Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
21. More criminal activity from a government agency that nothing will be done about.
Sat Dec 21, 2013, 09:16 AM
Dec 2013

Thanks again Edward Snowden.

At least people know they are being spied on now. No longer can they be called CTs about anything regarding their Government.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Corrupt beyond measure. woo me with science Dec 2013 #1
+1 cantbeserious Dec 2013 #9
For some reason, I am unable to rec this post. woo me with science Dec 2013 #2
NSA? trumad Dec 2013 #3
Heh heh. woo me with science Dec 2013 #6
It isn't outside the realm of possibilities. Enthusiast Dec 2013 #20
With this level of corruption and criminality, woo me with science Dec 2013 #32
well, clearly the NSA is unhappy about it... ProdigalJunkMail Dec 2013 #4
Clearing cache and cookies did the trick. woo me with science Dec 2013 #7
i cleared cookies this morning, too ProdigalJunkMail Dec 2013 #10
I like your cookies better than my cookies. woo me with science Dec 2013 #17
Same here. 840high Dec 2013 #91
That really is messed up. surrealAmerican Dec 2013 #5
With This Revelation In Mind - Consider That The Whole Edifice Of Government Is Corrupted cantbeserious Dec 2013 #8
We have a lot of work ahead of us to clean up this mess - it may take a lifetime. reformist2 Dec 2013 #18
The bush crime family set a whole new standard of corruption in America. We may loudsue Dec 2013 #37
It is Obama's surveillance state now. nt woo me with science Dec 2013 #40
I agree with everything you say except it seems you want to blame Republicans. rhett o rick Dec 2013 #50
Funny But I somehow don't remember George W truedelphi Dec 2013 #71
We sure dodged a bullet when we didn't get single payer! (nt) Recursion Dec 2013 #108
Right You Are Since What We Have Is Insurance Reform - So Much For Hope And Change cantbeserious Dec 2013 #113
One of the reasons I keep no sensitive data on a computer that connects to the outside world. hobbit709 Dec 2013 #11
Or a phone or on any computer in the world that may have information about us jtuck004 Dec 2013 #14
Anything I truly don't want anyone to know about is kept in the safest location of all hobbit709 Dec 2013 #15
Ha. That's kinda what I was thinking. One hopes. n/t jtuck004 Dec 2013 #19
That makes no difference. All your sensitive data is on computers, and they are all spied on. Romulox Dec 2013 #22
That's not the stuff I worry about. hobbit709 Dec 2013 #23
You likely have an idiosyncratic definition of "sensitive data" then. Romulox Dec 2013 #25
Those are matters of public knowledge. hobbit709 Dec 2013 #28
You are spouting absolute gibberish, of course. SS#, Bank accounts "public knowledge"? Romulox Dec 2013 #29
those items are available if you know where and how to look. hobbit709 Dec 2013 #30
Right. That place is the bank's encrypted database. With an NSA backdoor key. Romulox Dec 2013 #31
But you're not bothered if it stays? woo me with science Dec 2013 #34
If I would be perfectly happy if it's gone, the opposite holds if it stays. hobbit709 Dec 2013 #35
Why? woo me with science Dec 2013 #41
I am more worried about a extreme power shift politically to the right .. and what they're YOHABLO Dec 2013 #89
I buy stuff and earned money in public places. I don't just drive in my back yard. JDPriestly Dec 2013 #79
Phone calls cross the public spectrum. So why care if the gov't listens? Where's the distinction? Romulox Dec 2013 #116
They don't physically follow you to your lawyer's office. It would be too obvious. JDPriestly Dec 2013 #120
If someone physically followed me to my lawyer's office, I would go to court and get a restraining JDPriestly Dec 2013 #122
Now they will be intrigued to know Rosa Luxemburg Dec 2013 #38
As best as I can make out, RSA said no to Clinton, yes to Bush in 2006, ucrdem Dec 2013 #12
You should. Maedhros Dec 2013 #68
and in other news, Inspector Renault is shocked to find gambling going at Rick's place. nt ucrdem Dec 2013 #69
Again - why is is so important to you to discourage people from paying attention Maedhros Dec 2013 #70
It's not old news to the poster. It's just rationalization in his/her part. Hissyspit Dec 2013 #74
Its a fun game they have going quakerboy Dec 2013 #99
Who's should-ing whom? ucrdem Dec 2013 #80
You dismiss the importance of the OP Maedhros Dec 2013 #81
I read the link and clarified the timeline. You're welcome. nt ucrdem Dec 2013 #82
As I said, the timeline is not important. Maedhros Dec 2013 #83
Well, that was honest. nt ucrdem Dec 2013 #84
Doesn't surprise me at all. bemildred Dec 2013 #13
K&R - This is chilling. n/t myrna minx Dec 2013 #16
More criminal activity from a government agency that nothing will be done about. sabrina 1 Dec 2013 #21
this is disgusting! shireen Dec 2013 #24
k&r for exposure. n/t Laelth Dec 2013 #26
And to think there is far more yet to be revealed, it's beyond corrupt. nt mother earth Dec 2013 #27
Thank you Reuters!! johnnyreb Dec 2013 #33
+1 The few remaining investigative journalists deserve high praise woo me with science Dec 2013 #36
Large tail wagging dog Rosa Luxemburg Dec 2013 #39
Free software is the answer. DireStrike Dec 2013 #42
And safe for child pornographers and human traffickers. Think it through. randome Dec 2013 #46
Ok, let's ban anything that a criminal can use. Think it through. DireStrike Dec 2013 #48
You appear to choose security over liberty. nm rhett o rick Dec 2013 #51
Only when there is no alternative. randome Dec 2013 #54
There is always a choice. If The Powers To Be gave you the choice of eliminating child pornography rhett o rick Dec 2013 #56
Yes they have trumad Dec 2013 #62
it's for your own good.... mike_c Dec 2013 #64
So is food. eggplant Dec 2013 #52
I don't understand your point. randome Dec 2013 #55
I don't know where to begin. eggplant Dec 2013 #66
Not really. joshcryer Dec 2013 #97
"Not really." cprise Dec 2013 #107
The poster was saying you couldn't get caught. joshcryer Dec 2013 #112
My bad. I thought you replied to #42. n/t cprise Dec 2013 #115
No worries. joshcryer Dec 2013 #117
Anonymity tools are still necessary cprise Dec 2013 #118
Absolutely! joshcryer Dec 2013 #119
Check out Qubes OS cprise Dec 2013 #110
"The NSA declined to comment." progressoid Dec 2013 #43
Right, Lara Logan is probably on it. :-D closeupready Dec 2013 #75
My rec worked - TBF Dec 2013 #44
As I pointed out in one of the other threads on this... randome Dec 2013 #45
Great post!! Major Hogwash Dec 2013 #67
Like the Composite Superman? randome Dec 2013 #93
You were asked above (and declined to answer, interestingly) if closeupready Dec 2013 #77
I don't see that it's a pertinent question. randome Dec 2013 #92
Skype joined NSA PRISM just weeks after MS bought them. n/t cprise Dec 2013 #106
Son of a bitch! hootinholler Dec 2013 #47
What a bunch of scumbags! NealK Dec 2013 #49
This is, indeed, a BIG fucking deal. nt Poll_Blind Dec 2013 #53
You say you work in "the Network Security business", but this "blows you away"? Egalitarian Thug Dec 2013 #57
It blows me away because... trumad Dec 2013 #61
No, it's just a "soap opera!" Hissyspit Dec 2013 #76
NIST recently disowned Dual EC DRBG. joshcryer Dec 2013 #98
I happen to have some knowledge in this area also AAO Dec 2013 #104
Rec'd, no surprise Corruption Inc Dec 2013 #58
K & R !!! WillyT Dec 2013 #59
This is a must read. jsr Dec 2013 #60
K&R DeSwiss Dec 2013 #63
Nothing new here. sulphurdunn Dec 2013 #65
So, let me get this straight..... Th1onein Dec 2013 #72
Don't be so hard on the NSA, Yavapai Dec 2013 #73
K&R Solly Mack Dec 2013 #78
Steven Levy strongly hinted that the NSA had already done in public key crypto back in 2001. Warren Stupidity Dec 2013 #85
Where are those who will say they don't care because it's a Dem administration? OnyxCollie Dec 2013 #86
Oh a couple of the usual have shown up. riderinthestorm Dec 2013 #88
Loyalty to the party is more important than loyalty neverforget Dec 2013 #95
Pretty clear this is assbackwards, NSA needs to be under high surveillance. The threats RKP5637 Dec 2013 #87
If you are a real programmer you would never trust a package "random" number generator jimlup Dec 2013 #90
I still have a hardware RNG PCMCIA card Recursion Dec 2013 #111
K&R me b zola Dec 2013 #94
Fortunately the open crypto community didn't adopt it. joshcryer Dec 2013 #96
I don't believe that there is any encryption publically available that the gov't can't crack. Renew Deal Dec 2013 #100
There is an audit going on for True Crypt, an open source encryption program. Kablooie Dec 2013 #102
I trust both serpent and twofish Recursion Dec 2013 #109
Exactly, the more that comes to light, the more we have to thank Snowden for Warpy Dec 2013 #101
+ 1,000,000,000... What You Said !!! - K & R !!! WillyT Dec 2013 #105
Danny Casolaro reported on this in 1990 Midnight Writer Dec 2013 #103
I think people are just confused about who/what constitute "the government" Doctor_J Dec 2013 #114
kick woo me with science Dec 2013 #121
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Wow! I work in the Netwo...»Reply #21