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Showing Original Post only (View all)Rolling Stone: How two alienated, angry geeks broke the story of the year [View all]
Early one morning last December, Glenn Greenwald opened his laptop, scanned through his e-mail, and made a decision that almost cost him the story of his life. A columnist and blogger with a large and devoted following, Greenwald receives hundreds of e-mails every day, many from readers who claim to have "great stuff." Occasionally these claims turn out to be credible; most of the time they're cranks. There are some that seem promising but also require serious vetting. This takes time, and Greenwald, who starts each morning deluged with messages, has almost none. "My inbox is the enemy," he told me recently.
And so it was that on December 1st, 2012, Greenwald received a note from a person asking for his public encryption, or PGP, key so he could send him an e-mail securely. Greenwald didn't have one, which he now acknowledges was fairly inexcusable given that he wrote almost daily about national-security issues, and had likely been on the government's radar for some time over his vocal support of Bradley Manning and WikiLeaks. "I didn't really know what PGP was," he admits. "I had no idea how to install it or how to use it." It seemed time-consuming and complicated, and Greenwald, who was working on a book about how the media control political discourse, while also writing his column for The Guardian, had more pressing things to do.
"It felt Anonymous-ish to me," Greenwald says. "It was this cryptic 'I and others have things you would be interested in. . . .' He never sent me neon lights it was much more ambiguous than that."
So he ignored the note. Soon after, the source sent Greenwald a step-by-step tutorial on encryption. Then he sent him a video Greenwald describes as "Encryption for Journalists," which "walked me through the process like I was a complete idiot."
And so it was that on December 1st, 2012, Greenwald received a note from a person asking for his public encryption, or PGP, key so he could send him an e-mail securely. Greenwald didn't have one, which he now acknowledges was fairly inexcusable given that he wrote almost daily about national-security issues, and had likely been on the government's radar for some time over his vocal support of Bradley Manning and WikiLeaks. "I didn't really know what PGP was," he admits. "I had no idea how to install it or how to use it." It seemed time-consuming and complicated, and Greenwald, who was working on a book about how the media control political discourse, while also writing his column for The Guardian, had more pressing things to do.
"It felt Anonymous-ish to me," Greenwald says. "It was this cryptic 'I and others have things you would be interested in. . . .' He never sent me neon lights it was much more ambiguous than that."
So he ignored the note. Soon after, the source sent Greenwald a step-by-step tutorial on encryption. Then he sent him a video Greenwald describes as "Encryption for Journalists," which "walked me through the process like I was a complete idiot."
More at:
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/snowden-and-greenwald-the-men-who-leaked-the-secrets-20131204
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Rolling Stone: How two alienated, angry geeks broke the story of the year [View all]
Logical
Dec 2013
OP
But they are heros now. The public is seeing what the NSA is actually doing. It opened many eyes! nt
Logical
Dec 2013
#2
LOL, where are the terrorists? Where? In the USA name the last terror attack! They have your ass....
Logical
Dec 2013
#22
Because the NSA did such a terrific job stopping the Boston Marathon bombing.
NuclearDem
Dec 2013
#26
Who put you in charge? You don't care if the NSA listens to your calls? Fine, I DO care.
SomethingFishy
Dec 2013
#50
THAT, in a nutshell, is why universal government surveillance is a good thing....
mike_c
Dec 2013
#3
Like millions of other Americans you mean. Rather than 'apathetic and blinded by partisanship'??
sabrina 1
Dec 2013
#4
It Is Clear To Me That One Has Not Actually Read The Article - Many Of The Questions Are Answered
cantbeserious
Dec 2013
#20
Like I said, anyone who cares about this COUNTRY rather than individual parties, is angry and
sabrina 1
Dec 2013
#73
Like maybe Thomas Paine.. the originator of our cherished but shredded Bill of Rights.. eom
2banon
Dec 2013
#43
I did not know that. That's ironic, given that he was a relatively recent immigrant
merrily
Dec 2013
#63
So, It Is Wrong For Americans To Have No Confidence In Oligarchs, Corporations And Government
cantbeserious
Dec 2013
#9
It is amazing. Snowden -- barely more than a kid with no high school diploma, no college degree,
JDPriestly
Dec 2013
#48
But..but..everybody knew about it...that's why our "transparent" gov't was keeping it secret.
Tierra_y_Libertad
Dec 2013
#18