
  29 November 2013 G8-G20 Spying 1

  The Globe and Mail   18
  30 November 2013 CSEC Brazil Spying 18*

  SVT (Swedish TV)   2
  5 December 2013 Sweden Spied Russia for NSA 2

  L’Espresso   3
  6 December 2013 NSA Spies Italy 3

  Trojkan (SVT)   29
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Relationship 1*
  11 December 2013 NSA 5 Eyes Partners 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Agenda 8
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA RU Baltic 1
  11 December 2013 NSA GCHQ Sweden FRA COMINT 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA  XKeyscore Plan 5
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Sources 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Tor et al 3
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Slide 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum 1 1
  11 December 2013 GCHQ Sweden FRA Quantum 1
  11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum Accomplishments 2
  9 December 2013 NSA and Sweden Pact 3*

  Jacob Appelbaum   * 71
  30 December 2013 NSA Catalog * 50
  30 December 2013 NSA Catalog Video Clips * 21

  Information.dk   63*
  19 June 2014 NSA Partners 41*
  14 January 2014 SSO (duplicate) 7*
  14 January 2014 PRISM (duplicate) 11*
  13 January 2014 5-Eyes Spy G8-G20 (duplicate) 4*

  Anonymous/
New York Times
  18
  27 January 2014 NSA Smartphones Analysis 14
  27 January 2014 GCHQ Mobile Theme 4

  NBC News   87
  25 February 2014 GCHQ Cyber Effects 11
  7 February 2014 GCHQ Cyber Attack 15
  5 February 2014 GCHQ Anonymous 14
  27 January 2014 GCHQ Squeaky Dolphin 47

  The Intercept   522*
  4 December 2014 NSA AURORA GOLD et al 63
  10 October 2014 10 NSA Releases
Computer Network Exploitation Declass
National Initiative Task Security 2
National Initiative Task Security 1
Exceptionally Controlled Info Compartments
Exceptionally Controlled Info Pawleys
Exceptionally Controlled Information
Sentry Eagle 2
Sentry Eagle 1
Tarex Classification Guide
Whipgenie Classification Guide
69
  17 September 2014 NSA Visit by NZ Spy 2
  5 September 2014 Masterspy Quadrennial Report 2009 32
  25 August 2014 NSA ICREACH 55
  12 August 2014 GCHQ Covert Mobile Phones Policy 6
  5 August 2014 NCTC Terrorist Identifies 12
  4 August 2014 US-NSA Pays Israel $500,000 2
  4 August 2014 NSA-Israel Spying Pact 2013 3
  4 August 2014 Israel-US Spying Pact 1999 16
  25 July 2014 NSA Saudi Arabia 4
  14 July 2014 NSA JTRIG Tools-Techniques 8
  9 July 2014 NSA FISA Accounts 8
  19 June 2014 NSA Partners 41*
  19 May 2014 12 Various Pages 12
  30 April 2014 GHOSTMACHINE-ECHOBASE
NSA Visit by GCHQ Lobban
PRISM with Olympics
14:6+8
4:1+3
1:
  4 April 2014 GCHQ Full Spectrum Cyber
NSA 5-Eyes SIGDEV Conference
19
2
  20 March 2014 NSA Hunt Sysadmins 6
  13 March 2014 NSA Third Party 1
  12 March 2014 NSA HammerchantNSA UK on Mikey and Ibake

 

NSA Turbine and Turmoil

NSA Thousands of Implants

NSA More Than One Way

NSA GCHQ Quantumtheory

NSA Selector Types

NSA Quantum Insert

NSA Analysis of Converged Data

NSA Phishing and MTM Attacks

NSA Menwith Hill xKeyscore

NSA Industry Exploit

NSA 5 Eyes Hacking

43

 

2

1

1

11

1

5

1

3

1

1

1

  7 March 2014 NSA Ask Zelda 8
  24 February 2014 GCHQ Disruption 4
  24 February 2014 GCHQ Online Deception
(7 pages duplicates of GCHQ Psychology)
*50
  18 February 2014 GCHQ Psychology37 Duplicates of NBC News *44
  18 February 2014 NSA-GCHQ Discovery 1
       
  Glenn Greenwald    
  13 May 2014 A variety of documents 107
       
  Cryptome   310
  23 May 2014 No Place to Hide (27MB) 310
       
  Heise   26
  16 August 2014 NSA GCHQ CSEC HACIENDA 26
       
  Süddeutsche Zeitung   7
  25 November 2014 Vodafone GCHQ Cables List and Slides 72
       

 

Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden 2017, Edward Snowden Age, Edward Snowden Antarctica, Edward Snowden Articles, Edward Snowden Actor, Edward Snowden And Trump, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Apush, Edward Snowden Ama, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Biography, Edward Snowden Book, Edward Snowden Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Booz Allen, Edward Snowden Birthday, Edward Snowden Bbc, Edward Snowden Blog, Edward Snowden Birth Chart, Edward Snowden Bernie Sanders, Edward Snowden Bitcoin, Edward Snowden Cia, Edward Snowden Cnn, Edward Snowden Cast, Edward Snowden Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden Current News, Edward Snowden Citizen 4, Edward Snowden Conservative, Edward Snowden China, Edward Snowden Chemtrails, Edward Snowden Contact, Edward Snowden Dead, Edward Snowden Documentary, Edward Snowden Definition, Edward Snowden Documentary Netflix, Edward Snowden Doc, Edward Snowden Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Dell, Edward Snowden Documentary Hbo, Edward Snowden Date, Edward Snowden David Hoffman, Edward Snowden Essay, Edward Snowden Email, Edward Snowden Ethics, Edward Snowden Ethics Essay, Edward Snowden Early Life, Edward Snowden Effect, Edward Snowden Ecuador, Edward Snowden Education, Edward Snowden Everything About Donald Trump, Edward Snowden Event, Edward Snowden Facts, Edward Snowden Family, Edward Snowden Film, Edward Snowden First Interview, Edward Snowden Facebook, Edward Snowden Father, Edward Snowden Full Movie, Edward Snowden Flat Earth, Edward Snowden First Tweet, Edward Snowden Fox News, Edward Snowden Guardian, Edward Snowden Glenn Greenwald, Edward Snowden Glasses, Edward Snowden Global Warming, Edward Snowden Gif, Edward Snowden Google, Edward Snowden Girlfriend Movie, Edward Snowden Good, Edward Snowden Grandfather, Edward Snowden Genius, Edward Snowden Hero, Edward Snowden Height, Edward Snowden House, Edward Snowden Hawaii, Edward Snowden High School, Edward Snowden Hong Kong, Edward Snowden History, Edward Snowden Heartbeat, Edward Snowden Haarp, Edward Snowden Hbo, Edward Snowden Interview, Edward Snowden Iq, Edward Snowden Instagram, Edward Snowden Interview 2013, Edward Snowden Imdb, Edward Snowden Interview 2017, Edward Snowden Images, Edward Snowden Interview 2016, Edward Snowden Income, Edward Snowden Iphone, Edward Snowden Job, Edward Snowden Journalist, Edward Snowden Japan, Edward Snowden Julian Assange Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Java, Edward Snowden Journalism, Edward Snowden Joseph Gordon-levitt, Edward Snowden Julian Assange, Edward Snowden John Oliver Passwords, Edward Snowden Jean Michel Jarre, Edward Snowden Kunia, Edward Snowden Kimdir, Edward Snowden Katie Couric Interview, Edward Snowden Katie Couric, Edward Snowden Kaskus, Edward Snowden Kim, Edward Snowden Kasus, Edward Snowden Kfc, Edward Snowden Kim Jest, Edward Snowden Koenig, Edward Snowden Location, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills Moscow, Edward Snowden Laptop, Edward Snowden Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Living, Edward Snowden Lawyer, Edward Snowden Life, Edward Snowden Latest News, Edward Snowden Latest, Edward Snowden Live Stream, Edward Snowden Movie, Edward Snowden Movie Netflix, Edward Snowden Movie Cast, Edward Snowden Military, Edward Snowden Movie Online, Edward Snowden Memes, Edward Snowden Middlebury College, Edward Snowden Married, Edward Snowden Moscow, Edward Snowden Medical Condition, Edward Snowden Net Worth, Edward Snowden Now, Edward Snowden News, Edward Snowden New York Times, Edward Snowden Netflix, Edward Snowden Natal Chart, Edward Snowden Nobel Prize, Edward Snowden Nsa Salary, Edward Snowden Npr, Edward Snowden Nationality, Edward Snowden On Trump, Edward Snowden Osama Bin Laden, Edward Snowden Obama, Edward Snowden Oscar, Edward Snowden On Movie, Edward Snowden On Twitter, Edward Snowden Openstack, Edward Snowden On Antarctica, Edward Snowden Os, Edward Snowden Original Interview, Edward Snowden Parents, Edward Snowden Political Views, Edward Snowden Privacy Tips, Edward Snowden Political Party, Edward Snowden Patriot Act, Edward Snowden Pictures, Edward Snowden Podcast, Edward Snowden Phone Case, Edward Snowden Poll, Edward Snowden Putin, Edward Snowden Quotes, Edward Snowden Quizlet, Edward Snowden Questions, Edward Snowden Quien Es, Edward Snowden Quote About Privacy, Edward Snowden Quotes Citizenfour, Edward Snowden Quick Facts, Edward Snowden Qualifications, Edward Snowden Russia, Edward Snowden Reddit, Edward Snowden Research Paper, Edward Snowden Real Name, Edward Snowden Residence, Edward Snowden Resume, Edward Snowden Robot, Edward Snowden Recommended Apps, Edward Snowden Reporter, Edward Snowden Russian, Edward Snowden Story, Edward Snowden Salary, Edward Snowden Status, Edward Snowden Signal, Edward Snowden Speech, Edward Snowden Security Tips, Edward Snowden Shirt, Edward Snowden Siblings, Edward Snowden Special Forces, Edward Snowden Still Alive, Edward Snowden Twitter, Edward Snowden Today, Edward Snowden Trump, Edward Snowden Timeline, Edward Snowden Ted Talk, Edward Snowden The Guardian, Edward Snowden Trailer, Edward Snowden The Movie, Edward Snowden T Shirt, Edward Snowden Tor, Edward Snowden Update, Edward Snowden Ufo, Edward Snowden Us Army, Edward Snowden University Of Michigan, Edward Snowden Used Tails, Edward Snowden Umich, Edward Snowden University Of Maryland, Edward Snowden Ufo Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Ufo Video, Edward Snowden Urban Dictionary, Edward Snowden Video, Edward Snowden Vpn, Edward Snowden Vice, Edward Snowden And Julian Assange, Edward Snowden Voice, Edward Snowden And Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden Vault 7, Edward Snowden Visa, Edward Snowden And Wikileaks, Edward Snowden Vanity Fair, Edward Snowden Wife, Edward Snowden Wiki, Edward Snowden Wired, Edward Snowden William And Mary, Edward Snowden Washington Post, Edward Snowden Who Is He, Edward Snowden Website, Edward Snowden Worth, Edward Snowden Wikileak, Edward Snowden Washington Post 2013, Edward Snowden Youtube, Edward Snowden Young, Edward Snowden Yahoo Answers, Edward Snowden Youtube Channel, Edward Snowden Youtube Documentary, Edward Snowden Yokota, Edward Snowden And Lindsay Mills, Edward Snowden Yify, Edward Snowden Zodiac Sign, Edward Snowden Zcash, Edward Snowden Zuckerberg, Edward Snowden Zoho, Edward Snowden Zizek, Edward Snowden Zimbabwe, Edward Snowden Zitate, Edward Snowden Zusammenfassung, Edward Snowden Zivilisation, Edward Snowden Zvi\u017eda\u010d,


                             
 
 

Cryptome – Snowden Shills for US Spies

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

From: William A Blunden <blunden[at]sfsu.edu>
To: “jya[at]pipeline.com” <jya[at]pipeline.com>
Subject: Snowden Shills for U.S. Intelligence
Date: Sun, 12 Oct 2014 14:06:26 +0000From a recent Tech Crunch article covering a Snowden interview at the New Yorker Festival:

http://techcrunch.com/2014/10/11/edward-snowden-new-yorker-festival/

“We can have secret programs. You know, the American people don’t have to know the name of every individual that’s under investigation. We don’t need to know the technical details of absolutely every program in the intelligence community.”

That’s it, he’s shown his hand.

He doesn’t question whether covert organizations like the CIA are compatible with democratic government. This guy is no Philip Agee or John Stockwell. He’s still keeping some of his tribal loyalties.

Peace,

Bill



Unveiled by Cryptome – FBI FOIA Appeal for Snowden Documents

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

FOIA request: http://cryptome.org/2014/07/snowden-documents-fbi-foia-14-0721.pdf
FBI denial: http://cryptome.org/2014/08/fbi-14-0805.pdf


http://www.justice.gov/oip/efoia-portal.html



Joseph Cox – Why All the Snowden Docs Should Be Public: An Interview with Cryptome

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

Ever since the phrase “Information wants to be free” was first uttered in the early 80s, activists have campaigned for technology to act as a vehicle for knowledge. We’ve since seen the advent of the internet, the proliferation of personal computers, and the rise of whistleblowing sites.

Before Snowden and Wikileaks grabbed the headlines, there was Cryptome. Launched in 1996, the website, or “digital library,” as its owners John Young and Deborah Natsios describe it, is a tome of classified documents. Including everything from lists of MI6 agents to details on nuclear technology, the archive currently stands at over 71,600 files, spanning nearly two decades of disclosures.

Among those is all the available information on the Snowden files, and the duo behind the venture are adamant that the entirety of the leaked NSA documents should be dumped online, rather than strategically trickled out by journalists. Cryptome has even made vague hints that the Snowden documents may be released in full this month.

I phoned up Young and Natsios to ask how they felt the freedom of information movement has changed, for better or worse, over the past two decades.

When Cryptome was launched as a bare-bones website and started to host an assortment of documents for anyone to sift through, there weren’t many ways to get information out onto the internet. “We happened to have the technology to turn paper documents into a digital form,” Young told me. “A lot of other people didn’t yet have that technology: scanners, formatters.”

They offered this service to the cypherpunks list, an email chain linking some of the biggest movers and shakers in cryptography. Julian Assange was an avid reader, and years later the first vestiges of Bitcoin would be posted among its members.

Young and Natsios are both licensed architects in New York. They said they thought it was ironic that Cryptome is considered an underground project, because “our work does increasingly take us to underground sites, in fact.” These might be a subway system expansion, or vaults beneath sidewalks. Young and Natsios quite literally expose what is lying underneath the city.

Below the glitz of Times Square and hubbub of Manhattan, there’s a different world that directly influences the surface. One of their jobs involves making sure that these hidden spaces are functioning correctly. “Because we’re called into urban infrastructures in moments of crisis and disrepair, you could say we’re involved in ‘radical’ cultures of repair,” Natsios said.

While their architectural work is keeping the city in a good state of repair, their freedom of information work (i.e. publishing classified documents) ​​does the same for the public domain, also in a “radical” way. “We are required by state laws as architects to police issues of public health, safety and welfare. This is in the name of the public good. From Cryptome’s perspective, we are obliged as architects to police the police, if you will. We are obliged to dissent, as required for the public good,” she said.

We are required by state laws as architects to police issues of public health, safety and welfare.

Of course, a counter analogy could suggest that the whirring of pipes underneath the surface needs to be closed off to avoid being tampered with by those with a malicious intent, that having them publicly accessible could put the city in danger, just as having government secrets available on the internet could pose its own risks.

Ten years after Cryptome first started, Wikileaks arrived. Wikileaks has been responsible for some of the most shattering disclosures in recent history, such as the Iraq war logs or the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and although both outlets act in fairly similar ways, Wikileaks differed in one key aspect.

“The critical thing [Wikileaks] brought to it, which we’ve never done, is that they used publicity and advertising, and sought press coverage,” Young said. “They ran a press operation with press releases. They went into a high profile operation.”

You might think that would be beneficial to freedom of information, encouraging more public engagement, but Natsios disagrees. “[Wikileaks] brought some troubling methodologies into the frame, that is the embracing of a kind of public relations sensationalism at each and every turn,” she said. The public, in her eyes, “are less educated, they’re not embracing the nuances of issues and are becoming passive themselves. They are passively consuming sensational tidbits, and the public good isn’t served by that kind of consumer behaviour.” Instead of taking Wikileaks’ material and dealing with it in a productive manner, she said, people are waiting “for the ever greater adrenaline jolt of the next sensational terabyte of leaks released.”

Cryptome has a similar stance on the handling of the Snowden documents. “Mr. Snowden, please send your 41 PRISM slides and other information to less easily cowed and overly coddled commercial outlets than Washington Post and Guardian,” the couple wrote on the site in June 2013.

 

When asked what they would do if Cryptome had access to the Snowden documents, Young told Gawker, “We would have dumped it, the whole thing. Everyone else likes to play this game: ‘What if we harm somebody’ or all this kind of crap. Which is strictly cowardice. Of course the companies who run the outlets, their lawyers won’t let them do this kind of thing, so if you’ve got money invested in your operation you won’t take these kind of risks.”

The Intercept recently decided not to disclose the name of one country that the Snowden documents reported had 100 percent of its phone traffic recorded. It justified its decision because of “specific, credible concerns that doing so could lead to increased violence,” according to the article. Wikileaks, however, later revealed the country to be Afghanistan.

In order to avoid pressures to suppress details, Young and Natsios are reluctant for Cryptome to be considered in any way an institution. “We find that increasingly because of legal and financial pressures, institutionalized freedom of information groups become quite inflexible, not agile, not tactical enough,” said Natsios.

“We prefer being independent agents: We prefer that agility, we prefer that daily lack of master-plan agitation, and not being limited by the annual report obligations upon freedom of information non-profits; we have no annual report.” This is perhaps why Cryptome releases more controversial files than other groups, such as graphic photos of the Iraq war.

Cryptome basically thinks that the more information released, the greater the benefit for an informed public. “The Snowden team has been flunked out of not releasing this stuff by saying it will harm the nation, and I think we’re about to see something more harmful to the nation if they don’t release,” said Young.

He suggested, for instance, that more details might help people resist NSA surveillance. “The internet has been completely compromised, so it is not a good place for freedom of information,” he said. “It has been turned on the public, and Snowden has revealed some of that, but only two percent of it. He’s not revealed any of the means we need to counter that takeover.”

“We think the entire thing should be released, in order that more people can work on the counter-surveillance side,” he continued. “Now there are people working on this, on how to take it back, but I think that they can’t take it back without the rest of Snowden’s material because they don’t know the depth of control [being carried out by intelligence agencies].”

The way that information is distributed has changed dramatically since Cryptome’s inception. From the cypherpunks to Wikileaks, and now journalism in a post-Snowden world, the public has undoubtedly become more informed about what its government is doing. But with more information available than ever before, Cryptome would argue, we still need to know more.

Der Putin/KGB/STASI-GoMoPa-Witz des Tages: “Snowden, erzählen Sie uns ALLES über die schreckliche Überwachung!”

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

“Es gibt kein Verbrechen, keinen Kniff, keinen Trick,
keinen Schwindel, kein Laster, das nicht von Geheimhaltung lebt.
Bringt diese Heimlichkeiten ans Tageslicht, beschreibt sie,
attacktiert sie, macht sie vor allen Augen lächerlich.
Und früher oder später wird die öffentliche Meinung sie hinwegfegen.
Bekannt machen allein genügt vielleicht nicht –
aber es ist das einzige Mittel, ohne das alle anderen Versagen…”
Joseph Pulitzer(1847-1911)

DER GoMoPa-STASI-STIL IM INTERNET NUN AUCH BEIM BRITISCHEN GEHEIMDIENST

Become a Patron!
True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

Neue Dokumente aus dem Fundus von US-Whistleblower Edward Snowden zeigen Methoden der westlichen Geheimdienste zu verdeckten Onlineaktionen gegen Personen, Gruppen und Unternehmen. Eine Präsentation des britischen GCHQ trägt den Titel “Die Kunst der Täuschung” und will “Cyber-Zauberer” ausbilden. Andere Dokumente beschreiben, wie Personen oder Unternehmen mit falschen Angaben gezielt diskreditiert werden können. Der amerikanische Enthüllungsjournalist Glenn Greenwald veröffentlichte das Material in seinem neuen Portal The Intercept. Aktivisten wie Jacob Appelbaum und Frank Rieger verwiesen über Twitter unter anderem unter Hastags wie #stasi, #zersetzung und #Mfs auf frappierende Parallelen zu einer entsprechenden Richtlinie der Stasi aus dem Jahr 1976.

Hinter den Konzepten steht eine neu gebildete Einheit des GCHQ, die Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group (JTRIG). Diese führte auch DDoS-Angriffe gegen Aktivisten von Anonymous aus. Nach Darstellung Greenwalds richten sich die Infiltrationstechniken nicht gegen normale Spionageziele wie feindliche Staaten und deren Führer, sondern anstelle strafrechtlicher Ermittlungen gegen verdächtige Hacktivisten, die weder angeklagt noch verurteilt seien. Ein Dokument trägt die Überschrift: “Neue Möglichkeiten und Aktionen gegen Hacktivismus eröffnen.”

 

Gezielte Rufschädigung

Die Methoden der Rufschädigung sind rabiat: So soll über soziale Netzwerke das Vertrauen von Zielpersonen erschlichen werden, um sich dann auf einem Blog als Opfer dieser Personen darstellen zu können. Der Familie sowie Freunden und Bekannten sollen E-Mails oder SMS geschrieben werden. Um Unternehmen zu diskreditieren, sollen vertrauliche Informationen an die Presse weitergegeben werden. Auf einschlägigen Foren soll negativ über die Firma berichtet werden. Darüber hinaus sollen Geschäfte beendet und Geschäftsbeziehungen ruiniert werden. In der erwähnten Richtlinie der Stasi wurden vergleichbare “bewährte Formen der Zersetzung” genannt: “systematische Diskreditierung des öffentlichen Rufes, des Ansehens und des Prestiges auf der Grundlage miteinander verbundener wahrer, überprüfbarer und diskreditierender sowie unwahrer, glaubhafter, nicht widerlegbarer und damit ebenfalls diskreditierender Angaben; systematische Organisierung beruflicher und gesellschaftlicher Mißerfolge zur Untergrabung des Selbstvertrauens einzelner Personen”.

Die Geheimdienste bedienen sich dabei auch Erkenntnissen aus Psychologie und Sozialwissenschaften, um Aktivistengruppen nicht nur zu verstehen, sondern auch um sie zu kontrollieren. Eine “Humanwissenschaftliche Operationszelle” soll sich dabei “Strategischer Beeinflussung und Störungen” widmen. Einzelne Dokumente tragen dabei Titel wie “Die psychologischen Bausteine der Täuschung” oder die “Zehn Prinzipien der Beeinflussung”. Die Präsentation beschreibt zudem die “Feststellung und Ausnutzung von Bruchstellen” in Gruppen. Als Methoden der Störung sind dabei sieben Operationen genannt, darunter “Falsche Flagge”, “Falsche Rettung”, Infiltration und List.

Das GCHQ wollte auf Anfrage Greenwalds keine Stellung zu den Dokumenten nehmen. Der Nachrichtendienst gab die Standardantwort, wonach keine geheimdienstlichen Themen kommentiert würden. Zudem erfolge jede Tätigkeit “in einem strikten rechtlichen und polizeilichen Rahmen, der garantiere, dass die Aktivitäten autorisiert, notwendig und angemessen sind”. Ob und in welchem Umfang die Methoden tatsächlich angewandt wurden, bleibt offen.

 

Die Dokumente sind hier:

 

https://firstlook.org/theintercept/document/2014/02/24/art-deception-training-new-generation-online-covert-operations/

Unveiled – Edward Lucas DMCA Notice for Snowden Plot

Edward Lucas DMCA Notice for Snowden Plot

 


Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2014 13:56:57 +0000
From: “Edward Lucas” <edwardlucas[at]economist.com>
To: <cryptome[at]earthlink.net>
Cc: <Andrew Rosenheim <androsen[at]amazon.co.uk>
Subject: DCMA notice

Mr John Young
Cryptome, 251 West 89th Street, New York, NY 10024

Dear Mr Young

I am the copyright owner of the article being infringed at:

http://cryptome.org/2014/02/lucas-snowden.htm

It is a Kindle Single available for sale on the Amazon website

This letter is official notification under the provisions of Section 512* of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (*DMCA*) to effect removal of the above-reported infringements. I request that you immediately issue a cancellation message as specified in RFC 1036 for the specified postings and prevent the infringer, who is identified by its web address, from posting the infringing content to your servers in future. Please be advised that the law requires you, as a service provider, to *expeditiously remove or disable access to* the infringing content upon receipt of this notice. Non-compliance may result in a loss of immunity for liability under the DMCA.

Use of the material in the manner complained of here is not authorized by me, the copyright holder, or the law. The information provided here is accurate to the best of my knowledge. I swear under penalty of perjury that I am the copyright holder.

Please send me, at the address noted below, a prompt response indicating the actions you have taken to resolve this matter.

Yours faithfully

Edward Lucas

+44 207 576 xxxx (direct)
+44 7770 380 xxx (mobile)

edwardlucas[at]economist.com
The Economist
25 St James St
London SW1A 1HG
www.edwardlucas.com

This e-mail may contain confidential material. If you are not an intended recipient, please notify the sender and delete all copies. It may also contain personal views which are not the views of The Economist Group. We may monitor e-mail to and from our network.

Sent by a member of The Economist Group. The Group’s parent company is The Economist Newspaper Limited, registered in England with company number 236383 and registered office at 25 St James’s Street, London, SW1A 1HG. For Group company registration details go to http://legal.economistgroup.com


	

Cryptome – NSA Snowden Releases Tally Update – *1,159 Pages

18 February 2014. Add *45 pages to The Intercept (37 pages are duplicates of release by NBC News). Tally now *1,159 pages of The Guardian first reported 58,000 files; caveat: Janine Gibson, The Guardian NY, said on 30 January 2014 “much more than 58,000 files in first part, two more parts” (no numbers) (tally now less than ~1.8%). DoD claims 1,700,000 files (~.0062% of that released).

Note: Between 10-17 February 2014, The Intercept disclosed fragments of Snowden pages and the New York Times referenced some but as far as known did not release them in full. If available please send link.

10 February 2014. Add 1 page to NRC Handelsblad (via Electrospaces.blogspot.com).

7 February 2014. Add 15 pages NBC News.

5 February 2014. Add 14 pages NBC News.

31 January 2014. Add 27 pages to CBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 47 pages to NBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 18 pages to Anonymous via New York Times.

16 January 2014. Add 8 pages to The Guardian.

* 14 January 2014. Add 21 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

* 13 January 2014. Add 4 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

Related Snowden Document and Page Count Assessment:

http://cryptome.org/2014/01/snowden-count.htm

* 5 January 2014. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel (30 December 2013. No source given for NSA docs). Tally now *962 pages (~1.7%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.50% of that released).

4 January 2014. The source was not identified for *133  pages published by Der Spiegel and Jacob Appelbaum in late December 2013. They are included here but have not been confirmed as provided by Edward Snowden. Thanks to post by Techdirt.

Glenn Greenwald tweeted:

Glenn Greenwald @ggreenwald, 8:05 AM – 29 Dec 13@Cryptomeorg @ioerror I had no involvement in that Spiegel article, ask them – and they don’t say those are Snowden docs.

Matt Blaze tweeted, 11:24 AM – 2 Jan 14

matt blaze @mattblazeIf there are other sources besides Snowden, I hope journalists getting docs are careful to authenticate them (& disclose uncertainty).

3 January 2014. Add 13 pages to Washington Post.

3 January 2014. See also EFF, ACLU and LeakSource accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

2 January 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post published 10 July 2013.

* 31 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 December 2013. Add 50 pages of NSA ANT Catalog by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 21 pages from 30C3 video by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 42 pages (8 duplicates) to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

* 29 December 2013. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

24 December 2013. Add 2 pages to Washington Post.

23 December 2013

http://www.adn.com/2013/12/22/3243451/pincus-snowden-still-has-a-road.html

We’ve yet to see the full impact of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s unauthorized downloading of highly classified intelligence documents.

Among the roughly 1.7 million documents he walked away with — the vast majority of which have not been made public — are highly sensitive, specific intelligence reports, as well as current and historic requirements the White House has given the agency to guide its collection activities, according to a senior government official with knowledge of the situation.

The latter category involves about 2,000 unique taskings that can run to 20 pages each and give reasons for selective targeting to NSA collectors and analysts. These orders alone may run 31,500 pages.

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT). Tally now 797 pages (~1.4%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.40% of that released). Australia press reports “up to 20,000 Aussie files.”

Rate of release over 6 months, 132.8 pages per month, equals 436 months to release 58,000, or 36.3 years. Thus the period of release has decreased in the past month from 42 years.

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.

 


21 November 2013. See also EFF and ACLU accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

 


3 November 2013

47 42 Years to Release Snowden Documents

Out of reported 50,000 pages (or files, not clear which), about 446 514 pages (>1% 1%) have been released over 5 months beginning June 5, 2012. At this rate, 89 100 pages per month, it will take 47 42 years for full release. Snowden will be 77 72 years old, his reporters hoarding secrets all dead.

NY Times, 3 November 2013:

Whatever reforms may come, Bobby R. Inman, who weathered his own turbulent period as N.S.A. director from 1977 to 1981, offers his hyper-secret former agency a radical suggestion for right now. “My advice would be to take everything you think Snowden has and get it out yourself,” he said. “It would certainly be a shock to the agency. But bad news doesn’t get better with age. The sooner they get it out and put it behind them, the faster they can begin to rebuild.”

 


 

Outlet Pages
The Guardian 273
Washington Post 216
Der Spiegel * 97
O Globo Fantastico ~87
New York Times
Anonymous
118 (82 joint)
18
ProPublica 89 (82 joint)
Le Monde 20
Dagbladet 13
NRC Handelsblad 5
Huffington Post 3
CBC 36
The Globe and Mail 18
SVT 2
L’Espresso 3
Trojkan (SVT) 29
Jacob Appelbaum * 71
Information.dk 22*
Anonymous/New York Times 18
NBC News 76
The Intercept *45

 


Timeline of releases:

18 February 2014. Add 45 pages to The Intercept.

10 February 2014. Add 1 page to NRC Handelsblad (via Electrospaces.blogspot.com).

7 February 2014. Add 15 pages NBC News.

5 February 2014. Add 14 pages NBC News.

31 January 2014. Add 27 pages CBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 47 pages to NBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 18 pages to Anonymous.

16 January 2014. Add 8 pages to The Guardian.

* 14 January 2014. Add 21 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

* 13 January 2014. Add 4 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

3 January 2014. Add 13 pages to Washington Post.

2 January 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post published 10 July 2013.

* 31 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 Decebmer 2013. Add 50 pages of NSA ANT Catalog by Jacob Appelbaum.

* 30 December 2013. Add 21 pages from 30C3 video by Jacob Appelbaum.

* 30 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 December 2013. Add 42 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 29 December 2013. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel.

24 December 2013. Add 2 pages to Washington Post.

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT).

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.

11 December 2013. Belatedly add 25 pages to Guardian.

11 December 2013. Belatedly add 74 pages to Washington Post.

10 December 2013. Add 2 pages to CBC.

10 December 2013. Add 4 pages to CBC (duplicate of previous source).

9 December 2013. Add 3 pages to Trojkan. Add 2 pages to Guardian. Add 82 pages to New York Times and ProPublica (joint).

6 December 2013. Add 3 pages to L’Espresso.

5 December 2013. Add 2 pages to SVT (Swedish TV).

5 December 2013. Add 1 page to Washington Post.

4 December 2013. Add 3 pages to Washington Post.

2 December 2013. Add 3 pages to CBC.

30 November 2013. Add 18 pages to The Globe and Mail.

30 November 2013. Add 3 pages to NRC Handelsblad.

29 November 2013. Add 1 page to CBC.

27 November 2013. Add 3 pages to Huffington Post.

26 November 2013. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

23 November 2013. Add 1 page to NRC Handelsblad.

23 November 2013. Add 5 pages to New York Times.

22 November 2013. Add 10 pages to Dagbladet.

18 November 2013. Add 6 pages to The Guardian.

17 November 2013. Add two images to Der Spiegel.

4 November 2013. Add 14 pages to Washington Post.

3 November 2013. A reports an additional 54 slides for O Globo Petrobas.

3 November 2013. Add 22 pages to New York Times.

2 November 2013. Add 13 pages to Guardian, 11 are duplicates.

31 October 2013. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

29 October 2013. Add 3 pages to Der Spiegel

27 October 2013. Add 2 pages to Der Spiegel.

25 October 2013. Add 4 pages to Le Monde.

22 October 2013. Add 5 pages to Le Monde.

21 October 2013. Add 11 pages to Le Monde, 8 are duplicates.

20 October 2013. Add 1 page to Der Spiegel.

13 October 2013. Add 4, 7 and 9 pages to Washington Post.

8 October 2013. Add 7 pages to O Globo: CSE spying on Brazilian ministry, reported 7 October 2013.

6 October 2013. Add Snowden pages published by Washington Post, Der Spiegel, O Globo Fantastico, New York Times, ProPublica. Some are duplicates(*).

 


5 October 2013

26 Years to Release Snowden Docs by The Guardian

Out of reported 15,000 pages, The Guardian has published 192 pages in fourteen releases over four months, an average of 48 pages per month, or 1.28% of the total. At this rate it will take 26 years for full release.

Edward Snowden will be 56 years old.
Glenn Greenwald will be 72.
Laura Poitras will be 75.
Alan Rusbridger will be 86.
Barton Gellman will be 78.
Julian Assange will be 68.
Chelsea Manning will be 52.
Keith Alexander will be 88.
Barack Obama will be 78.
Daniel Ellsberg will be 108.
This author will be 103.

 


 

Number Date Title Pages

The Guardian 273
21 16 January 2014 SMS Text Messages Exploit 8
20 9 December 2013 Spying on Games 2
18 18 November 2013 DSD-3G 6
19 1 November 2013 PRISM, SSO
SSO1 Slide
SSO2 Slide
13*
18 4 October 2013 Types of IAT Tor 9
17 4 October 2013 Egotistical Giraffe 20*
16 4 October 2013 Tor Stinks 23
15 11 September 2013 NSA-Israel Spy 5
14 5 September 2013 BULLRUN 6*
13 5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
12 5 September 2013 NSA classification guide 3
11 31 July 2013 XKeyscore 32
10 27 June 2013 DoJ Memo on NSA 16
9 27 June 2013 Stellar Wind 51
8 21 June 2013 FISA Certification 25
7 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit A 9
6 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit B 9
5 16 June 2013 GCHQ G-20 Spying 4
4 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant FAQ 3
3 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant Slides 4
2 7 June 2013 PPD-20 18
1 5 June 2013 Verizon 4

Washington Post 216
2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 2 10
2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 3
23 December 2013 NSA/CSS Mission 2
11 December 2013 Excessive Collection 9
11 December 2013 SCISSORS 2 7
11 December 2013 SCISSORS 1 4
11 December 2013 Yahoo-Google Exploit 6
11 December 2013 Cable Spying Types 7
11 December 2013 WINDSTOP 1
11 December 2013 Co-Traveler 24
11 December 2013 GSM Tracking 2
11 December 2013 SIGINT Successes 4
11 December 2013 GHOSTMACHINE 4
5 December 2013 Target Location 1
4 December 2013 FASCIA 2
4 December 2013 CHALKFUN 1
26 November 2013 Microsoft a Target? 4
4 November 2013 WINDSTOP, SSO, Yahoo-Google 14
30 October 2013 MUSCULAR-INCENSOR Google and Yahoo 4
14 October 2013 SSO Overview 4
14 October 2013 SSO Slides 7
14 October 2013 SSO Content Slides 9
4 October 2013 Tor 49
4 October 2013 EgotisticalGiraffe 20*
4 October 2013 GCHQ MULLENIZE 2
4 October 2013 Roger Dingledine 2
30 August 2013 Budget 17
10 July 2013 PRISM Slide 1
29 June 2013 PRISM 8
20 June 2013 Warrantless Surveillance 25*
7 June 2013 PPD-20 18*
6 June 2013 PRISM 1

Der Spiegel * 97
31 December 2013 QFIRE * 16
30 December 2013 TAO Introduction * 16
30 Deceber 2013 QUANTUM Tasking (8 duplicates of QUANTUMTHEORY) 28*
30 December 2013 QUANTUMTHEORY 14
29 December 2013 TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH (images)
TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH
(DE article)
4
17 November 2013 ROYAL CONCIERGE (DE)ROYAL CONCIERGE (EN) 2
29 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 3
27 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 2
20 October 2013 Mexico President 1
20 September 2013 Belgacom 3
16 September 2013 SWIFT 3
9 September 2013 Smartphones 5
1 September 2013 French Foreign Ministry 0
31 August 2013 Al Jazeera 0

O Globo Fantastico ~87
7 October 2013 CSE Brazil Ministry 7
8 September 2013 Petrobas ~60
3 September 2013 Brazil and Mexico 20

New York Times 118
9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
23 November 2013 SIGINT Strategy 2012-2016 5
3 November 2013 SIGINT Mission 2013SIGINT Mission 2017 22
28 September 2013 Contact Chaining Social Networks 1
28 September 2013 SYANPSE 1
5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*

ProPublica 89
9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
5 September 2103 SIGINT Enabling 3*

Le Monde 20
25 October 2013 NSA Hosts FR Spies 4
22 October 2013 Wanadoo-Alcatel 1
22 October 2013 Close Access Sigads 2
22 October 2013 Boundless Informant 2
22 October 2013 PRISM 11

Dagbladet 13
19 November 2013 BOUNDLESSINFORMANT 13

NRC Handelsblad 5
8 February 2014 MIVD BoundlessInformant
Cryptome mirror
1
30 November 2013 Dutch SIGINT 3
23 November 2013 SIGINT Cryptologic Platform 1

Huffington Post 3
27 November 2013 Muslim Porn Viewing 3

CBC 36
30 January 2014 CESC IP Profiling 27
10 December 2013 NSA-CSEC Partnership 1
10 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 4*
2 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 3
29 November 2013 G8-G20 Spying 1

The Globe and Mail 18
30 November 2013 CSEC Brazil Spying 18*

SVT (Swedsh TV) 2
5 December 2013 Sweden Spied Russia for NSA 2

L’Espresso 3
6 December 2013 NSA Spies Italy 3

Trojkan (SVT) 29
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Relationship 1*
11 December 2013 NSA 5 Eyes Partners 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Agenda 8
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA RU Baltic 1
11 December 2013 NSA GCHQ Sweden FRA COMINT 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA  XKeyscore Plan 5
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Sources 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Tor et al 3
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Slide 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum 1 1
11 December 2013 GCHQ Sweden FRA Quantum 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum Accomplishments 2
9 December 2013 NSA and Sweden Pact 3*

Jacob Appelbaum * 71
30 December 2013 NSA Catalog * 50
30 December 2013 NSA Catalog Video Clips * 21

Information.dk 22*
14 January 2014 SSO (duplicate) 7*
14 January 2014 PRISM (duplicate) 11*
13 January 2014 5-Eyes Spy G8-G20 (duplicate) 4*

Anonymous/
New York Times
18
27 January 2014 NSA Smartphones Analysis 14
27 January 2014 GCHQ Mobile Theme 4

NBC News 76
7 February 2014 GCHQ Cyber Attack 15
5 February 2014 GCHQ Anonymous 14
27 January 2014 GCHQ Squeaky Dolphin 47

The Intercept *45
18 February 2014 GCHQ Psychology37 Duplicates of NBC News *44
18 February 2014 NSA-GCHQ Discovery 1

 

 


 

 

Cryptome – Sliming Snowden

Sliming Snowden

 


http://www.amazon.com/gp/cdp/member-reviews/A3J1JL75Q0E4VD/ref=pdp_new_
read_full_review_link?ie=UTF8&page=1&sort_by=MostRecentReview#RSR0O1O4HLAZ3

5.0 out of 5 stars Sliming Snowden, February 9, 2014

By

John Young “Cryptome” (New York, NY)

This review is from: The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World’s Most Wanted Man (Vintage) (Kindle Edition)

Luke Harding wraps the Snowden story in shades of patriotism, conveying compromised journalism pretending opposition to government while seeking its approval for titillating stories of national security expose, editors redacting as commanded, airbrushing embarassments, withholding details needed to combat the global spying disease while helping spread it by self-serving like spies.

Harding self-serves his mendacious industry: valorous, vainglorious Guardian, New York Times, Washington Post, varieties of global media, headlining gravest news of NSA violations of public trust only after careful consultation with national authorities, thereby doubling public trust infidelities.

Harding embellishes protestations of resistance to government control, but does not reveal the extent of self-censorship the news outlets have engaged in: only a tiny number of Snowden documents — between .0062% (of 1.7 million by USG), and 1.7% (of 58,000 by the Guardian) — have been released, with thousands of melodramatic stories written about the near total censorship of what Snowden called his gift to the public.

Worst fault: there are no Snowden documents in the book, total censorship of credible evidence, instead only rhetorical blather composed of rewrites of news accounts and a bit of inside-the-Guardian gossip and much self-congratulation.

This is a sales brochure for the Guardian, characteristically bloviated by editor Alan Rusbridger, puffed-up with profiles of daring journalists — Ewan MacAskill, Laura Poitras, Glenn Greenwald — hyper-aroused at the unexpected Snowden windfall, dancing and laughing at their good fortune, of journalism’s, rescue for a declining industry beaten by truly courageous unjournalistic initiatives.

(Harding smears Julian Assange for his arch-enemies Guardian and New York Times, only glancingly mentions Baron Gellman’s seasoned, superior and less flamboyant reports on Snowden.)

Editors of the Guardian and the New York Times are portrayed without blemishes, valiant, brave, stalwart, while cultivating governments to participate in a mutually beneficial campaign of the illusion of risk and assurance long practiced by the press and officials at lunches and private conferences here amply admitted as if just wonderful buddies giving a hand to bollix the public.

Snowden is praised for speaking exactly like a perfect hybrid of Guardian-NY Times-lawyerly journalism and official press officers oozing concern for the public interest while relishing controversy and public attention by explaining (with ample redactions and omissions) what spies do to save nations. Pacts are set among all parties for roles to play, words to say, actions to take, increased profits and budgets to be enjoyed. Harding crows it will takes years, even decades, for the story to run, run and run some more. In synchronicity, Jill Abramson, NYTimes editor, said recently at a public gathering titled “Journalism After Snowden,” “thank god for Snowden, we want more stories, we need more stories.”

Harding has provided a tawdry romance of illusory national security journalism, sweaty and heavy breathing of adrenaline rush on airliners, breast and chest baring videoed in Hong Kong hotels for later private showings, bountiful informaton copulation in the rathole salons of London, New York, Washington, DC, and Rio de Janeiro.

With books, videos, films, TV, news cascading endless Snowden gush, no wonder billionaire Omidyar leaped to fund a $250 million bordello to service this natsec investment adventure with exciting jaunts to Rio to sit at the feet of Marquis de Greenwald (amidst leg-humping dogs) for instructions in the sexiest of journalism following the slimy Internet pornography industry.

Unveiled – NSA Snowden Releases Tally Update – *1,098 Pages

5 February 2014. Add 14 pages NBC News. Tally now *1,098 pages of The Guardian first reported 58,000 files; caveat: Janine Gibson, The Guardian NY, said on 30 January 2014 “much more than 58,000 files in first part, two more parts” (no numbers) (tally now less than ~1.8%). DoD claims 1,700,000 files (~.0062% of that released).

31 January 2014. Add 27 pages to CBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 47 pages to NBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 18 pages to Anonymous via New York Times.

16 January 2014. Add 8 pages to The Guardian.

* 14 January 2014. Add 21 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

* 13 January 2014. Add 4 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

Related Snowden Document and Page Count Assessment:

http://cryptome.org/2014/01/snowden-count.htm

* 5 January 2014. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel (30 December 2013. No source given for NSA docs). Tally now *962 pages (~1.7%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.50% of that released).

4 January 2014. The source was not identified for *133 pages published by Der Spiegel and Jacob Appelbaum in late December 2013. They are included here but have not been confirmed as provided by Edward Snowden. Thanks to post by Techdirt.

Glenn Greenwald tweeted:

Glenn Greenwald @ggreenwald, 8:05 AM – 29 Dec 13

@Cryptomeorg @ioerror I had no involvement in that Spiegel article, ask them – and they don’t say those are Snowden docs.

Matt Blaze tweeted, 11:24 AM – 2 Jan 14

matt blaze @mattblaze

If there are other sources besides Snowden, I hope journalists getting docs are careful to authenticate them (& disclose uncertainty).

3 January 2014. Add 13 pages to Washington Post.

3 January 2014. See also EFF, ACLU and LeakSource accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

2 January 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post published 10 July 2013.

* 31 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 December 2013. Add 50 pages of NSA ANT Catalog by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 21 pages from 30C3 video by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 42 pages (8 duplicates) to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

* 29 December 2013. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

24 December 2013. Add 2 pages to Washington Post.

23 December 2013

http://www.adn.com/2013/12/22/3243451/pincus-snowden-still-has-a-road.html

We’ve yet to see the full impact of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s unauthorized downloading of highly classified intelligence documents.

Among the roughly 1.7 million documents he walked away with — the vast majority of which have not been made public — are highly sensitive, specific intelligence reports, as well as current and historic requirements the White House has given the agency to guide its collection activities, according to a senior government official with knowledge of the situation.

The latter category involves about 2,000 unique taskings that can run to 20 pages each and give reasons for selective targeting to NSA collectors and analysts. These orders alone may run 31,500 pages.

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT). Tally now 797 pages (~1.4%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.40% of that released). Australia press reports “up to 20,000 Aussie files.”

Rate of release over 6 months, 132.8 pages per month, equals 436 months to release 58,000, or 36.3 years. Thus the period of release has decreased in the past month from 42 years.

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.

21 November 2013. See also EFF and ACLU accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

3 November 2013

47 42 Years to Release Snowden Documents

Out of reported 50,000 pages (or files, not clear which), about 446 514 pages (>1% 1%) have been released over 5 months beginning June 5, 2012. At this rate, 89 100 pages per month, it will take 47 42 years for full release. Snowden will be 77 72 years old, his reporters hoarding secrets all dead.

NY Times, 3 November 2013:

Whatever reforms may come, Bobby R. Inman, who weathered his own turbulent period as N.S.A. director from 1977 to 1981, offers his hyper-secret former agency a radical suggestion for right now. “My advice would be to take everything you think Snowden has and get it out yourself,” he said. “It would certainly be a shock to the agency. But bad news doesn’t get better with age. The sooner they get it out and put it behind them, the faster they can begin to rebuild.”

Outlet Pages
The Guardian 273
Washington Post 216
Der Spiegel * 97
O Globo Fantastico ~87
New York Times
Anonymous 118 (82 joint)
18
ProPublica 89 (82 joint)
Le Monde 20
Dagbladet 13
NRC Handelsblad 4
Huffington Post 3
CBC 36
The Globe and Mail 18
SVT 2
L’Espresso 3
Trojkan (SVT) 29
Jacob Appelbaum * 71
Information.dk 22*
Anonymous/New York Times 18
NBC News 61

Timeline of releases:

5 February 2014. Add 14 pages NBC News.

31 January 2014. Add 27 pages CBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 47 pages to NBC News.

27 January 2014. Add 18 pages to Anonymous.

16 January 2014. Add 8 pages to The Guardian.

* 14 January 2014. Add 21 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

* 13 January 2014. Add 4 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

3 January 2014. Add 13 pages to Washington Post.

2 January 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post published 10 July 2013.

* 31 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 Decebmer 2013. Add 50 pages of NSA ANT Catalog by Jacob Appelbaum.

* 30 December 2013. Add 21 pages from 30C3 video by Jacob Appelbaum.

* 30 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 December 2013. Add 42 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 29 December 2013. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel.

24 December 2013. Add 2 pages to Washington Post.

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT).

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.

11 December 2013. Belatedly add 25 pages to Guardian.

11 December 2013. Belatedly add 74 pages to Washington Post.

10 December 2013. Add 2 pages to CBC.

10 December 2013. Add 4 pages to CBC (duplicate of previous source).

9 December 2013. Add 3 pages to Trojkan. Add 2 pages to Guardian. Add 82 pages to New York Times and ProPublica (joint).

6 December 2013. Add 3 pages to L’Espresso.

5 December 2013. Add 2 pages to SVT (Swedish TV).

5 December 2013. Add 1 page to Washington Post.

4 December 2013. Add 3 pages to Washington Post.

2 December 2013. Add 3 pages to CBC.

30 November 2013. Add 18 pages to The Globe and Mail.

30 November 2013. Add 3 pages to NRC Handelsblad.

29 November 2013. Add 1 page to CBC.

27 November 2013. Add 3 pages to Huffington Post.

26 November 2013. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

23 November 2013. Add 1 page to NRC Handelsblad.

23 November 2013. Add 5 pages to New York Times.

22 November 2013. Add 10 pages to Dagbladet.

18 November 2013. Add 6 pages to The Guardian.

17 November 2013. Add two images to Der Spiegel.

4 November 2013. Add 14 pages to Washington Post.

3 November 2013. A reports an additional 54 slides for O Globo Petrobas.

3 November 2013. Add 22 pages to New York Times.

2 November 2013. Add 13 pages to Guardian, 11 are duplicates.

31 October 2013. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

29 October 2013. Add 3 pages to Der Spiegel

27 October 2013. Add 2 pages to Der Spiegel.

25 October 2013. Add 4 pages to Le Monde.

22 October 2013. Add 5 pages to Le Monde.

21 October 2013. Add 11 pages to Le Monde, 8 are duplicates.

20 October 2013. Add 1 page to Der Spiegel.

13 October 2013. Add 4, 7 and 9 pages to Washington Post.

8 October 2013. Add 7 pages to O Globo: CSE spying on Brazilian ministry, reported 7 October 2013.

6 October 2013. Add Snowden pages published by Washington Post, Der Spiegel, O Globo Fantastico, New York Times, ProPublica. Some are duplicates(*).

5 October 2013

26 Years to Release Snowden Docs by The Guardian

Out of reported 15,000 pages, The Guardian has published 192 pages in fourteen releases over four months, an average of 48 pages per month, or 1.28% of the total. At this rate it will take 26 years for full release.

Edward Snowden will be 56 years old.
Glenn Greenwald will be 72.
Laura Poitras will be 75.
Alan Rusbridger will be 86.
Barton Gellman will be 78.
Julian Assange will be 68.
Chelsea Manning will be 52.
Keith Alexander will be 88.
Barack Obama will be 78.
Daniel Ellsberg will be 108.
This author will be 103.

Number Date Title Pages
The Guardian 273
21 16 January 2014 SMS Text Messages Exploit 8
20 9 December 2013 Spying on Games 2
18 18 November 2013 DSD-3G 6
19 1 November 2013 PRISM, SSO
SSO1 Slide
SSO2 Slide 13*
18 4 October 2013 Types of IAT Tor 9
17 4 October 2013 Egotistical Giraffe 20*
16 4 October 2013 Tor Stinks 23
15 11 September 2013 NSA-Israel Spy 5
14 5 September 2013 BULLRUN 6*
13 5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
12 5 September 2013 NSA classification guide 3
11 31 July 2013 XKeyscore 32
10 27 June 2013 DoJ Memo on NSA 16
9 27 June 2013 Stellar Wind 51
8 21 June 2013 FISA Certification 25
7 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit A 9
6 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit B 9
5 16 June 2013 GCHQ G-20 Spying 4
4 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant FAQ 3
3 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant Slides 4
2 7 June 2013 PPD-20 18
1 5 June 2013 Verizon 4
Washington Post 216
2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 2 10
2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 3
23 December 2013 NSA/CSS Mission 2
11 December 2013 Excessive Collection 9
11 December 2013 SCISSORS 2 7
11 December 2013 SCISSORS 1 4
11 December 2013 Yahoo-Google Exploit 6
11 December 2013 Cable Spying Types 7
11 December 2013 WINDSTOP 1
11 December 2013 Co-Traveler 24
11 December 2013 GSM Tracking 2
11 December 2013 SIGINT Successes 4
11 December 2013 GHOSTMACHINE 4
5 December 2013 Target Location 1
4 December 2013 FASCIA 2
4 December 2013 CHALKFUN 1
26 November 2013 Microsoft a Target? 4
4 November 2013 WINDSTOP, SSO, Yahoo-Google 14
30 October 2013 MUSCULAR-INCENSOR Google and Yahoo 4
14 October 2013 SSO Overview 4
14 October 2013 SSO Slides 7
14 October 2013 SSO Content Slides 9
4 October 2013 Tor 49
4 October 2013 EgotisticalGiraffe 20*
4 October 2013 GCHQ MULLENIZE 2
4 October 2013 Roger Dingledine 2
30 August 2013 Budget 17
10 July 2013 PRISM Slide 1
29 June 2013 PRISM 8
20 June 2013 Warrantless Surveillance 25*
7 June 2013 PPD-20 18*
6 June 2013 PRISM 1
Der Spiegel * 97
31 December 2013 QFIRE * 16
30 December 2013 TAO Introduction * 16
30 Deceber 2013 QUANTUM Tasking (8 duplicates of QUANTUMTHEORY) 28*
30 December 2013 QUANTUMTHEORY 14
29 December 2013 TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH (images)
TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH (DE article) 4
17 November 2013 ROYAL CONCIERGE (DE)

ROYAL CONCIERGE (EN)
2
29 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 3
27 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 2
20 October 2013 Mexico President 1
20 September 2013 Belgacom 3
16 September 2013 SWIFT 3
9 September 2013 Smartphones 5
1 September 2013 French Foreign Ministry 0
31 August 2013 Al Jazeera 0
O Globo Fantastico ~87
7 October 2013 CSE Brazil Ministry 7
8 September 2013 Petrobas ~60
3 September 2013 Brazil and Mexico 20
New York Times 118
9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
23 November 2013 SIGINT Strategy 2012-2016 5
3 November 2013 SIGINT Mission 2013

SIGINT Mission 2017
22
28 September 2013 Contact Chaining Social Networks 1
28 September 2013 SYANPSE 1
5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
ProPublica 89
9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
5 September 2103 SIGINT Enabling 3*
Le Monde 20
25 October 2013 NSA Hosts FR Spies 4
22 October 2013 Wanadoo-Alcatel 1
22 October 2013 Close Access Sigads 2
22 October 2013 Boundless Informant 2
22 October 2013 PRISM 11
Dagbladet 13
19 November 2013 BOUNDLESSINFORMANT 13
NRC Handelsblad 4
30 November 2013 Dutch SIGINT 3
23 November 2013 SIGINT Cryptologic Platform 1
Huffington Post 3
27 November 2013 Muslim Porn Viewing 3
CBC 36
30 January 2014 CESC IP Profiling 27
10 December 2013 NSA-CSEC Partnership 1
10 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 4*
2 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 3
29 November 2013 G8-G20 Spying 1
The Globe and Mail 18
30 November 2013 CSEC Brazil Spying 18*
SVT (Swedsh TV) 2
5 December 2013 Sweden Spied Russia for NSA 2
L’Espresso 3
6 December 2013 NSA Spies Italy 3
Trojkan (SVT) 29
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Relationship 1*
11 December 2013 NSA 5 Eyes Partners 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Agenda 8
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA RU Baltic 1
11 December 2013 NSA GCHQ Sweden FRA COMINT 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Plan 5
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Sources 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Tor et al 3
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Slide 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum 1 1
11 December 2013 GCHQ Sweden FRA Quantum 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum Accomplishments 2
9 December 2013 NSA and Sweden Pact 3*
Jacob Appelbaum * 71
30 December 2013 NSA Catalog * 50
30 December 2013 NSA Catalog Video Clips * 21
Information.dk 22*
14 January 2014 SSO (duplicate) 7*
14 January 2014 PRISM (duplicate) 11*
13 January 2014 5-Eyes Spy G8-G20 (duplicate) 4*
Anonymous/
New York Times 18
27 January 2014 NSA Smartphones Analysis 14
27 January 2014 GCHQ Mobile Theme 4
NBC News 61
5 February 2014 GCHQ Anonymous 14
27 January 2014 GCHQ Squeaky Dolphin 47

Tagesschau Video – Snowden Says US Spies Industry

http://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/snowden352.html

Interview with Edward Snowden in ARD

“USA operate industrial espionage”

In the world’s first television interview of former U.S. intelligence official Edward Snowden he has reiterated his belief that the United States spied on foreign business enterprises.

In conversation with the NDR journalist Hubert Seipel, Snowden said that he did not want to pre-empt future publications by journalists and could – in his view, but there should be no question how the United States behaved. U.S. intelligence agencies spied not only politicians and other citizens: “If there is information about Siemens that benefits the national interest of the United States, but have nothing to do with national security, they take this information anyway,” he said. Snowden has been granted initial asylum in Russia.

A few days ago an NSA spokeswoman stressed that the intelligence agencies were not involved in industrial espionage. Background to this was a report in the “New York Times” that the U.S. intelligence could implant computers with radio bugs.

Previously German politicians had called for a possible no-Spy Agreement with the United States that should also include a waiver of industrial espionage.

Snowden emphasized to ARD that he himself was no longer in possession of explosive material, but he had passed it to selected journalists and therefore to the public. He will have no influence on possible publication. The show today at 20.00 clock is a first cut from the interview. The interview was produced in collaboration with the North German broadcasting and production company Cinecentrum.

The first showing of the entire interview today of essential excerpts in the ARD interview broadcast ” Günther Jauch ” at 21.45 clock and following at 23.05 clock in full length also a first.

Unveiled – NSA Snowden Releases Tally Update – *984 Pages

* 14 January 2014. Add 21 pages to Information.dk (duplicate). Tally now *984 pages (~1.7%) of reported 58,000 files. DoD claims 1,700,000 files (~.0057% of that released).

* 13 January 2014. Add 4 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

Related Snowden Document and Page Count Assessment:

http://cryptome.org/2014/01/snowden-count.htm

* 5 January 2014. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel (30 December 2013. No source given for NSA docs). Tally now *962 pages (~1.7%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.50% of that released).

4 January 2014. The source was not identified for *133 pages published by Der Spiegel and Jacob Appelbaum in late December 2013. They are included here but have not been confirmed as provided by Edward Snowden. Thanks to post by Techdirt.

Glenn Greenwald tweeted:

Glenn Greenwald @ggreenwald, 8:05 AM – 29 Dec 13

@Cryptomeorg @ioerror I had no involvement in that Spiegel article, ask them – and they don’t say those are Snowden docs.

Matt Blaze tweeted, 11:24 AM – 2 Jan 14

matt blaze @mattblaze

If there are other sources besides Snowden, I hope journalists getting docs are careful to authenticate them (& disclose uncertainty).

3 January 2014. Add 13 pages to Washington Post.

3 January 2014. See also EFF, ACLU and LeakSource accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

http://leaksource.wordpress.com/

2 January 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post published 10 July 2013.

* 31 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 December 2013. Add 50 pages of NSA ANT Catalog by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 21 pages from 30C3 video by Jacob Appelbaum (no source given for NSA docs).

* 30 December 2013. Add 42 pages (8 duplicates) to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

* 29 December 2013. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel (no source given for NSA docs).

24 December 2013. Add 2 pages to Washington Post.

23 December 2013

http://www.adn.com/2013/12/22/3243451/pincus-snowden-still-has-a-road.html

We’ve yet to see the full impact of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s unauthorized downloading of highly classified intelligence documents.

Among the roughly 1.7 million documents he walked away with — the vast majority of which have not been made public — are highly sensitive, specific intelligence reports, as well as current and historic requirements the White House has given the agency to guide its collection activities, according to a senior government official with knowledge of the situation.

The latter category involves about 2,000 unique taskings that can run to 20 pages each and give reasons for selective targeting to NSA collectors and analysts. These orders alone may run 31,500 pages.

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT). Tally now 797 pages (~1.4%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.40% of that released). Australia press reports “up to 20,000 Aussie files.”

Rate of release over 6 months, 132.8 pages per month, equals 436 months to release 58,000, or 36.3 years. Thus the period of release has decreased in the past month from 42 years.

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.

21 November 2013. See also EFF and ACLU accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

3 November 2013

47 42 Years to Release Snowden Documents

Out of reported 50,000 pages (or files, not clear which), about 446 514 pages (>1% 1%) have been released over 5 months beginning June 5, 2012. At this rate, 89 100 pages per month, it will take 47 42 years for full release. Snowden will be 77 72 years old, his reporters hoarding secrets all dead.

NY Times, 3 November 2013:

Whatever reforms may come, Bobby R. Inman, who weathered his own turbulent period as N.S.A. director from 1977 to 1981, offers his hyper-secret former agency a radical suggestion for right now. “My advice would be to take everything you think Snowden has and get it out yourself,” he said. “It would certainly be a shock to the agency. But bad news doesn’t get better with age. The sooner they get it out and put it behind them, the faster they can begin to rebuild.”

Outlet Pages
The Guardian 265
Washington Post 216
Der Spiegel * 97
O Globo Fantastico ~87
New York Times 118 (82 joint)
ProPublica 89 (82 joint)
Le Monde 20
Dagbladet 13
NRC Handelsblad 4
Huffington Post 3
CBC 9
The Globe and Mail 18
SVT 2
L’Espresso 3
Trojkan (SVT) 29
Jacob Appelbaum * 71
Information.dk 22*

Timeline of releases:

* 14 January 2014. Add 21 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

* 13 January 2014. Add 4 pages to Information.dk (duplicate).

3 January 2014. Add 13 pages to Washington Post.

2 January 2014. Add 1 page to Washington Post published 10 July 2013.

* 31 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 Decebmer 2013. Add 50 pages of NSA ANT Catalog by Jacob Appelbaum.

* 30 December 2013. Add 21 pages from 30C3 video by Jacob Appelbaum.

* 30 December 2013. Add 16 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 30 December 2013. Add 42 pages to Der Spiegel.

* 29 December 2013. Add 4 pages to Der Spiegel.

24 December 2013. Add 2 pages to Washington Post.

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT).

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.

11 December 2013. Belatedly add 25 pages to Guardian.

11 December 2013. Belatedly add 74 pages to Washington Post.

10 December 2013. Add 2 pages to CBC.

10 December 2013. Add 4 pages to CBC (duplicate of previous source).

9 December 2013. Add 3 pages to Trojkan. Add 2 pages to Guardian. Add 82 pages to New York Times and ProPublica (joint).

6 December 2013. Add 3 pages to L’Espresso.

5 December 2013. Add 2 pages to SVT (Swedish TV).

5 December 2013. Add 1 page to Washington Post.

4 December 2013. Add 3 pages to Washington Post.

2 December 2013. Add 3 pages to CBC.

30 November 2013. Add 18 pages to The Globe and Mail.

30 November 2013. Add 3 pages to NRC Handelsblad.

29 November 2013. Add 1 page to CBC.

27 November 2013. Add 3 pages to Huffington Post.

26 November 2013. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

23 November 2013. Add 1 page to NRC Handelsblad.

23 November 2013. Add 5 pages to New York Times.

22 November 2013. Add 10 pages to Dagbladet.

18 November 2013. Add 6 pages to The Guardian.

17 November 2013. Add two images to Der Spiegel.

4 November 2013. Add 14 pages to Washington Post.

3 November 2013. A reports an additional 54 slides for O Globo Petrobas.

3 November 2013. Add 22 pages to New York Times.

2 November 2013. Add 13 pages to Guardian, 11 are duplicates.

31 October 2013. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

29 October 2013. Add 3 pages to Der Spiegel

27 October 2013. Add 2 pages to Der Spiegel.

25 October 2013. Add 4 pages to Le Monde.

22 October 2013. Add 5 pages to Le Monde.

21 October 2013. Add 11 pages to Le Monde, 8 are duplicates.

20 October 2013. Add 1 page to Der Spiegel.

13 October 2013. Add 4, 7 and 9 pages to Washington Post.

8 October 2013. Add 7 pages to O Globo: CSE spying on Brazilian ministry, reported 7 October 2013.

6 October 2013. Add Snowden pages published by Washington Post, Der Spiegel, O Globo Fantastico, New York Times, ProPublica. Some are duplicates(*).

5 October 2013

26 Years to Release Snowden Docs by The Guardian

Out of reported 15,000 pages, The Guardian has published 192 pages in fourteen releases over four months, an average of 48 pages per month, or 1.28% of the total. At this rate it will take 26 years for full release.

Edward Snowden will be 56 years old.
Glenn Greenwald will be 72.
Laura Poitras will be 75.
Alan Rusbridger will be 86.
Barton Gellman will be 78.
Julian Assange will be 68.
Chelsea Manning will be 52.
Keith Alexander will be 88.
Barack Obama will be 78.
Daniel Ellsberg will be 108.
This author will be 103.

Number Date Title Pages
The Guardian 265
20 9 December 2013 Spying on Games 2
18 18 November 2013 DSD-3G 6
19 1 November 2013 PRISM, SSO
SSO1 Slide
SSO2 Slide 13*
18 4 October 2013 Types of IAT Tor 9
17 4 October 2013 Egotistical Giraffe 20*
16 4 October 2013 Tor Stinks 23
15 11 September 2013 NSA-Israel Spy 5
14 5 September 2013 BULLRUN 6*
13 5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
12 5 September 2013 NSA classification guide 3
11 31 July 2013 XKeyscore 32
10 27 June 2013 DoJ Memo on NSA 16
9 27 June 2013 Stellar Wind 51
8 21 June 2013 FISA Certification 25
7 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit A 9
6 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit B 9
5 16 June 2013 GCHQ G-20 Spying 4
4 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant FAQ 3
3 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant Slides 4
2 7 June 2013 PPD-20 18
1 5 June 2013 Verizon 4
Washington Post 216
2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 2 10
2 January 2014 Quantum Computer 3
23 December 2013 NSA/CSS Mission 2
11 December 2013 Excessive Collection 9
11 December 2013 SCISSORS 2 7
11 December 2013 SCISSORS 1 4
11 December 2013 Yahoo-Google Exploit 6
11 December 2013 Cable Spying Types 7
11 December 2013 WINDSTOP 1
11 December 2013 Co-Traveler 24
11 December 2013 GSM Tracking 2
11 December 2013 SIGINT Successes 4
11 December 2013 GHOSTMACHINE 4
5 December 2013 Target Location 1
4 December 2013 FASCIA 2
4 December 2013 CHALKFUN 1
26 November 2013 Microsoft a Target? 4
4 November 2013 WINDSTOP, SSO, Yahoo-Google 14
30 October 2013 MUSCULAR-INCENSOR Google and Yahoo 4
14 October 2013 SSO Overview 4
14 October 2013 SSO Slides 7
14 October 2013 SSO Content Slides 9
4 October 2013 Tor 49
4 October 2013 EgotisticalGiraffe 20*
4 October 2013 GCHQ MULLENIZE 2
4 October 2013 Roger Dingledine 2
30 August 2013 Budget 17
10 July 2013 PRISM Slide 1
29 June 2013 PRISM 8
20 June 2013 Warrantless Surveillance 25*
7 June 2013 PPD-20 18*
6 June 2013 PRISM 1
Der Spiegel * 97
31 December 2013 QFIRE * 16
30 December 2013 TAO Introduction * 16
30 Deceber 2013 QUANTUM Tasking (8 duplicates of QUANTUMTHEORY) 28*
30 December 2013 QUANTUMTHEORY 14
29 December 2013 TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH (images)
TAO ANT COTTONMOUTH (DE article) 4
17 November 2013 ROYAL CONCIERGE (DE)

ROYAL CONCIERGE (EN)
2
29 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 3
27 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 2
20 October 2013 Mexico President 1
20 September 2013 Belgacom 3
16 September 2013 SWIFT 3
9 September 2013 Smartphones 5
1 September 2013 French Foreign Ministry 0
31 August 2013 Al Jazeera 0
O Globo Fantastico ~87
7 October 2013 CSE Brazil Ministry 7
8 September 2013 Petrobas ~60
3 September 2013 Brazil and Mexico 20
New York Times 118
9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
23 November 2013 SIGINT Strategy 2012-2016 5
3 November 2013 SIGINT Mission 2013

SIGINT Mission 2017
22
28 September 2013 Contact Chaining Social Networks 1
28 September 2013 SYANPSE 1
5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
ProPublica 89
9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
5 September 2103 SIGINT Enabling 3*
Le Monde 20
25 October 2013 NSA Hosts FR Spies 4
22 October 2013 Wanadoo-Alcatel 1
22 October 2013 Close Access Sigads 2
22 October 2013 Boundless Informant 2
22 October 2013 PRISM 11
Dagbladet 13
19 November 2013 BOUNDLESSINFORMANT 13
NRC Handelsblad 4
30 November 2013 Dutch SIGINT 3
23 November 2013 SIGINT Cryptologic Platform 1
Huffington Post 3
27 November 2013 Muslim Porn Viewing 3
CBC 9
10 December 2013 NSA-CSEC Partnership 1
10 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 4*
2 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 3
29 November 2013 G8-G20 Spying 1
The Globe and Mail 18
30 November 2013 CSEC Brazil Spying 18*
SVT (Swedsh TV) 2
5 December 2013 Sweden Spied Russia for NSA 2
L’Espresso 3
6 December 2013 NSA Spies Italy 3
Trojkan (SVT) 29
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Relationship 1*
11 December 2013 NSA 5 Eyes Partners 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Agenda 8
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA RU Baltic 1
11 December 2013 NSA GCHQ Sweden FRA COMINT 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Plan 5
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Sources 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Tor et al 3
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Slide 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum 1 1
11 December 2013 GCHQ Sweden FRA Quantum 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum Accomplishments 2
9 December 2013 NSA and Sweden Pact 3*
Jacob Appelbaum * 71
30 December 2013 NSA Catalog * 50
30 December 2013 NSA Catalog Video Clips * 21
Information.dk 22*
14 January 2014 SSO (duplicate) 7*
14 January 2014 PRISM (duplicate) 11*
13 January 2014 5-Eyes Spy G8-G20 (duplicate) 4*

Revealed – Snowden Document and Page Count Assessment

The count of Snowden files has ranged from an initial low end of 10,000 to the latest high of 1,700,000, although the high end is likely exaggerated by officials to maximize alleged damage.

The number of pages in these files has not been estimated but about 1,000 pages have been released, mostly as PDFs and images. How many total pages might be in the files and now long would it take Snowden to read them to assure least harm to the US?

For comparison, Cryptome’s archive is about 70,000 files. Converting these files to pages comes to about 1,000,000 pages. These files are PDFs, HTMLs, DOCs, TXTs, DWGs, images, spreadsheets, with a few videos and films excluded from the count. To get the page count all files were converted to PDFs. The page count of documents ranges from 1 to 2,200. This might be a fair range of types and page counts of files in the Snowden batch.

An average file then, of 70,000 files with 1,000,000 pages, comes to 14.28 pages per file. Using this as a guide for the Snowden files, the number of pages could range from 142,800 pages for 10,000 files to 24,276,000 pages for 1.7 million files.

Examining the low end of 142,800 pages would be about like reading 476 books of 300 pages length. Examining the high end of 24,276,000 pages would be like reading 80,920 books of 300 pages each.

Snowden is smart and knows his material thoroughly so time to speed read a 300-page book of NSA material, could be done in, say, 2 hours.

On the low end it would take 952 hours to read 142,800 pages, reading 10 hours a day, would come to 95 days, or about 3 months.

On the high end it would take 161,890 hours to read 24,276,000 pages, reading 10 hours a day, would come to 1,619 days or about 54 months — 4 1/2 years.

4 1/2 years is longer than Snowden is reported to have worked for Dell and Booz Allen as contractor to NSA.

It is unlikely Snowden would have examined 24 million pages.

More likely Snowden used a program to quickly analyze large data collections and rank intelligence actionability in the NSA manner. Glenn Greenwald told Buzzfeed that the documents had been beautifully organized, “almost to a scary degree.” As if prepared with a purposeful program for analyzing and data sharing with avid customers.

There are information security programs which compartmentalize data for multiple levels of security and access as well as controls for the distribution and timing of release. These are used to manage classified data handling among a variety of personnel and agencies with varying clearances.

It could be that Snowden remains in control of his material’s release by way of programmed implants in the material for access and timing although the material is physically distant from him. This too is conventional security practice.

These practices would be characteristic of a seasoned security person who could not be certain of media outlets’ long-term behavior, their transmission and storage security, their theft and spying prevention capabilities, their susceptiblity to coercion or persuasion by officials or by inducements to betray him to protect themselves.

Events have shown that these meticulous security measures would have been and remain appropriate.

It also allows Snowden to remain in charge of any negotiations for return of the material, for accurate accounting of the material’s scope, retention, distribution and release, and for assuring his safety without relying on the fickle fingers of fate of informants and turncoats which have beckoned the all-too-trusting to long-term imprisonment.

__________

As an aside, another way to surmise what Snowden allegedly had on four laptops is by file size. Cryptome’s 70,000 files comes to about 17GB, or an average of 243KB per file. Using that as a guide to Snowden’s files, the total size ranges from 2.43GB for 10,000 files to 413GB for 1,700,00 files. On the high end that’s about 103GB per laptop. No problem, laptops with 100GB-250GB disks are common.

Exposed – Edward Snowden and Booz Allen Public Keys

Edward Snowden and Booz Allen Public Keys

Edward Snowden generated PGP public keys under several email addresses while associated with Booz Allen Hamilton and NSA and later under the alleged pseudonym Verax (none have been found for his work at Dell).

Public key servers (such as SKS OpenPGP Keyserver) are often mined to trace PGP users, and it is likely that security offices at Booz Allen Hamilton and Dell monitored PGP usage by its employees performing government work as required by government contracts, and for NSA, CIA and government counterspies to similarly track their contractors and employees (PGP public key servers are fed to government agencies as well as widely distrubuted to the public. Seasoned PGP users exchange keys privately and may leave public keys on the servers as cover.)

If Snowden generated and used the Verax keys for multiple correspondents, the number might indicate the number of parties receiving his material or who he corresponded with about the material. (PGPdump reveals the exact date and time keys are generated as well as other unique indicators.)

Although it is possible that multiple keys were used to communicate with a single party, or multiple parties, several times, each key perhaps used only once or a limited number of times.

Use of multiple public keys for enhanced security is well known in comsec circles, and is deployed as a ruse to divert attention away from more secure means.

Snowden would have known this ruse, and many others as well. As would have counterspies at Booz Allen, Dell, NSA, CIA and many others.

The NSA report “Out of Control,” from 1996, examined the need for counterspying system administrators like Snowden. Snowden may have known of this report, and might have considered it a ruse of ruses.

Sample public keys:

Type bits/keyID Date User ID

pub 4096R/21B7141F 2013-03-24 Ed Snowden

Ed Snowden
Edward Snowden
Edward Snowden
Edward Snowden
Fingerprint=98E6 3244 07FA 26AD B358 7C95 4DB8 A088 21B7 141F

pub 4096R/21B7141F 2013-03-24
Fingerprint=98E6 3244 07FA 26AD B358 7C95 4DB8 A088 21B7 141F

uid Ed Snowden
sig sig3 21B7141F 2013-03-24 __________ __________ [selfsig]
sig sig3 21B7141F 2013-04-13 __________ __________ [selfsig]

uid Ed Snowden
sig sig3 21B7141F 2013-04-13 __________ __________ [selfsig]

uid Edward Snowden
sig sig3 21B7141F 2013-03-24 __________ __________ [selfsig]

uid Edward Snowden
sig sig3 21B7141F 2013-04-12 __________ __________ [selfsig]
sig revok 21B7141F 2013-07-16 __________ __________ [selfsig]
Note last revocation after Snowden’s releases in early June 2013.

uid Edward Snowden
sig sig3 21B7141F 2013-03-24 __________ __________ [selfsig]
sig sig3 21B7141F 2013-04-16 __________ __________ [selfsig]
sig revok 21B7141F 2013-07-16 __________ __________ [selfsig]
Note last revocation after Snowden’s releases in early June 2013.

sub 4096R/B25D8926 2013-03-24
sig sbind 21B7141F 2013-03-24 __________ __________ []

Only two other keys used boozallen.com addresses — 12 years earlier:

pub 1024D/BAE8C0A6 2001-04-16 Hayman
Fingerprint=D311 FAAA 7AA6 4263 06F0 D8A2 1749 349D BAE8 C0A6

pub 1024D/EDED4028 2000-12-05 Dan Speas
Fingerprint=CF3C E65D B30A B92E 21D8 245A 61B1 C896 EDED 4028

Multiple keys generation is sometimes an indication of keys being used for single or multiple correspondents or tasks for enhanced security.

A Booz Allen senior associate generated several keys on two days; no other bah.com keys were generated in this two-day volume:

pub 2048R/07B5ED7F 2013-03-19 Mark Eckert
Fingerprint=9AB1 0F99 9BC4 79B0 3FB0 C236 E55F B011 07B5 ED7F

pub 2048R/04FB2011 2013-03-19 Mark Eckert
Fingerprint=C247 FE8E 1E5B CF8A AE94 08FE A42B B21D 04FB 2011

pub 2048R/2FB85DA7 2013-03-19 Mark Eckert
Fingerprint=089E FB6A 45E4 8283 8D9A 4000 4CC5 6946 2FB8 5DA7

pub 2048R/20F57C2B 2013-03-19 Mark Eckert
Fingerprint=8A77 6E80 2F37 B2E1 52D0 7620 0148 90CF 20F5 7C2B

pub 2048R/0E009444 2013-03-18 Mark Eckert
Fingerprint=4779 371B 4A2C 0A45 917C 033B C741 883A 0E00 9444

However, the alleged Snowden pseudonym, Verax, generated these keys in a week, most of them on one day:

pub 4096R/0E8CD2B6 2013-05-20 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=F606 1774 A693 72A1 8AD0 1CD7 0C4D AF57 0E8C D2B6

pub 4096R/71A3AA96 2013-05-20 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=2B5D D0BF F454 8592 1FAF 22FB 4569 3580 71A3 AA96

pub 4096R/79B82638 2013-05-20 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=4ECC 0702 A2E9 5FA6 2074 C7BE 574F C888 79B8 2638

pub 4096R/E87C2665 2013-05-20 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=7F99 43F6 5CC9 BAD1 92A9 8DF8 96E6 0F93 E87C 2665

pub 4096R/C920FAA6 2013-05-20 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=AC5E 06C5 17D0 A8C1 75D3 17F5 53B9 0192 C920 FAA6

pub 4096R/CEBFFE8D 2013-05-20 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=22DA 0669 5202 A346 BA36 F35D 3CEB 5687 CEBF FE8D

pub 4096R/2BE0BC29 2013-05-20 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=5091 7466 B18F 35B3 F644 F700 1D0D 97F2 2BE0 BC29

pub 4096R/9DCA85F7 2013-05-19 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=BDE4 AA86 8507 1371 7793 11A8 105D A7AB 9DCA 85F7

pub 4096R/BE452B27 2013-05-13 Verax (Informed Democracy Front)
Fingerprint=134D 970C 5872 5AA6 8F2A BD75 D18D FE89 BE45 2B27

Exposed – NSA Snowden Releases Tally Update – 726 Pages

Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT). Tally now 797 pages (~1.4%) of reported 58,000. NSA head claims 200,000 (~.40% of that released). Australia press reports “up to 20,000 Aussie files.”

Rate of release over 6 months, 132.8 pages per month, equals 436 months to release 58,000, or 36.3 years. Thus the period of release has decreased in the past month from 42 years.

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.

21 November 2013. See also EFF and ACLU accounts:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/11/nsa-spying-primary-sources

https://www.aclu.org/nsa-documents-released-public-june-2013

3 November 2013

47 42 Years to Release Snowden Documents

Out of reported 50,000 pages (or files, not clear which), about 446 514 pages (>1% 1%) have been released over 5 months beginning June 5, 2012. At this rate, 89 100 pages per month, it will take 47 42 years for full release. Snowden will be 77 72 years old, his reporters hoarding secrets all dead.

NY Times, 3 November 2013:

Whatever reforms may come, Bobby R. Inman, who weathered his own turbulent period as N.S.A. director from 1977 to 1981, offers his hyper-secret former agency a radical suggestion for right now. “My advice would be to take everything you think Snowden has and get it out yourself,” he said. “It would certainly be a shock to the agency. But bad news doesn’t get better with age. The sooner they get it out and put it behind them, the faster they can begin to rebuild.”

Outlet Pages
The Guardian 265
Washington Post 200
Der Spiegel 19
O Globo Fantastico ~87
New York Times 118 (82 joint)
ProPublica 89 (82 joint)
Le Monde 20
Dagbladet 13
NRC Handelsblad 4
Huffington Post 3
CBC 9
The Globe and Mail 18
SVT 2
L’Espresso 3
Trojkan (SVT) 29

Timeline of releases:

13 December 2013. Add 26 pages to Trojkan (SVT).

12 December 2013. Belatedly add 27 pages to Guardian and 18 pages to Washington Post.

11 December 2013. Belatedly add 25 pages to Guardian.

11 December 2013. Belatedly add 74 pages to Washington Post.

10 December 2013. Add 2 pages to CBC.

10 December 2013. Add 4 pages to CBC (duplicate of previous source).

9 December 2013. Add 3 pages to Trojkan. Add 2 pages to Guardian. Add 82 pages to New York Times and ProPublica (joint).

6 December 2013. Add 3 pages to L’Espresso.

5 December 2013. Add 2 pages to SVT (Swedish TV).

5 December 2013. Add 1 page to Washington Post.

4 December 2013. Add 3 pages to Washington Post.

2 December 2013. Add 3 pages to CBC.

30 November 2013. Add 18 pages to The Globe and Mail.

30 November 2013. Add 3 pages to NRC Handelsblad.

29 November 2013. Add 1 page to CBC.

27 November 2013. Add 3 pages to Huffington Post.

26 November 2013. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

23 November 2013. Add 1 page to NRC Handelsblad.

23 November 2013. Add 5 pages to New York Times.

22 November 2013. Add 10 pages to Dagbladet.

18 November 2013. Add 6 pages to The Guardian.

17 November 2013. Add two images to Der Spiegel.

4 November 2013. Add 14 pages to Washington Post.

3 November 2013. A reports an additional 54 slides for O Globo Petrobas.

3 November 2013. Add 22 pages to New York Times.

2 November 2013. Add 13 pages to Guardian, 11 are duplicates.

31 October 2013. Add 4 pages to Washington Post.

29 October 2013. Add 3 pages to Der Spiegel

27 October 2013. Add 2 pages to Der Spiegel.

25 October 2013. Add 4 pages to Le Monde.

22 October 2013. Add 5 pages to Le Monde.

21 October 2013. Add 11 pages to Le Monde, 8 are duplicates.

20 October 2013. Add 1 page to Der Spiegel.

13 October 2013. Add 4, 7 and 9 pages to Washington Post.

8 October 2013. Add 7 pages to O Globo: CSE spying on Brazilian ministry, reported 7 October 2013.

6 October 2013. Add Snowden pages published by Washington Post, Der Spiegel, O Globo Fantastico, New York Times, ProPublica. Some are duplicates(*).

5 October 2013

26 Years to Release Snowden Docs by The Guardian

Out of reported 15,000 pages, The Guardian has published 192 pages in fourteen releases over four months, an average of 48 pages per month, or 1.28% of the total. At this rate it will take 26 years for full release.

Edward Snowden will be 56 years old.
Glenn Greenwald will be 72.
Laura Poitras will be 75.
Alan Rusbridger will be 86.
Barton Gellman will be 78.
Julian Assange will be 68.
Chelsea Manning will be 52.
Keith Alexander will be 88.
Barack Obama will be 78.
Daniel Ellsberg will be 108.
This author will be 103.

Number Date Title Pages
The Guardian 265
20 9 December 2013 Spying on Games 2
18 18 November 2013 DSD-3G 6
19 1 November 2013 PRISM, SSO
SSO1 Slide
SSO2 Slide 13*
18 4 October 2013 Types of IAT Tor 9
17 4 October 2013 Egotistical Giraffe 20*
16 4 October 2013 Tor Stinks 23
15 11 September 2013 NSA-Israel Spy 5
14 5 September 2013 BULLRUN 6*
13 5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
12 5 September 2013 NSA classification guide 3
11 31 July 2013 XKeyscore 32
10 27 June 2013 DoJ Memo on NSA 16
9 27 June 2013 Stellar Wind 51
8 21 June 2013 FISA Certification 25
7 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit A 9
6 20 June 2013 Minimization Exhibit B 9
5 16 June 2013 GCHQ G-20 Spying 4
4 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant FAQ 3
3 8 June 2013 Boundless Informant Slides 4
2 7 June 2013 PPD-20 18
1 5 June 2013 Verizon 4
Washington Post 200
11 December 2013 Excessive Collection 9
11 December 2013 SCISSORS 2 7
11 December 2013 SCISSORS 1 4
11 December 2013 Yahoo-Google Exploit 6
11 December 2013 Cable Spying Types 7
11 December 2013 WINDSTOP 1
11 December 2013 Co-Traveler 24
11 December 2013 GSM Tracking 2
11 December 2013 SIGINT Successes 4
11 December 2013 GHOSTMACHINE 4
5 December 2013 Target Location 1
4 December 2013 FASCIA 2
4 December 2013 CHALKFUN 1
26 November 2013 Microsoft a Target? 4
4 November 2013 WINDSTOP, SSO, Yahoo-Google 14
30 October 2013 MUSCULAR-INCENSOR Google and Yahoo 4
14 October 2013 SSO Overview 4
14 October 2013 SSO Slides 7
14 October 2013 SSO Content Slides 9
4 October 2013 Tor 49
4 October 2013 EgotisticalGiraffe 20*
4 October 2013 GCHQ MULLENIZE 2
4 October 2013 Roger Dingledine 2
30 August 2013 Budget 17
29 June 2013 PRISM 8
20 June 2013 Warrantless Surveillance 25*
7 June 2013 PPD-20 18*
6 June 2013 PRISM 1
Der Spiegel 19
17 November 2013 ROYAL CONCIERGE (DE)

ROYAL CONCIERGE (EN)
2
29 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 3
27 October 2013 NSA-CIA SCS 2
20 October 2013 Mexico President 1
20 September 2013 Belgacom 3
16 September 2013 SWIFT 3
9 September 2013 Smartphones 5
1 September 2013 French Foreign Ministry 0
31 August 2013 Al Jazeera 0
O Globo Fantastico ~87
7 October 2013 CSE Brazil Ministry 7
8 September 2013 Petrobas ~60
3 September 2013 Brazil and Mexico 20
New York Times 118
9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
23 November 2013 SIGINT Strategy 2012-2016 5
3 November 2013 SIGINT Mission 2013

SIGINT Mission 2017
22
28 September 2013 Contact Chaining Social Networks 1
28 September 2013 SYANPSE 1
5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
5 September 2013 SIGINT Enabling 3*
ProPublica 89
9 December 2013 Spying on Games 82*
5 September 2013 BULLRUN 4*
5 September 2103 SIGINT Enabling 3*
Le Monde 20
25 October 2013 NSA Hosts FR Spies 4
22 October 2013 Wanadoo-Alcatel 1
22 October 2013 Close Access Sigads 2
22 October 2013 Boundless Informant 2
22 October 2013 PRISM 11
Dagbladet 13
19 November 2013 BOUNDLESSINFORMANT 13
NRC Handelsblad 4
30 November 2013 Dutch SIGINT 3
23 November 2013 SIGINT Cryptologic Platform 1
Huffington Post 3
27 November 2013 Muslim Porn Viewing 3
CBC 9
10 December 2013 NSA-CSEC Partnership 1
10 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 4*
2 December 2013 G8-G20 Spying 3
29 November 2013 G8-G20 Spying 1
The Globe and Mail 18
30 November 2013 CSEC Brazil Spying 18*
SVT (Swedsh TV) 2
5 December 2013 Sweden Spied Russia for NSA 2
L’Espresso 3
6 December 2013 NSA Spies Italy 3
Trojkan (SVT) 29
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Relationship 1*
11 December 2013 NSA 5 Eyes Partners 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Agenda 8
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA RU Baltic 1
11 December 2013 NSA GCHQ Sweden FRA COMINT 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Plan 5
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Sources 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Tor et al 3
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA XKeyscore Slide 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum 1 1
11 December 2013 GCHQ Sweden FRA Quantum 1
11 December 2013 NSA Sweden FRA Quantum Accomplishments 2
9 December 2013 NSA and Sweden Pact 3*

Uncensored – Glenn Greenwald on Snowden Leak Halt for Asylum

Glenn Greenwald, Associate of Edward Snowden, talked to “MK” about his revelatory book

By Andrew Yashlavsky

Former CIA technical officer and U.S. National Security Agency Edward Snowden disclosed secrets of U.S. intelligence, now famous in the whole world. Glenn Greenwald is known to a narrow circle of people. But it is precisely this American blogger and journalist and Guardian columnist who published Snowden’s information. “MK” contacted Greenwald and asked him a few questions.

Glenn Greenwald is going to publish a book based on the revelations of Snowden and warns those who may wish to silence the “whistleblower”: “He has already distributed thousands of documents and made sure that different people around the world have the full archive. If anything happens to him, these documents will be made public. This is his insurance. The U.S. government should daily pray on their knees no harm happens to Snowden. Because if that happens, all of this information will be released and it will be the worst nightmare for the United States.”

And Snowden, according to Greenwald, “has enough information that in just one minute could cause more damage to the U.S. government than anyone else has ever done in the history of the United States.”

– Glenn, you’re going to write and publish a book dedicated to exposing the activities of U.S. intelligence on the basis of materials disclosed by Snowden. Is it possible to know more detail about this? – “MK” asked the American journalist.

– In this book I tell the story of how I started working with Edward Snowden as my source of information about the large-scale secret spy program, which was created by the United States government, and then turned on its own citizens and the rest of the world. In my book, I will also explore reasons why such a system threatens fundamental freedoms and privacy.

– Are not you afraid for your own safety, after all, in the book you’re going to touch on sensitive issues for the U.S. government. Would not you, too, like Snowden, be pursued by the U.S. government?

– A couple of prominent American leaders have called for me to be arrested. But, fortunately, the Constitution of the United States guarantees freedom of the press. Of course, over the last decade-plus, the U.S. government has repeatedly argued that it is re-examining some legal or constitutional framework. However, since I live in Brazil, it will be very difficult for the American authorities to prevent the emergence of a book I’m writing.

– You are now in contact with Edward Snowden?

– I have been in contact with him, but Mr. Snowden is now very focused on fulfilling the conditions that required by the Russian government so that he could stay in Russia. And as a result, our communication is reduced to a discussion of his general condition and the response of the United States and around the world to texts written by me.

– In general, what do you think about his decision to seek asylum in Russia? In your opinion, is the right place for people like Snowden?

– I think a refuge from political persecution is an extremely important right in the international legal system. There is no doubt that the United States pursues “whistleblowers”: anyone who exposes serious violations of the law, fraud and corruption of U.S. officials. That is exactly what Mr. Snowden did. Around the world there are few countries in which there is both an opportunity and a desire to use the above-mentioned whistleblower law, instead of suggestions to capitulate to the U.S. Russia is one of those countries. So it’s understandable why he decided to seek asylum there …

Glenn Greenwald did not respond when asked about his means of communication with Snowden.

Greenwald unveils – Snowden Information Threatens US in Case of Murder

Glenn Greenwald: “Snowden has information for more damage”

The journalist who received the leaks from the CIA Mole said there are more documents

By Alberto Armendariz | LA NACION

RIO DE JANEIRO. – Smoke and Mirrors. With his striped bathing suit, his white sandals, his jean jacket and a backpack, Glenn Greenwald seems like a tourist walking along the promenade of Sao Conrado, Rio de Janeiro. But it is the journalist, blogger and columnist for the British newspaper The Guardian who surprised the world with revelations about the extensive network of U.S. cyber espionage that was leaked by Edward Snowden, former intelligence analyst for the National Security Agency (NSA ).

“Snowden has enough information to cause more damage to the U.S. government in a minute alone than anyone else has ever had in the history of the United States,” Greenwald, 46, told LA NACION, and since living in these latitudes writes regularly on international security issues which has made him famous, winner of several distinguished awards.

Today, the New Yorker, a former lawyer, is in the eye of the storm. Lawmakers in Washington want to put him on trial, spies of various countries seek Snowden’s secret information shared with him last month in Hong Kong and which he still sends from Moscow through an encrypted email system. He knows he’s being watched and that their conversations are monitored. They even steal the laptop from her boyfriend Rio, from their own home.

Three men wait in the lobby of the hotel Royal Tulip with credentials of a congress of osteoporosis about which the manager has no idea. Are they really doctors or are following Greenwald? Appearances are deceptive.

– Does Snowden’s decision to stay in Russia help him come to Latin America?

– Yes, the most important thing is not to end in U.S. custody, which proved extremely vindictive government to punish those who reveal uncomfortable truths, and in whose judicial system can not be trusted when it comes to people accused of endangering the national security. The judges do everything they can to secure convictions in these cases. He would be immediately put in prison to cover the debate that he helped generate, and end the rest of his days behind bars.

– Does Russia give him security guarantees?

– Not many countries in the world that have the ability and willingness to defy U.S. demands. But Russia is one of those countries and it has been good so far.

– Beyond the revelations about the spying system’s performance in general, what other information does Snowden have?

– Snowden has enough information to cause more damage to the U.S. government in a minute alone than anyone else has ever had in the history of the United States. But that’s not his goal. His objective is to expose software that people around the world use without knowing that they are exposing themselves without consciously agreeing to surrender their privacy rights. He has a huge number of documents that would be very harmful to the U.S. government if they were made public.

– Are you afraid that someone will try to kill him?

– It’s a possibility, although it would not bring many benefits to anyone at this point. Thousands of documents are already distributed and to make sure that several people around the world have the entire file. If something were to happen, those documents would be made public. This is an insurance policy. The U.S. government should be on its knees every day praying that nothing happens to Snowden, because if something happens, all the information will be revealed and that would be their worst nightmare.

– Can Latin America be a good shelter for Snowden?

– Only a few countries, including several in Latin America, China and Russia, have challenged the U.S., and have realized that America is no longer in a position of strength as it did before with the rest of the world, and that the rest of the countries do not have to obey its demands as if it were an imperial order. In Latin America there is a feeling of natural sympathy for the United States, yet there is a great resentment for specific historical policies of Washington toward the region. What happened to the plane of Evo Morales in Europe caused a strong reaction, was treated as if Bolivia was a colony and not a sovereign state.

– From documents Snowden shared with you, is there much more information related to Latin America?

– Yes. For each country that has an advanced communications system, such as from Mexico to Argentina, there are documents that detail how the United States collects traffic information, the programs that are used to capture the transmissions, the number of interceptions that are performed per day, and more. One way to intercept communications is through a telephone corporation in the United States that has contracts with telecommunications companies in most Latin American countries. The important thing will be to see the reaction of the various governments. I do not think that the governments of Mexico and Colombia will do much about it. But maybe those of Argentina and Venezuela will be willing to take action.

Glenn Greenwald / Columnist, The Guardian
Profession: Journalist
Age: 46 years
Origin: United States

Unveiled – Snowden Censored by Craven Media

Snowden Censored by Craven Media

Mr. Snowden, please send your 41 PRISM slides and other information to less easily cowed and overly coddled commercial outlets than Washington Post and Guardian. Their arm-waving, self-aggrandizing verbosity, after conspiring to obey official demand (below) to censor your information is a pattern well-documented by unfettered disclosure sites. Their piecemealing release is hoary dramatization, diverting cover-up, of failure to deliver untampered material. Your valor is yet to be fully disclosed, do not settle for being seduced by false promises portending being kicked under the bus. Heed this under-bus-kick published today by Secrecy News:

EDWARD SNOWDEN, SOURCE OF NSA LEAKS, STEPS FORWARD

… “When you are subverting the power of government– that’s a fundamentally dangerous thing to democracy.”

“I’m willing to go on the record to defend the authenticity [of these disclosures]. This is the truth. This is what’s happening. You should decide whether we need to be doing this,” he said of his disclosures.

In the history of unauthorized disclosures of classified information, a voluntary admission of having committed such disclosures is the exception, not the norm. And it confers a degree of dignity on the action. Yet it stops short of a full acceptance of responsibility. That would entail surrendering to authorities and accepting the legal consequences of “subverting the power of government” and carrying out “a fundamentally dangerous thing to democracy.”

And two days ago this go-to-prison kick by The Atlantic:

Whistle-blowing is the moral response to immoral activity by those in power. What’s important here are government programs and methods, not data about individuals. I understand I am asking for people to engage in illegal and dangerous behavior. Do it carefully and do it safely, but — and I am talking directly to you, person working on one of these secret and probably illegal programs — do it.

High officers and rhetoricians convene safe at base to wargame, destined by history, to praise and send youngsters into harm’s way to protect high privilege, then crow about leadership, sacrifice, pretending remorse, gloating in amply-pensioned retirement. Bear in mind, fodder for their ambitions is how they see you imprisoned for disobedience, emblazoned in by-lined headlines, warehoused in vet hospitals, or best, flag-draped in coffins disappearing into vote-rigged databanks.

http://www.wect.com/story/22544509/snowdens-cautious-approach-to-post-reporter

To effect his plan, Snowden asked for a guarantee that The Washington Post would publish – within 72 hours – the full text of a PowerPoint presentation describing PRISM, a top-secret surveillance program that gathered intelligence from Microsoft, Facebook, Google and other Silicon Valley companies. He also asked that The Post publish online a cryptographic key that he could use to prove to a foreign embassy that he was the document’s source.

Gellman told him the Post would not make any guarantee about what the Post published or when. The Post broke the story two weeks later, on Thursday. The Post sought the views of government officials about the potential harm to national security prior to publication and decided to reproduce only four of the 41 slides, Gellman wrote in his story about their communications.