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Mark Klein, AT&T whistleblower who revealed NSA mass spying, has died

1557 points2 dayseff.org
kstrauser2 days ago

Nooooooo! He was my next door neighbor a few years ago, and I knew him as a person before I realized that I knew him as a hero.

His dogs were fiercely protective of his house, which is perfectly understandable. One day I saw a "sewer cleaning" van behind his house, and I have a hard time believing that's what it really was: https://honeypot.net/2025/03/12/rip-mark-klein.html

themcaffee2 days ago

That certainly is just a Sewer TV inspection van! I have a hand in writing some of the software that is run on these and processes the videos that come out of them. They all have rack mounted PCs and a monitor with a joystick to control the crawler that goes in the pipe.

jancsika2 days ago

> That certainly is just a Sewer TV inspection van!

Hee hee, I can hear the NSA now: "Dammit, who parked a sewer inspection van in the middle of our massive surveillance network?!?"

Back on the topic of indiscriminate wide-net surveillance (which I think was also the focus of the AT&T whistleblower), I quote Bruce Schneier on the Snowden leaks:

"I started this talk by naming three different programs that collect Google user data. Those programs work under different technical capabilities, different corporate alliances, and different legal authorities. You should expect the same thing to be true for cell phone data, for internet data, for everything else. When you have the budget of the NSA and you're given the choice, 'Should you do it this way or that way?' The correct answer is: both."

1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1iMFPMqboZc

tptacek2 days ago

Gotta love this site.

burnished1 day ago

Makes for a treasure trove of impromptu QA's in the comments

AceJohnny21 day ago

"Did you win the Putnam?"

Sorry u/sanj & hat-tip to u/cperciva ;)

eduction1 day ago

[flagged]

+1
echoangle1 day ago
baxtr2 days ago

[flagged]

labster2 days ago

[flagged]

smolder2 days ago

[flagged]

frugalmail2 days ago

I'm really curious then.

Why's the visible person holding the headphones tighter against his ear? What kind of sounds need to be processed by a human for sewer inspection?

To their benefit, if it was sus, they would have kept the door shut.

themcaffee2 days ago

Generally these are done in coordination with a sewer cleaning truck at the next manhole in the pipe. Very common for them to stay on the phone with each other

frugalmail2 days ago

That makes sense that they would use higher quality headphones on a radio to collaborate. Thanks for the insight!

Kinrany2 days ago

Holding the headphones tighter is never suspicious

kortilla2 days ago

> Why's the visible person holding the headphones tighter against his ear?

“Hey boss, we just finished up the job. Everything is good here, what site do you want us to go to next?”

hangs up phone

waste_monk2 days ago

Do you work for the National Sewerage Agency? :D

acomjean2 days ago
sim7c002 days ago

it would be too funny if that was a re sewage company. black vans with small print n.s.a. on it haha xD

+1
MisterTea1 day ago
ryanisnan2 days ago

I mean, if a sufficiently capable entity is interested in snooping on an individual like this, mimicking a sewer tv inspection van is a trivial endeavour. You don’t know at all what that van was doing.

tptacek2 days ago

Yes we do. It was a sewer inspection van. If it was the NSA, their van wouldn't look so goofy that people took one look at the photo and assumed it had to be an NSA van, which is what happened here. This is a bad movie plot trope: the bad guys can't simultaneously be omniscient and so dumb they're trivially outed like this, just like the real supervillain isn't going to monologue while you free yourself from the chains lowering you into the shark tank.

+4
lurk22 days ago
+2
ziddoap2 days ago
dosman331 day ago

Regardless of what the real story is on this van, lookup the Bernie S. case if you want an easy case with proof of government surveillance incompetence. Under cover Secret Service agents were photographed surveilling a 2600 meeting in a mall court, then got embarrassed when the 2600 guys posted flyers with their photographs around. Most criminals are dumb which is a good thing as I like the bad guys getting caught, but unfortunately the smart ones graduate to become politicians.

+1
ryanisnan2 days ago
sim7c002 days ago

haha well dont assume spies are some godmode infallable people. spies also are humans and can have varying degrees of freedom to express their stupidity in their work..

in our country some spies got caught drivin around with wifi pineapple in plain sight circling govt and ngo sites.

in my mind thats next level dumb stuff, but maybe they arent really hackers and think its not conspicuous, or even the opposite, they know exactly what it is but think 'oh normal people wont stop to think about this, they dont recognise such equipment'.

if you werent there, didnt know the guys in the van etc. etc. - its all just guesswork.

even public record of a sewer inspection right then and there at that time (which i kinda doubt exists) wouldnt confirm or deny what that van was really doing there.

that being said, i would _assume_ its a sewer inspection van. but thats an assumption, not a known fact.

Kinrany2 days ago

Reminds me of the joke where students prove by induction that the teacher is not actually planning a surprise test, and are surprised when there's a test the next day

highwaylights2 days ago

Now I'm starting to wonder if that guy habitually leaves the door open because he got sick of people winking at him with a wry smile every time he had to go to a job.

+1
foobarian2 days ago
rsoto22 days ago

Wouldn't it be the perfect plot to LOOK like you are a goofy badly run agency to hide the reality?

+1
hox2 days ago
potato37328421 day ago

You're thinking like a normal person. You need to think like an institution that has the entire weight of government behind them and who nobody wants to be on the wrong side of.

They either find someone who has suitable vans they can threaten with prosecution. That person then agrees to be an "informant" because that's better than losing your life to the feds and then their handler asks to borrow a van. They like this because no money needs to get spent specifically on it so it doesn't tend to get scrutinized. If they're going full above the table they register a business with the state complete with valid HVAC license or whatever and then rent a van from some company the FBI owns/runs that rents white vans and have some decals printed up. (For those inclined to do further reading, the OSINT hobbyists have done a lot to expose this workflow as it relates to aircraft so probably start there.)

autoexec2 days ago

> mimicking a sewer tv inspection van is a trivial endeavour.

Why bother mimicking a sewer inspection van when you can just buy or commandeer an actual sewer inspection van?

yaspersian2 days ago

[dead]

belter1 day ago
dgrin912 days ago

I can't tell if this is honest or sarcasm

highwaylights2 days ago

Same. I can totally buy the joystick and the robot as I've seen this done in my area, but the rack mounted PCs and the headphones makes it seem awfully like he's telling Tom Cruise which wire to cut.

tptacek2 days ago

That's almost definitely just a sewer inspection van; I found videos that company has of "multi-sensor pipeline inspections" with the same van, open, with the same equipment visible, and a bunch of people following a bunch of equipment down into a manhole.

Bluecobra2 days ago

As an aside, if you are purchasing an older home make sure you pay for a sewer line inspection. I had no idea this was a thing until a few years later when I had to replace mine and it cost ~$25,000.

edaemon2 days ago

I also have an older home and we had to repair our sewer line. It was clay pipe which had broken in a few spots and had major root intrusion. Thankfully there's some newer technology that makes it significantly cheaper in the right circumstances -- instead of digging up your street connection and laying in new pipe they can blow an epoxy-soaked liner into your existing pipe, then run a curing light through it. It ended up being less than 40% of the cost of replacement and works just as well.

tptacek2 days ago

We had ours done when we moved in a couple years ago and it was a cool snakey camera thing; they only got us out to the service line; past that would have been a lot more elaborate. Also: that video feed? Pretty gross.

As an aside: I think a lot of people here would be surprised at the amount of technology (and surveillance) that goes into setting speed limits and placing stop signs in residential areas.

+1
mhb2 days ago
silisili2 days ago

I'm always amazed by regional differences in pricing.

I had a company(wrongly) tell me I needed a new septic tank and drainfield installed, and quoted me out at 7800.

Which is way, way more work and parts than a sewer line.

genewitch2 days ago

how far is that sewer line run, 6 miles? they usually just bore it out and put a PVC sleeve inside. This is done with the cast iron sewer lines, because if they're not properly taken care of, they will rust into nothing and then you just have a suggestion of a hole through the dirt to the sewer line.

my lines are 4" PVC, if we somehow clog those, someone call me an ambulance.

+1
WWLink2 days ago
LargoLasskhyfv2 days ago

[flagged]

kstrauser2 days ago

It probably was! But given the batch of circumstances, I think it's at least plausible that it was more than that.

tptacek2 days ago

I don't think it's very plausible. The subtext of the photo is "that looks comically unlike what you'd inspect from a sewer inspection van". Well, I can tell you pretty much for sure: thats' what the inside of a sewer inspection van from that company looks like.

It took just a couple minutes (less than 5) to go look this up and find the video, for what it's worth.

Maybe it's an NSA wet team! Wet, because they do sewer inspection work. :)

+1
bawolff2 days ago
kens2 days ago

I found a video with an identical National Plant Services sewer inspection van, inspecting a large-diameter sewer line: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVXceJ3Yxnw (The photo shows van TV-230 while the video shows van TV-217, so they are different instances of the van.)

emmelaich2 days ago

I went to the Carylon website to find a list of their companies and got

> Block Reason: Access from your area has been temporarily limited for security reasons.

My area is Australia.

https://caryloncorp.com/find-a-company/

kube-system2 days ago

It’s not uncommon for site firewalls to be configured this way for business that do not do work internationally.

+2
dkga2 days ago
rkagerer2 days ago

Please obtain one of each, and do a teardown to confirm ;-)

brk2 days ago

That is a van built by Ares (I might have the spelling slightly wrong).

Funny enough I once bought a used one, stripped the sewer inspection equipment out, kept the Oman diesel generator and made it into an actual surveillance van.

The inspection robots that came with it were cool. I sold them and the other equipment I pulled out for a good chunk of cash.

itisit2 days ago

The money shot! I did not realize sewer cleaning required so much onsite IT. Are those rack units running computational fluid dynamics models to figure out how to unclog elaborate networks of pipes?

mikeyouse2 days ago

Interestingly, it seems the 'real' sewer cleaning company uses a bunch of tech to do their inspections, etc.:

https://specializedmaintenance.com/services/digital-tv-inspe...

(Which would make it an excellent van for the 3-letter spooks to copy, so not really persuasive either way)

adastra222 days ago

That’s just a display monitor and a small computer. Grandpaarent’s photo had two half racks of data center grade AV equipment.

cookiengineer2 days ago

I wanted to point out that when visiting those sites from Germany (nationalplant.com and the specializedmaintenance.com website) it shows the same unavailable geoblocked message. I wouldn't have recognized it but after opening both links in new tabs on my phone I thought I forgot to open one of the links in this thread and I double-checked it.

Are those fake companies both hosted on wordfence or something? What are the odds, huh?

johnisgood2 days ago

Upon clicking the link above, I get:

Your access to this site has been limited by the site owner

Your access to this service has been limited. (HTTP response code 503)

spaceribs2 days ago

I'd like to believe it was an inspection van: https://nationalplant.com/services/digital-tv-inspection/

I'd like to believe that, but I don't.

0cf8612b2e1e2 days ago

I am willing to believe it was innocuous. The guy already spilled the beans and has been blackballed from government access. Does he require clandestine surveillance any more? Easy enough to get “national security” reasons why all of his devices need to be tapped. More intimidating to have visible GMen watching him for life.

somenameforme2 days ago

For some reason this reminded me of Ernest Hemingway. In the later parts of his life, he began to believe he was being followed and tracked by the FBI, and these delusions eventually gave way to various other issues. Or perhaps it could be the other way around, but there is a catch here.

In either case this led to him being somewhat brutally treated with electroconvulsive therapy, repeatedly, to little effect beyond damaging his mind. A quote from on that was, "What is the sense of ruining my head and erasing my memory, which is my capital, and putting me out of business? It was a brilliant cure, but we lost the patient." He would kill himself not long thereafter.

The interesting thing is that the FBI was following and tracking him, and simply stayed silent as this all played out.

kstrauser2 days ago

That very well could be what it was. If it had been anything other than:

1. Spotless.

2. Parked right behind Klein's (and by extension, my) house.

3. Skittish, such that they closed the door right after I took the picture and drove off less than a minute later without pulling any gear up out of a manhole or something.

then that's probably what I'd chalk it up to. I am absolutely not 100% convinced it was, say, an undercover NSA van.

And yet, that's exactly what I thought it was from the moment I saw the gear racks and monitors inside.

therealcamino1 day ago

Here's the thing, there's never going to be convincing evidence for you to decide that it wasn't what your hunch said it was. That's the nature of suspicion.

You could Google "national plant services van" on image search and find similar vans, and that the company is owned by is the Carylon Corporation, with revenue of $300m/year -- but that couldn't convince you that a government agency (it wouldn't be the NSA unless they're violating the law) didn't borrow it or copy it.

You could read that their services include "Digital CCTV inspection. Laser profiling. Sonar pipeline inspection." but that couldn't convince you that the monitor+joystick and other equipment is needed for sewer inspection, because you already believe it is for surveillance. (The irony being that the kind of mass surveillance Mark Klein exposed, or Snowden exposed, means there's absolutely no need to park a truck outside someone's house. You can track who they're communicating with already, and you can subvert their own devices to listen in, instead of parking a van out front for their neighbors to notice.)

You could look at who has the contract to inspect sewers in your town -- it's public record. But you could still choose to believe that the federal government did the same check, and went out and got an identical truck so as to be less suspicious (although in this thread half the people are saying "that's too clean/fancy/technological to be a sewer inspection van!" so if they did it would have backfired.)

Was he under surveillance? Who knows. Does this truck prove anything either way? No. Everybody is going to leave this thread with whatever hunch they came in with.

bunabhucan2 days ago

We have a manhole outside our house and it was inspected like this. I work with GIS for electric and gas companies. I used to keep small ear protectors in the Burley so me and the kids could go up and ask "diggermen" about holes in the road.

Xcel used directional drilling for a plastic gas main down our street and then did sewer intrusion inspections after. A neighbor had their sewer line pierced. It's a hazard because it isn't detectible until the sewer line blocks and then the blade thingy the plumber uses can sever the plastic gas service lateral in the sewer line.

There is a gas overflow valve (like a ball bearing that too much flow can push in to block the pipe) back at the service tee fitting on the main. If that doesn't work then you could have a gas explosion in the sewer or house. It happens and it is bad. Clients give presentations on these projects at conferences (e.g. use GIS to combine the sewer and gas topology to identify where the crossings are.)

That truck isn't for inspecting your sewer, it's for inspecting every junction on that sewer line, 8 hours per day, every day. They will have a map and linear reference showing where every other underground utility (fiber/gas/electricity) intersects it and be recording and cross referencing it in case it needs to be produced in court at a later date.

People are conflating do-you-need-a-$30k-sewer-line "plumber inspection" with this service. This kind of inspection is more like the "assuming tort liability" role that the companies like sitewise serve. Even with the robot done and packed, the operator in the truck was working for a bit, making copies of the videos and tagging them and stuff. If your gas main piercing a sewer causes explosions the settlements can be in the tens of millions.

BigUtility uses trenchless directional drilling to poke a drill horizontally down the street and then laterally to each house saving millions of dollars in open trench costs. The gotcha is that they can't see where they are digging and thus can burn, electrocute, explode or kill taxpayers. The inspections help with sewer maintenance / cleaning but the big money/concern is on the liability for cross bored gas lines.

The robot (the one I saw outside my house) was over $10k and kitting out the whole truck with a crane and the monitors and reels was $90k. They hosed the robot down completely with high pressure water from the truck once it came back out and checked it over for damage. That and the fact that the van guys typically don't go in the sewer is why the van is clean. It's an "expensive equipment" van, not a plumbers van. For comparison the fiber optic inspection a plumber might use is more like $2k and you can rent them.

Depending on the job they can inflate a balloon at the next manhole upstream or even pump/route the sewer through a temp pipe on the street surface (looks like a big fire hose) from the previous manhole to the one after where the van is. That needs 3 crews plus flaggers for traffic. They use a radio to coordinate with the other crews.

With the line blocked for inspection the robot typically just has a film of that nasty sewer grease on it.

They told me the door stays open even in winter because the crane operator / tether wrangler guy is right by an open sewer which is a fall and methane hazard.

The job isn't quick - there might be 300 feet / 100m of line to the robot near the next manhole. Unless they were just looking at one service main, if they were able to leave they must have been winding up already.

The more important question is: is there a sewer manhole where they parked?

If we can surveil people with drones from miles away, what technology are the FBI using that requires guys physically in a van outside a house? If you were going to park outside, why would you use a method that usually blocks the street?

I dug up a pic. If you look carefully you can see two tethers, one for the 4 wheel metal sled that moves it and a thicker one for the camera and lights on the "head" part. The crew used the controls to move the head around until it was looking at my kids and they could see themselves on the second screen (one screen faced out the door.) The kids thought it was cool: https://i.imgur.com/2ltz8bj.png

Story about a fatal explosion caused by horizontal directional drilling piercing a gas main:

https://www.cnn.com/2013/03/13/us/missouri-gas-explosion/ind...

I can't find any conference papers but the industry term to google is "crossbore" and this blog post has some pictures of gas service laterals piercing sewers:

https://blog.envirosight.com/sewer-school-preventing-cross-b...

ESRI page on using GIS to identify the potential crossbores and assign them 90 day inspection windows to try to detect it before the sewer backs up:

https://community.esri.com/t5/gas-and-pipeline-blog/arcgis-f...

+2
Boogie_Man2 days ago
rkagerer2 days ago

Conversely, makes me think my IT truck with all its network cables and racks, needs a toilet.

nzeid2 days ago

This whole sewer inspection thing must be particularly hilarious to the people performing the inspection. "Yo dude, we're officially spies! hi5"

southernplaces72 days ago

"sewer cleaning van"... This might be apt. The feds and their many tactics..... Flowers By Irene https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_HSNMLfhFM

HexPhantom2 days ago

That must have been surreal.. knowing him first as just a neighbor, then realizing the weight of what he did

nabakin2 days ago

I don't think I've ever seen the inside of an actual undercover van before. Crazy picture. Do we know anything else about them?

lukan2 days ago

I would not jump to conclusions so soon.

A) I would question why they would do the effort of still doing surveillance on him

B) if they do, they are usually so smart to keep the door closed

C) like others have mentioned, sewer cleaning comes with a lot of tech (I assume remote controlled machines)

throwaway2016062 days ago

I would think that anyone working in a sewer inspection van would keep the door open because it is highly likely that sewer inspection vans smell like, well, sewer.

geraldwhen2 days ago

If the van is loaded with equipment, or even if it isn’t, theft and robbery are common in most of the US. You can’t leave a van door open and not be extremely vigilant.

adastra222 days ago

One thing for certain: that is absolutely NOT a sewer inspection van. Seriously, you ever worked trades? It is way too clean on the interior and not fitted for working dirty jobs, to say nothing of the visible surveillance workstation.

Velofellow1 day ago

yes, and that looks pretty much just like some of the vans I've been in the back of for CCTV sewer inspections.

serial_dev2 days ago

While I can honestly believe both (it was a surveillance van vs it was a sewer maintenance company), do you think that the intimidation and surveillance of Snowden or Assange won’t last until the end of their lives?

londons_explore2 days ago

I feel like a real undercover van would have a policy about not opening the side door during a mission too...

orblivion2 days ago

Flowers By Irene

taosx2 days ago

This is crazy.. you guys are focused on vans and mini stories when all his sacrifice and that of thousand if not more americans was snuffed.

`Congress intervened by passing the FISA Amendments Act which, in part, granted “retroactive immunity” to the telecommunications carriers for their involvement in the NSA spying programs. This massive grant of immunity for past violations of multiple state and federal laws protecting communications privacy was unprecedented.`

kstrauser2 days ago

Be the change you want to see. I mentioned the vans and his dogs because Mark wasn't some random picture on the Internet, but the nice guy a couple houses down who talked about the volunteer work he did for harbor seals[0]. He was a real person we liked a lot and I thought others might enjoy hearing about his noisy, overprotective golden retrievers.

But yes, he was also a personal hero to me before I met him in real life, and we should absolutely still be talking about the things he uncovered and what happened to them afterward. Please do tell those stories, too.

[0]https://goldengatebirdalliance.org/blog-posts/wild-ly-succes...

jll292 days ago

Where are today's technicians that are prostituting themselves for the communications companies around the world that this can still be happening?

Man up and remove those splitters, cables, show us the drawings, reports and PPT slides!

R.I.P. Mark

+1
lukan2 days ago
ziddoap2 days ago

Mark Klein was not some mythical hero, but a real person who did heroic things. It's nice to be reminded of that. If anything, I find it inspiring.

HexPhantom2 days ago

That kind of courage is rare, and it makes his story even more powerful. Real people can make a difference

leotravis101 day ago

Indeed, something that we sadly lack today. We need people like Mark more than ever, not less.

HexPhantom2 days ago

He risked everything, and in the end, the system closed ranks to protect itself. Retroactive immunity was basically a way of saying - "Yep, it was illegal, but it doesn't matter."

deactivatedexp2 days ago

[dead]

shadowgovt2 days ago

You have to remember that half, possibly more than half, of the country is more than okay with what the NSA was doing and is doing.

It's not at all surprising that Congress would indemnify people for, more or less, doing what Congress authorized them to do. If we don't like it, we could consider, maybe not voting the same people into that Congress. Over. And over. And over. And over. And over. And over.

A full 24 Senators and 63 Representatives have held their seats for over 36 years. That's not what you'd expect of a citizenship that was actually upset about being spied upon by their government.

llmthrow1032 days ago

It's obviously not a problem of electing the wrong people. There are enough checks and balances in the system to ensure that there is no change forthcoming.

shadowgovt2 days ago

The system is, indeed, set up to minimize revolutionary churn. The tilt that we're seeing right now towards fascism and white nationalism has been some 40 years in the making. It takes a lot of organization to tilt the whole thing.

This is a feature, not a bug. The system is architected, when something is controversial, default to no motion.

timewizard2 days ago

> You have to remember that half, possibly more than half, of the country is more than okay with what the NSA was doing and is doing.

I doubt this. I'd also be interested to see if those people actually know, on any real level, what the NSA was actually doing.

> If we don't like it, we could consider, maybe not voting the same people into that Congress. Over. And over. And over. And over. And over. And over.

They so reliably do the opposite of what people want and yet continue to win. You don't find this at all odd and you put it down to lack of consideration on the part of the electorate.

> That's not what you'd expect of a citizenship that was actually upset about being spied upon by their government.

The joys of being old enough to remember the Church Committee, The House Select Committee on Assassinations, The JFK Records Review Board. PEOPLE ARE CLEARLY NOT OKAY WITH THIS. Yet those who carry water for the deep state are unimpeded by this. Please see this, or at least, don't repeat simple falsehoods about the electorate.

It's like coming across a drowning man and laughing in his face about his predicament.

+1
sethaurus2 days ago
georgeplusplus2 days ago

So glad you pointed this out. people are numb to these sort of news now a days.

Reminds me of George Carlins words, “ It’s never gonna get any better. Don’t look for it. Be happy with what you got.”

kleiba2 days ago

This is the sentence I was looking for:

> While we were able to use his evidence to make some change, both EFF and Mark were ultimately let down by Congress and the Courts, which have refused to take the steps necessary to end the mass spying even after Edward Snowden provided even more evidence of it in 2013.

Do you have to be a cynic to pretty much have expected this?

fsflover2 days ago

Unfortunately this spying is exactly what all the government wants, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_purpose_of_a_system_is_wha...

shadowgovt1 day ago

It's also hard to make the case that it isn't, ultimately, what the people want, by "the standard you walk past is the standard you accept" principle.

It's been nearly twenty years. If Americans were deeply, deeply bothered by the government spying on them, they'd have burned down this government by now. At most charitable, this speaks to a deep ignorance or apathy in the American electorate and American citizenship. Or a general anxiety about what "the other people" are doing that exceeds their anxiety about what the government can do with panopticon surveillance.

I think, in general, hackers vastly overestimate the average human concern or sensitivity to this kind of thing.

fsflover1 day ago

> deep ignorance or apathy in the American electorate

Which party is against spying? The only possible action is probably protesting. This doesn't work well, e.g.: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_enforcement_and_the_Occupy.... And spying is used against the protestors, too: https://www.aclu.org/news/national-security/spying-occupy.

+1
shadowgovt1 day ago
LoganDark1 day ago

> If Americans were deeply, deeply bothered by the government spying on them, they'd have burned down this government by now.

Right now stuff is happening that does deeply bothers Americans, and what do they do? They walk around with signs, they file legal papers, and maybe some other forms of peaceful, albeit useless, protest... a lot of other countries truly would be burning down the government right now if something like Elon happened there, but so far America has just been saying they don't want it, in as many ways as possible, but while still continuing to fully let it happen.

+1
fshr1 day ago
gosub1001 day ago

Victim blaming. "How dare you get victimized and not do more to stop it?"

shadowgovt1 day ago

Victims have to be victimized first. Most surveilled Americans feel about as victimized as a well-kept dog.

basisword1 day ago

How close are we to “bypassing” a lot of this spying when some of the most popular communications platforms (e.g. WhatsApp) are end to end encrypted? Will the tech eventually solve the problem in a convenient way, at least for those who care?

kelipso1 day ago

Really, the likelihood of all of them having backdoors is almost 100%.

dcposch23 hours ago

WhatsApp is end-to-end-to-server encryption.

They have a nicely implemented E2E protocol. This is operationally convenient: Meta can accurately say that they don't store WhatsApp messages, so fewer access requests go to them. And I'm sure it's nice for engineer morale, too.

However, the app makes it semi-mandatory to turn on backups. If you say no, it keeps nagging you. If you always say no, you are in the 0.1% and everyone you talk to has backups enabled, so all of your conversations are helpfully backed up anyway, just not for you :)

These backups go to Google Drive or iCloud. You can draw your own conclusions about who has access and who handles the LE/IC requests.

_aavaa_1 day ago

Not at all. They are one bill away (look at the UK).

We cannot solve political problems by ignoring them and retreating into code.

Spooky231 day ago

Pegasus suggests no, and the UK already killed this with BlackBerry years ago.

infinghxsg2 days ago

[dead]

7e1 day ago

No, you're not a cynic. The EFF takes exquisite pains to hide from you the fact that these programs spied on foreigners, which is the job of the NSA. Thus, they are necessary and proper, and perfectly legal.

The EFF is a propaganda platform. You shouldn't take its claims at face value.

amiga3861 day ago

Don't give us this "perfectly legal" crap. To remind you: the NSA killed off ThinThread (that explicitly took care to avoid wiretapping US citizens' data) in favour of Trailblazer, which grabs ALL data, ALL the time, including ALL US citizens' data.

Their explicit intent was to break the law. They broke the law. Then Congress retroactively let them get away with it. They're still breaking the law today.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThinThread

> The "change in priority" consisted of the decision made by the director of NSA General Michael V. Hayden to go with a concept called Trailblazer, despite the fact that ThinThread was a working prototype that claimed to protect the privacy of U.S. citizens. ThinThread was dismissed and replaced by the Trailblazer Project, which lacked the privacy protections

showerst1 day ago

Foriegners like the US citizen spouses and (ex)girlfriends of NSA employees?

https://www.reuters.com/article/world/uk/nsa-staff-used-spy-...

throw-qqqqq1 day ago

Let’s not confuse the fact that they are only legally allowed to spy on foreigners, with what they actually do.

I have no idea how you effectively filter mass wiretaps in fibre raw data and exclude americans. It’s impossible to not catch some/lots of domestic data as well..

kmeisthax1 day ago

So what you're saying is that the NSA wiretapping is OK because they're not doing it to you? That's really dumb.

Currently, the US is in a number of intelligence sharing arrangements in which countries ask other countries to spy on their own citizens for them. e.g. if the NSA can't spy on someone because they know they're American, they ask GCHQ to do it for them. And vice versa. This is why human rights need to be as universal as possible, because otherwise you just ask your buddy to do what you can't legally do yourself.

"We only spy on foreigners" is a water sandwich.

Furthermore, it is NSA policy to treat all encrypted traffic as foreign, and to archive it forever until it can be decrypted and searched to determine if it was legal to decrypt and search it. In other words, "we only spy on foreigners" is a guilty until proven innocent policy.

"Necessary and proper" is decided by a security apparatus with a conflict of interest. Nobody voted for this, the executive branch just decided to do it. As for legality, well, I'll give you that Congress retroactively made the spying legal. On the other hand, the US Constitution has a pretty clear restriction on the use of state power in order to search and seize. Being a foreigner is not in and of itself necessary suspicion to justify searching through all their shit, because being from another country is not a crime.

nathas1 day ago

[flagged]

madrox2 days ago

Had the privilege of watching him receive an award from EFF years ago at ETech. Gave a brief speech. Struck me as a gentle man who really did what he thought was right and for no other purpose. It took moral strength to do what he did. I hope he rests easy.

aio22 days ago

Damn.

I don't know if this started the whole movement or whatever you'd call it for this push towards privacy and the general public knowing about it, but it helped a lot. Before him releasing info about room 641A and whatever else, there really wasn't definitive evidence of any government spying and tampering, and either with the intention of starting this movement or simply letting people know, he was a big push in the right direction.

tldr: he's a w

DoingIsLearning2 days ago

> started the whole movement or whatever you'd call it for this push towards privacy

I don't really like this framing because it makes it sound like if you care for privacy you are some form of fringe advocate.

We should always try to reframe:

Would you be ok with government employees or law enforcement indiscriminately opening your letters? Ask any senior and the answer is a clear no.

So why are we discussing this as if privacy is entirely optional as soon as you change medium from written letters to emails, sms, instant message?

pjc501 day ago

You can make this work in the other direction:

"Would you be ok with government employees or law enforcement indiscriminately opening the letters of illegal immigrants?"

You'd immediately get the answer yes. Of course, in order to find the illegal immigrant letters they have to open _all_ of the letters.

People will give law enforcement huge amounts of power because they think it will be used against groups they don't like.

cj1 day ago

I wonder what percent of Americans would trade their privacy to bring their monthly cell phone bill from $100/mo to $0/mo in exchange for sharing texts and emails with a telecom company.

I suspect the percentage would be surprisingly high.

Unfortunately normal people don’t really care that much about privacy (even if we all think everyone should).

1oooqooq1 day ago

you mean, exactly like most the public on this site did when moving from Gmail and abandoning their isp provided email?

+1
lotsofpulp1 day ago
shadowgovt1 day ago

It's also interesting to float the thought experiment of what Gen Z would say about this question because the online norms are so different.

"Hey, sometimes people try to send bombs through the mail. Would you be okay with the government opening 1% of packages, inspecting them, and re-sealing them to make sure they're safe?

... what if they threw in a coupon so the next package mailed is free?"

(... and suddenly I've discovered of my own psyche that if those "The TSA inspected this bag" slips included a coupon for a free coffee, the visceral response to their presence would do a 180. "Oh, sweet! Free coffee!").

genewitch2 days ago

not only was there not "definitive evidence"; if you said that the companies did that sort of thing you were called a conspiracy theorist whackaloon. oddly 85% of the general public suddenly was like "well of course they spy on email" after all this came out.

rcxdude2 days ago

That's not the general sentiment I recall. There was a general sense of 'the government's probably watching' (along with who knows who else: early internet protocols like email really aren't resistant to snooping by more or less anyone), just no public info on specifically how (and you might get some disapproving looks if you claimed any specific approach without evidence).

abecedarius21 hours ago

It depends. If you were a hacker who'd read Bamford and the news from whistleblowers like Klein, talking with other hackers, that general sense was common knowledge. But if the topic came up in conversation with, like, the guy you're subletting a room from in NYC, you could get a very skeptical look.

(I wonder if these people remembered those conversations after Snowden.)

philipkglass2 days ago

I'm sure it depended on the audience, but I and others [0] guessed at broad electronic surveillance well before the 641A revelations. I was never called a conspiracy theorist for it either. In the 1990s if you had read Bamford's The Puzzle Palace [1] (published in 1982) and observed the government's legal fight against Zimmermann's PGP encryption software [2], you could make an educated guess close to the truth. If you phrased it as "I'm sure that the government is spying on everything," that went beyond the realm of what could be proved then, but airing suspicions about broad government snooping never elicited strong denials in my experience.

[0] Like the people on the Cypherpunks mailing list

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Puzzle_Palace

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phil_Zimmermann#Arms_Export_Co...

genewitch2 days ago

> [1] (published in 1982) and observed the government's legal fight against Zimmermann's PGP encryption software [2], you could make an educated guess close to the truth.

what percentage of the US population do you reckon could "make an educated guess" about the technological capabilities of the US government in 2002?

please remember this is a technology discussion forum, not a general public forum.

> Zimmermann's PGP encryption software

"PG what? Encryption? like the cryptkeeper? I like hans zimmer music"

+1
zmgsabst2 days ago
nvarsj2 days ago

It's pretty depressing how society went from "that would never happen" to general apathy.

potato37328421 day ago

That's a really charitable way of framing the fact that a 15% minority screeching about "the government would never" and "but there's no proof" was able to control the narrative despite people generally having doubt or believing otherwise privately right up until the point that the proof was public record and so ironclad that even mainstream media had to report on it.

(I assume the 85% number is made up, but for whatever the number is the point stands)

lern_too_spel2 days ago

The really odd thing is that 85% of the general public will say "well of course they spy on email" even today, after Snowden's leaks showed that the Obama administration had shut that down.

serial_dev2 days ago

It’s really odd, indeed, that people think some reorg and a smooth politician didn’t in fact change the very nature of the surveillance companies.

lern_too_spel7 hours ago

The leaks didn't talk about a reorg. They said the program had been shut down.

rl32 days ago

Setting aside the fact that the leaks you're referring to are over a decade old at this point, they also established that GCHQ buffered the entirety of the UK's internet traffic for 72 hours, bit for bit.

If you think there's no collection on e-mail, rather than just legal shell games being played with terminology and various compartments, then I've got a bridge to sell you.

In fact, the bridge is made of metadata and nothing else.

+1
lern_too_spel2 days ago
somenameforme2 days ago

What? No it didn't, not at all. The leaks clearly showed email as being one of the many things being directly surveilled. Here is one of the many slides directly acknowledging as much. [1]

If you mean the rhetoric around it, then yeah - politicians lie, especially when engaging in what would be seen as deeply unpopular behavior. This isn't a shock. I assure you the admin that passed indefinite detention without charge or trial [2] wasn't some crusader for civil rights. Obama was just ridiculously charismatic and could sell a drowning man water, but he was no different than the rest in behavior.

[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRISM#/media/File:PRISM_Collec...

[2] - https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/president-obama-signs-in...

+3
autoexec2 days ago
+2
lern_too_spel2 days ago
mulmen1 day ago

The Fourth Amendment seems like a more appropriate starting point. Most people call the “privacy movement” “the American revolution“.

zombot2 days ago

> who risked civil liability and criminal prosecution to help expose a massive spying program that violated the rights of millions of Americans.

That's how corrupt the system is. You get punished for revealing crimes against everyone.

Who is going to erect statues for him and people like him?

PostOnce2 days ago

We could do it. We could fundraise to cast a bronze of him and put it anywhere we like. It wouldn't take that many people or that much time, in the grand scheme of things.

Actually, the world might be a nicer place with more statues and less goofy abstract modernist art in public for even more money than bronzes.

krunck1 day ago

Put it right in the middle of Trump's "National Garden of American Heroes"[1] He'd love that. Ha!

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Garden_of_American_He...

hulitu18 hours ago

> Who is going to erect statues for him and people like him?

Usually, one has to kill some people to have a statue erected for him. /s

rsingel2 days ago

R.I.P.

He was a true and brave whistleblower.

I had the luck of getting a hold of his docs when they were under court seal, and we published them at Wired.

Only met and interviewed him later. He was a gentle man with a moral compass. A rarity even among whistleblowers.

The world is poorer without him.

HexPhantom2 days ago

A gentle man with a strong moral compass

AtomBalm2 days ago

He revealed unlawful surveillance years prior to and of the same gravity as Snowden, but only one became a celebrity. I would love to know the reason for that.

kstrauser2 days ago

I say this without intending to denigrate Snowden at all: Klein's situation was less messy. Snowden had a top secret clearance and vowed to safeguard all the secrets he came across. Klein was just a regular guy doing regular work for a regular company when he saw something strange. That doesn't mean I think Snowden was wrong, just that there's a ton of room for people to say "I agree with him but he shouldn't have done that because he swore not to". Klein didn't have those obligations.

nabla92 days ago

Snowden explained it well. There were four other whistleblowers besides Snowden and Klein.

(1) Russ Tice: USAF intelligence analyst

(2) William Binney: NSA Technical Director.

(3) Thomas Tamm: DOJ lawyer

(4) Thomas A. Drake: senior executive at NSA

Each of them was a senior position relative to Snowden and Klein and all these cases were shut down. What change Snowden had to do traditionally by the book whistleblow or tiny traditional leak. He made the conscious decision to take the information so that they could not shut him down, and make a scene from outside the US (Hong Kong) so that there would be time to talk to the press.

Snowden made a political crime that was morally justified. It was not self serving. It turns out that Americans don't care but at least he made a splash.

anonym292 days ago

Snowden also swore an oath to uphold the constitution, including the fourth amendment that the NSA was illegally violating (one NSA crime) and covering up (second NSA crime), including by lying to congress (third NSA crime), as well as to protect America from domestic enemies, like the kind of traitors who'd come up with a secret plan to violate the constitutional rights of the entire country and lie about it to congress.

Thank goodness he took his oath more seriously than the "I was just following orders" crowd. We know from WW2 that "I was just following orders" is not a legitimate excuse to help facilitate grave atrocities, like all of those other NSA employees did every single day, in violation of their own oaths that they each swore.

kstrauser2 days ago

You won't get any argument from me. I agree. And even in agreement, I still say that there's a much larger grey area in Snowden's case. We can and should discuss whether his actions were justified. I think they are. But I can at least appreciate that people who disagree have legitimate reasons to see it otherwise.

Klein's case didn't come with all that other baggage.

+1
axus2 days ago
+1
anonym292 days ago
bb882 days ago

I don't recall agreeing to any oath like that when I applied for a US clearance. I just recall the NDA.

I may have pledged allegiance to the US flag when I was a kid, but that wasn't the same as taking an oath of elected office to uphold the constitution.

worik2 days ago

> grave atrocities

Tapping phones is immoral and unethical, IMO.

But a long was from the "grave atrocities" that were uncovered at the end of WWII

+1
anonym292 days ago
serial_dev2 days ago

“I was just following orders” is only a bad excuse if your side loses.

shadowgovt2 days ago

And now he's nice and cozy in a country that is busy invading its neighbor... But one that the US President has himself cozied up to the leadership of as of late.

It's an odd world that makes odd bedfellows. One wonders depending on how the next four years go if Snowden could even catch a pardon.

... or if he did, the Russians would even let him leave.

marxisttemp2 days ago

Likewise, Manning got pardoned when her release was clearly messier and less targeted than Snowden’s. There isn’t much logic to these things.

To be clear, all 3 are personal heroes of mine.

psunavy032 days ago

[flagged]

perching_aix2 days ago

In a parallel universe there must be a world where those choices of his serve as a reminder that the world, and the people within it, are not nearly as simple and convenient as narratives and principles would suggest.

Let's think it through. Say you're pretty passionately pissed off about what you directly observe (in this case spying), so you go full hero and do what he did. Then consequences come and the only lifeline you're given is... Russian.

You tasted the reality for a bit there, that was rough, but luckily you're safe and out. But wait, now you're being compelled into becoming an asset. And no lifelines are around anymore. Suddenly you realize that the reality of the stronger dog fucking never disappeared, and that choice you made was much more grave than you thought, and there's no real going back.

And it doesn't matter if this is what actually happened to Snowden, what matters is that this is a very reasonable possibility. People are not fairy tales, and especially not perfectly consistent in their thoughts and beliefs. Not spatially, not temporally. He may have at some point thought that doing the noble thing was his choice, but wouldn't now. He may have been swayed in other ways since, and now takes both stances at the same time, regardless how contradictory they are.

The real lie here is treating people larger than life. One can appreciate a result without subscribing to everything the person ever did or does, or labelling them one way or another.

ifyoubuildit2 days ago

Can you really not think of any (charitable) reasons?

+2
booleandilemma2 days ago
+1
deciplex2 days ago
+4
CamperBob22 days ago
anonym292 days ago

[flagged]

tehwebguy2 days ago

Probably because one absconded half-successfully and became sort of stateless. That's a way more exciting story!

trescenzi2 days ago

I’m watching Person of Interest for the first time. It’s interesting watching it today now that the premise, minus 100% accurate crime prediction, is largely a forgone conclusion. It was produced after Klein but before Snowden and does a good job exploring the expansion of surveillance and just how motivated the government is to have a system that tracks everyone. Of course it’s fiction but it’s a fun watch that asks a lot of good questions.

ziddoap2 days ago

I really enjoyed that show. Such a shame it was cancelled! Despite critical acclaim (in later seasons, at least), it apparently wasn't profitable enough.

I actually tried to find a legal way to rewatch it the other day, but all of my current subscriptions list it with "rights expired" or some such.

michh1 day ago

It's weird how a lot of stuff in that show I dismissed as unrealistic techno-babble back then, now is very real.

LinuxBender2 days ago

I enjoyed that show enough that I was willing to put up with Amazon's "Freevee" ads because they would not just let me buy the show. I've never done that with any other shows.

choult2 days ago

Oh dear... You should hear some of the stories about Jim Caviezel[0]...

On second thought, maybe make up your own mind before you dip into that.

[0] https://open.spotify.com/episode/1euFlDCuryFSzMw6BjQCWA

trescenzi2 days ago

Oh yea I always read about actors during commercial break. Was a bit startled when reading his Wikipedia.

INTPenis2 days ago

Rest in peace sweet prince. I'll never forget this discovery, it was probably my first realization that whatever is possible technically is most likely being done somewhere to exert power over people.

And in this case most people in tech knew you could split a network backbone, and if you can do it then most likely someone is doing it. But Mark actually brought it into the light.

And that's what we can't forget in 2025, that whatever is possible technically is most likely being done by someone somewhere. Today it would be using AI to oppress people, track citizens, predict crimes, accuse people of crimes they might commit, or whatever your imagination anchored in technical reality can picture.

motohagiography2 days ago

A lot of influential people were quietly radicalized by Klein's disclosures and they took that forward in their ventures, careers, and lives. Change takes time, and almost two decades later, I think we are seeing the results of what those early voices in the wilderness were calling out.

I hope on the other side of current bureaucratic reforms we can make a monument that includes Klein and the other surveillance whistleblowers whose disclosures, and specifically whose courage, turned the popular tide against government overreach.

dang2 days ago

Related. There were probably other relevant threads over the years—can anyone find some?

Room 641A - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41507188 - Sept 2024 (5 comments)

The secrets of Room 641A (2008) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38305501 - Nov 2023 (4 comments)

Room 641A - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32984515 - Sept 2022 (2 comments)

Room 641A - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23350120 - May 2020 (70 comments)

Room 641A - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12515724 - Sept 2016 (75 comments)

Room 641A - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5847166 - June 2013 (44 comments)

rogerallen2 days ago
rogerallen2 days ago

and only 1 link still works. 19 years is a long time to the internet.

samstave2 days ago

Thats awesome.

See my post below -- I have been tracking Eschelon since the early 90s...

Guess what NSA router backdoors have become (mobile phones with socialifelog media apps on them)

---

And like @tptacek said

>>If it was the NSA, their van wouldn't look so goofy that people took one look at the photo and assumed it had to be an NSA van, which is what happened here. This is a bad movie plot trope: the bad guys can't simultaneously be omniscient and so dumb they're trivially outed like this, just like the real supervillain isn't going to monologue while you free yourself from the chains lowering you into the shark tank.

---

Love that but, I do think that both is true...

Look incompetent so they don't think you're competent (Stuxnet/DUQU)

Scoundreller2 days ago

The Onion was on this a looong time ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJ380SHZvYU

samstave2 days ago

:-) thank you for that. DOPE

samstave2 days ago

I knew I would be in that 2013 thread...

I mistook the building, but I do remember details that Twitter had a direct fiber connection to that room...

Also, we have a LOT of evidence of prior NSA backdoors and interceptions...

in 1998 I had to hire a CSIE (cisco expert) (like a 3 digit uuid) to help me recover a router password from infra I inherited... and during the password reset procedure on a 3640 - he was telling me how "the NSA requires Cisco to put in back doors into all the routers)

((The passwd BTW was Feet4Monkey))

--

Then recall Carnivore? (and its predecessor eschelon - and a whole bunch of reveals) -- what was interesting was that the only company to refuse to install Carnivor was Earthlink.net (ISP) -- and the reason they stated they wouldnt put in Carnivore, was because they stated they already had their user tracking system (They were owned by the Mormon Church) ((and for some reason Whoopi Goldberg was one of their large notable investors))

And recall how they stated that the NSA specifically likes to hire Mormons?

And recall North First Street DC that was purchased by Cerberus Group which was the ~Bush-Cabal hedgie, and the reason they bought it because it housed MAE WEST and they wanted to inject NBAR/Surveilling into it -- once they completed that, they sold it off again (To one of their subs, IIRC)

I hate that I am getting old and I start to forget a lot of the malfeasance I have witnessed in my ~30+ years in SV.

efeamzaov2 days ago

[flagged]

codetrotter2 days ago

I find it hilarious that this spam bot literally chose a comment by dang to respond with spam to.

Doubly so when the account has one comment 14 days ago where someone else tried to mention dang to have him see the spam :D

Fortune favors the bold, they say. But I think this takes “being bold” just a tad too literally lol.

xyst2 days ago

NSA and AT&T (telecom in general?) caught with their pants down not just once, but twice.

All of this heavily publicized yet here we are today with privacy being an afterthought in everyone’s mind.

I hate to say it but the private corporations and state have really made most of the population complacent with wide net surveillance — cameras everywhere, privacy non-existent, “kyc”, “selfies”, social media, big tech creating profiles of users, and data brokerages selling and buying “anonymized” profiles.

emmelaich2 days ago

Related, I'm rewatching "Enemy of the State" a 1998 film about government surveillance and assassinations and the deep state.

Underrated in my opinion.

Has Gene Hackman (also topical, which is why I am rewatching) and Will Smith.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enemy_of_the_State_(film)

emmelaich2 days ago

Pretty cool is that they mention Keyhole a few times. Keyhole (later Google Earth) was created a year later, in 1999.

willvarfar2 days ago

The US camera surveillance satellites are called Key Hole.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_Hole

defrost2 days ago

As willvarfar points out, there's a satellite system from the 1960s and quite a gap from there until Keyhole Inc.

  Keyhole Inc. specialized in geospatial data visualization applications. The name "Keyhole" paid homage to the original KH reconnaissance satellites, also known as Corona satellites, which were operated by the U.S. between 1959 and 1972. 
~ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Earth#History

Many companies operated in the gap, one in public was ERMapper (Earth Resources Mapping) which had Google Map like displays in the early 1990s and was mainly focussed on geospatial computing - stitching and correcting air and sat images, multispectral data with nonstandard nonlinear geocords, magnetic and radiometric displays and corrections, etc. Other such suites existed at that time.

Keyhole|Google Earth was not the first, it was the one that went very widely public.

neilv1 day ago

Side comment about suboptimal HN commenting or UI...

This post is about someone noteworthy dying, but the top relevant comment is followed by over a dozen screenfulls of text about a sewer inspection van, before you get to anything else.

If you start paging through it, do you close the browser tab in annoyance before you get to any further discussion of the person and why they're noteworthy?

> 4. Mark Klein, AT&T whistleblower who revealed NSA mass spying, has died (eff.org) 1404 points by leotravis10 20 hours ago | flag | hide | 306 comments

0xffff21 day ago

Are you aware that you can collapse comments chains?

neilv1 day ago

Yes, or go up and hit "next", but I don't normally have to on HN.

With the mouse-over-to-and-click-on-tiny-gray-link UI, it's usually faster to autoscroll/scrollwheel or hit PgDn.

So if you start doing the usual way, and it's not working, that's frustration with the post.

And is it worth your time to figure out where to prune/skip within the tree, when you have to go navigate to the tree links. And probably have hide/next/prev multiple times, to get past the entire tree from where you realize.

If people had more UI-efficient tree operations (like in past threading newsreaders), and knew how to use them, then it would be easier.

But with what we have, we can get important posts where important comments are effectively suppressed, for many readers, just by putting a dozen pages of frustrating distraction in front of them.

fsflover13 hours ago

This is why I downvoted the first comment.

DannyBee2 days ago

RIP - truly someone who tried to make the world better.

HexPhantom2 days ago

Mark Klein was just a guy doing his job... until he saw something he couldn't ignore. He didn't have to speak up. He could have walked away, lived his life, and let someone else deal with it. But he didn't. Rest in peace, Mark

jmpman2 days ago

I expect there were 10,000 who knew, and he’s the only one who spoke up. Now, the other 9,999 likely believed it was to thwart terrorism, as this was post 9/11. Maybe those who had visibility into who was being surveyed were checking to ensure the spying didn’t cross their ethical boundaries. Interesting to think of what each individual in the system was considering.

nabla92 days ago

>he’s the only one who spoke up.

Not true.

(1) Russ Tice: USAF intelligence analyst

(2) William Binney: NSA Technical Director.

(3) Thomas Tamm: DOJ lawyer

(4) Thomas A. Drake: senior executive at NSA

Each of them had a senior position relative Klein and Snowden and all these cases were shut down and you seemingly never knew about them.

jmpman20 hours ago

So what was different with Klein? He surfaced the information so widely that it couldn’t be contained by the “machine”?

az22617 hours ago

He wasn’t bound by the same clearance/confidentiality.

shadowgovt2 days ago

Oh, I think it's much simpler: the other 9,999 didn't care enough to risk continued employment. Security today was dearer to them than the hypothetical benefits to strangers.

(Perhaps worth noting: not to detract from what Mark did, but he was retired and therefore didn't have a job on the line. Credit to him for leveraging his position of privilege as a retiree to speak out about what he knew.)

thuanao23 hours ago

Where's the best overview of this whole NSA mass spying story, starting from 9/11 era and the beginning of the dotcom boom? Any good books or documentaries?

jypepin2 days ago

Is his book "Wiring Up The Big Brother Machine...And Fighting It" worth a read?

krunck1 day ago

I am thankful for what he did. We need more Mark Kleins.

Integrape1 day ago

Does this not count as a political post? It would have been flagged if the title had DOGE instead of NSA.

cynicalpeace2 days ago

Tom Drake, John Kiriakou, Ed Snowden, Mark Klein.

These are people that have shown that parts of the intelligence community are guilty of crimes against humanity and the American people.

Yet every time more evidence comes out, people are so quick to dismiss it as "wacko conspiracy theories".

sim7c002 days ago

they have done heroes jobs, but unfortunely the effect was that now its all become normal. ppl dont give a toss..

if you mention beam splitters on fiber, tap rooms at telcos, the 'black boxes' at ISPs.. people just pretend thats normal. they think most othe ppl are pedophiles, rapists and murderes somehow and so think its fine for everything to be tapped and logged. crazy world.

these folks give up their remaining lives for the good of others, and the others just spit on it.

user999999992 days ago

RIP to privacy too

BiteCode_dev2 days ago

I'm expecting nobody will do that anymore in the US.

First, those heroes were treated as enemies, then their revelations lead to nothing for the country, and great pain for them.

Finally, I doubt they would be proud of what their country is today and think it's worth the sacrifice.

tehjoker2 days ago

It's crazy almost nothing changed after this revelation. What a fake democracy we live in.

shadowgovt2 days ago

Or a real democracy with voters either deeply apathetic about being watched or deeply anxious about what happens if nobody's watching.

timeon2 days ago

Real but too constrained with two-party system.

tehjoker1 day ago

this comment would make sense if this was the only issue where this was true instead of one amongst almost an uncountable number

shadowgovt24 hours ago

Vectors pointing in all directions can sum to zero. If people are generally dissatisfied, but can't find common ground to coalesce their dissatisfaction into action, movement, or party, the status quo vibrates but does not move.

Broadly speaking, on one side of the aisle in the US I see people who refuse to coalesce, spend more time tearing at each other than figuring out how to work together, and find the entire idea of touching the system, let alone changing it, distasteful...And, sadly, on the other side I see a very successful coalition of surface-incompatible causes who figured out how to work together anyway and got their men elected.

hulitu17 hours ago

> It's crazy almost nothing changed after this revelation.

The "democracy" noted that when you bomb someone's brain with information and emotions (modern journalism), "he" will forget in 5 minutes what "he" was told. Especially when "he" has to pay the rent and feed a family.

"he" here could be any person.

djmips2 days ago

Age 79/80 ?

artursapek2 days ago

RIP

CaffeineLD502 days ago

Its not mass spying. The NSA is just making time capsule backups for everyone. Stop being so dramatic.

In a hundred years when it gets published its gonna be the bomb hilarious. Totes.

roenxi2 days ago

The tolerance for the US mass spying efforts remains weird. It undermines the credibility of many US politicians around Trump - yes the US public appears to be set to vote in Hitler-equivalents for the forseeable future. No, dismantling the insane spying apparatus is not a major agenda point.

Marry those two ideas together.

bloomingkales2 days ago

It's pretty much a forgone conclusion since they are putting AI into every intersection. How are you going to argue against the fact that government AI needs your data for training?

psadauskas2 days ago

Its fine, as long as they're spying on the radical woke leftists. They'd never spy on one of the good guys like me! /s

7e1 day ago

The NSA’s Upstream program primarily targeted foreign communications under the authority of Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act. However, it also incidentally collected data from U.S. citizens, particularly when their communications were intercepted while in contact with foreign targets.

The court cases were thrown out because of congressional action, as they should be, because the entire purpose of the NSA is to spy on foreigners. Thus these programs were legal and this whistleblowing was not, in fact, whistleblowing at all, just leaks of classified information.

samstave2 days ago

Needs black banner

yaspersian2 days ago

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hrhbbvjhcxb2 days ago

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heavymetalpoizn1 day ago

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curtisszmania1 day ago

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cytocync2 days ago

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unit1492 days ago

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RoseGray2 days ago

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rosegroove2 days ago

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heraldgeezer2 days ago

Such a different time. I got kind of anti-american after that but now with the world I am 100% pro USA/EU/Western world and Israel because the others are much worse. Much, much worse.

neil_s_anderson2 days ago

I find it odd how many people automatically assume that whatever the NSA is up to must be undesirable and therefore should be opposed.

I mean, where do you think analysis of plans by terrorists and nation state adversaries to attack our nation and its allies comes from? The raw intelligence data these are based on can only be gathered by surveillance of communications, both targeted and in bulk.

You should all be supporting this, as you benefit from it every day.

dannyobrien2 days ago

Well, the question at hand was, and is: what should we be supporting? I don't, in fact, assume that what the NSA is doing is bad, but in order for the public and the oversight systems the legislature put in place, someone has to know what's going on. The program Mark Klein revealed surprised legislators, including John Sensenbrenner, the author of the legislation that was used as a justification for the program: https://www.rstreet.org/commentary/patriot-act-author-introd...

Many people worried that the PATRIOT Act was overreach for surveillance, but the bill did pass. What happened with Mark's whistleblowing is that policymakers and the public found out that there were other programs, potentially illegal under even the PATRIOT Act (and, indeed the US Constitution), that had been hidden or obfuscated to their oversight bodies.

(Incidentally, the government's strategy in the cases against the NSA program was to say that even asking about legal authorisation and grounding of the program was in itself, a violation of national security. Many years after Mark's act, Ed Snowden's first published leak was this authorisation document, confirming that Mark was right, and that, had those cases been able to proceed, there would have been grounds for investigation.)

BobaFloutist2 days ago

The point is that mass domestic surveillance of American nationals violates common understanding of the law. It makes no sense for the requirements to get a wiretap to be so stringent but the requirements to monitor someone's internet traffic to be nonexistent, just because it's laundered through "intelligence gathering" and you argue it's therefore not "law enforcement."

neil_s_anderson2 days ago

The point of bulk data collection is to be able to, in effect, take a wiretap in the past before you knew what you'd need to be wiretapping in the present, by querying the bulk datasets for communications between specific endpoints within specific points in time.

As time travel doesn't exist, this is the next best technology available.

netsharc2 days ago

Ah, the East German State Police mentality...

Sadly, governments end up becoming corrupt. In one formerly free nation (or at least it was one that obnoxiously bragged about being one), data about women's periods became weaponized in a witchhunt against abortions.

ziddoap2 days ago

I think we all know that. We, or I at least, don't agree with it.

+3
neil_s_anderson2 days ago
energy1232 days ago

If it's illegal then why aren't the courts stopping it? Has there been a court case? What did the ruling say? Details would be useful.

lern_too_spel2 days ago

> The point is that mass domestic surveillance of American nationals violates common understanding of the law.

It also violates the courts' understanding of the law. That's probably why one such program was shut down prior to the Snowden leaks and definitely why the other was shut down after.

kstrauser2 days ago

Think of how safe we'd all be if we were on camera 24/7/365!

Let me put it this way: I don't do anything illegal in my bathroom, but damned if I want someone watching me in there. Everyone has their line they don't want crossed. Klein's - and the EFF's, and mine - is somewhere past the NSA monitoring every single communication in the entire country without a warrant. I have no objection with them monitoring specific suspects with a court order, but I don't want them listening to people who aren't being actively, personally investigated.

neil_s_anderson2 days ago

Just because your communications data or metadata exists in some bulk dataset somewhere doesn't mean that it's being actively and personally investigated by anyone.

As with the issuance of a warrant for wiretapping, there would need to be a proportionate and legitmate reason for your communications within a such a dataset to be looked at.

nyolfen2 days ago

the problem is that this data exists somewhere where i have no control over it and was collected without my consent, in clear violation of my constitutional rights. perhaps you have perfect trust in the current and future good faith of the US federal government, but perhaps you can understand why others do not. i would not want the local police keeping copies of all of my emails "just in case", why would it be any better for unaccountable strangers to keep secret dossiers on me?

kstrauser2 days ago

I do not want my data included in the dataset. "We're not looking at it, pinky swear!" rings hollow.

+5
neil_s_anderson2 days ago
skoopie2 days ago

We benefit from drug dealers too. They bring extra money into the community and they give rappers something to rap about.

rozap2 days ago

Yea, it's a good thing that since we live in a democracy we'd never elect anyone with bad intentions.

What a silly take.

Atreiden2 days ago

This is at best a strawman, and at worst blatant astroturfing. The benefit of the doubt is given to these organizations a priori. The idea that the average person should not be able to know about government intelligence programs is common sense - if the average person knows, so do our adversaries, defeating the purpose of the program.

But there have to be limits on this power, or you enable, and even empower, an Orwellian regime.

NSA has been caught, multiple times, flagrantly disregarding the law, violating privacy rights afforded to every citizen by the Constitution, and gathering an amount of data that could easily enable a hostile regime to enact vengeance on dissenters.

So imagine this hostile regime comes to power. Now everyone is forced to either support the regime, or face harsh consequences without recourse. Any plan you construct, or group of supporters you amass, will inevitably be compromised by this machine and eradicated, one way or another.

You have totalitarianism, and no means to resist it. ou've given up your immune system. You no longer have a democracy, even if you do on paper. And before you make the argument that "the ends justify the means" consider that this hostile regime might not share your ends. You may get wrapped up in "the means".

Is that a desirable outcome for you? If not, you should rethink your position. If that outcome seems desirable to you, there are a very limited number of reasons why that could be the case, and none of them are charitable.

f42 days ago

To not be scrutinized for any and everything is vital. When all is accessible, actors playing the part of the good citizen are the prime. I would rather have pain than the pretense of good.

akomtu2 days ago

The thing is, it no longer matters whether we support it. Nobody's asked for our permission and we have no power to stop it.