Op-ed: Why Obama should pardon Edward Snowden
A former Obama advisor on civil liberties says Snowden deserves one.
A former Obama advisor on civil liberties says Snowden deserves one.
A former US gov't lawyer and current Harvard Law professor makes the case.
Proper technology treatment helps, but main star saves an otherwise rocky ship.
"Things that may seem unlawful on a page... these were vital things."
Karma Police program profiled users, tracked "suspicious" Web searches worldwide.
But other than that, James Clapper said, it was a disaster.
"How many of those documents have you actually read?" Oliver asked.
New Snowden docs show that in 2010, SIM makers lost control of their encryption keys.
GCHQ: "All types of news media represent a potential threat to security."
“Sustained Skype collection” of voice, video, and messages started in 2011.
Surveillance wasn't a top issue, but intelligence reformers have lost a key ally.
Yahoo fought against helping with warrantless surveillance in 2007 but lost.
Second Circuit judges ask: What did Congress know, and when did they know it?
Alexander, other top officials discussed data destruction before it took place.
Washington Post reports that NSA uses vague rules to decide if a target is foreign.
NSA says it only gathers such data for "valid foreign intelligence purposes."
All the world's a stage for US spies, according to secret American memos.
Slide of active computer network exploitations reveals NSA hacks all over the world.
While facial recognition is getting easier, obtaining the images isn't.
"NSA has now explained that they have found one email inquiry by Edward Snowden."
Using DEA agreements, NSA taps into calls in The Bahamas—and possibly Jamaica.
Servers, routers get “beacons” implanted at secret locations by NSA’s TAO team.
Greenwald book provides more data on NSA's "Homing Pigeon," other surveillance.
Parliamentary testimony could have been another chance to apply for asylum.
Glenn Greenwald says he wasn't 100 percent sure he wouldn't be arrested.
Bloomberg cites unnamed sources, says agency regularly used it to spy.
Obama's pen, not Congress, could stop NSA bulk telephone metadata collection immediately.
After an appeals court ruling and a $25,000 fine, Google says the law is on its side.