Edward Snowden: ‘Privacy Is Pivotal to Maintaining a Free and Open Society’


Edward Snowden with Intercept technologist Micah Lee. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
Edward Snowden with Intercept technologist Micah Lee. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)

 

Micah Lee | The Intercept | Reader Supported News | November 13, 2015

ast month, I met Edward Snowden in a hotel in central Moscow, just blocks away from Red Square. It was the first time we’d met in person; he first emailed me nearly two years earlier, and we eventually created an encrypted channel to journalists Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwald, to whom Snowden would disclose overreaching mass surveillance by the National Security Agency and its British equivalent, GCHQ.

This time around, Snowden’s anonymity was gone; the world knew who he was, much of what he’d leaked, and that he’d been living in exile in Moscow, where he’s been stranded ever since the State Department canceled his passport while he was en route to Latin America. His situation was more stable, the threats against him a bit easier to predict. So I approached my 2015 Snowden meeting with less paranoia than was warranted in 2013, and with a little more attention to physical security, since this time our communications would not be confined to the internet.

Our first meeting would be in the hotel lobby, and I arrived with all my important electronic gear in tow. I had powered down my smartphone and placed it in a “faraday bag” designed to block all radio emissions. This, in turn, was tucked inside my backpack next to my laptop (which I configured and hardened specifically for traveling to Russia), also powered off. Both electronic devices stored their data in encrypted form, but disk encryption isn’t perfect, and leaving these in my hotel room seemed like an invitation to tampering.

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Video: Gays arrested in Moscow`s Red Square, singing national anthem


| America Blog | February 7, 2014

A group of Russian gay rights protesters were just arrested in Red Square in Moscow.

Raw video footage (see below) just posted online shows a small group of activists waving rainbow flags, the symbol of the gay rights movement, and singing the Russian national anthem, in Moscow’s famous Red Square, with Lenin’s Tomb as the backrop.

Such protests are illegal in Russia, especially after the passage last summer of a draconian anti-gay law that bans any speech or actions that might convince children that being gay is okay.

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Edward Snowden, the Dark Prophet


Image representing Edward Snowden as depicted ...

Image by None via CrunchBase

Michael Scherer | TIME Magazine | Reader Supported News | December 12, 2013

e pulled off the year’s most spectacular heist. Exiled from his country, the 30-year-old computer whiz has become the doomsayer of the information age

To avoid surveillance, the first four Americans to visit Edward Snowden in Moscow carried no cell phones or laptops. They flew coach on Delta from Washington with tickets paid for by Dutch computer hackers. After checking into a preselected hotel not far from Red Square, they waited for a van to pick them up for dinner.

None could retrace the ride that followed, driven by anonymous Russian security men, nor could any place the side door of the building where the trip ended. They passed through two cavernous ballrooms, the second with a painted ceiling like the Sistine Chapel, and emerged into a smaller space with salmon-colored walls and oil paintings in golden frames-like Alice in Wonderland, remembers one of the group. There at the bottom of the rabbit hole, in rimless glasses, a black suit and blue shirt with two open buttons at the collar, stood the 30-year-old computer whiz who had just committed the most spectacular heist in the history of spycraft.

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Russia: Five gay rights protesters detained following Red Square demonstration


 | PinkNews.co.uk | July 15, 2013

Police in Moscow detained five gay rights activists on Sunday for holding a demonstration against Russia’s recently introduced anti-gay legislation.

The Moscow Times reports that five activists were held by police after staging a demonstration at Russia’s Red Square, due to the fact that the activists did not have a permit for the rally.

The demonstrators lit flares and held up rainbow-coloured posters which read “Homophobia is riffraffs’ religion.”

The upper house of the Russian Parliament voted last month to approve both a bill banning adoption of Russian children by foreign same-sex couples and the nationwide anti-”propaganda” bill banning the promotion of “non-traditional” relationships to minors.

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