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	<title>GranneBlog &#187; war</title>
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		<title>David Foster Wallace on the impossibility of being informed &amp; the seduction of dogma</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/11/05/david-foster-wallace-on-the-impossibility-of-being-informed-the-seduction-of-dogma/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 20:28:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.granneman.com/?p=1547</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From David Foster Wallace&#8217;s &#8220;Introduction&#8221; (The Best American Essays 2007): Here is an overt premise. There is just no way that 2004’s reelection could have taken place—not to mention extraordinary renditions, legalized torture, FISA-flouting, or the passage of the Military Commissions Act—if we had been paying attention and handling information in a competent grown-up way. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From David Foster Wallace&#8217;s &#8220;Introduction&#8221; (<em>The Best American Essays 2007</em>):</p>
<blockquote><p>Here is an overt premise. There is just no way that 2004’s reelection could have taken place—not to mention extraordinary renditions, legalized torture, FISA-flouting, or the<br />
passage of the Military Commissions Act—if we had been paying attention and handling information in a competent grown-up way. ‘We’ meaning as a polity and culture. The premise does not entail specific blame—or rather the problems here are too entangled and systemic for good old-fashioned finger-pointing. It is, for one example, simplistic and wrong to blame the for-profit media for somehow failing to make clear to us the moral and practical hazards of trashing the Geneva Conventions. The for-profit media is highly attuned to what we want and the amount of detail we’ll sit still for. And a ninety-second news piece on the question of whether and how the Geneva Conventions ought to apply in an era of asymmetrical warfare is not going to explain anything; the relevant questions are too numerous and complicated, too fraught with contexts in everything from civil law and military history to ethics and game theory. One could spend a hard month just learning the history of the Conventions’ translation into actual codes of conduct for the U.S. military &#8230; and that’s not counting the dramatic changes in those codes since 2002, or the question of just what new practices violate (or don’t) just which Geneva provisions, and according to whom. Or let’s not even mention the amount of research, background, cross- checking, corroboration, and rhetorical parsing required to understand the cataclysm of Iraq, the collapse of congressional oversight, the ideology of neoconservatism, the legal status of presidential signing statements, the political marriage of evangelical Protestantism and corporatist	laissez-faire &hellip; There’s no way. You’d simply drown. We all would. It’s amazing to me that no one much talks about this—about the fact that whatever our founders and framers thought of as a literate, informed citizenry can no longer exist, at least not without a whole new modern degree of subcontracting and dependence packed into what we mean by &#8216;informed.’<sup>8</sup></p>
<p>&hellip;</p>
<p><sup>8</sup> Hence, by the way, the seduction of partisan dogma. You can drown in dogmatism now, too— radio, Internet, cable, commercial and scholarly print— but this kind of drowning is more like sweet release. Whether hard right or new left or whatever, the seduc- tion and mentality are the same. You don’t have to feel confused or inundated or ignorant. You don’t even have to think, for you already Know, and whatever you choose to learn confirms what you Know. This dog- matic lockstep is not the kind of inevitable dependence I’m talking about—or rather it’s only the most extreme and frightened form of that dependence.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>How security experts defended against Conficker</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/07/05/how-security-experts-defended-against-conficker/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/07/05/how-security-experts-defended-against-conficker/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2009 01:52:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.granneman.com/?p=1450</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From Jim Giles&#8217; &#8220;The inside story of the Conficker worm&#8221; (New Scientist: 12 June 2009): 23 October 2008 &#8230; The dry, technical language of Microsoft&#8217;s October update did not indicate anything particularly untoward. A security flaw in a port that Windows-based PCs use to send and receive network signals, it said, might be used to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From Jim Giles&#8217; &#8220;<a href="http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20227121.500-the-inside-story-of-the-conficker-worm.html">The inside story of the Conficker worm</a>&#8221; (New Scientist: 12 June 2009):</p>
<blockquote><p>
  23 October 2008 &hellip; The dry, technical language of Microsoft&#8217;s October update did not indicate anything particularly untoward. A security flaw in a port that Windows-based PCs use to send and receive network signals, it said, might be used to create a &#8220;wormable exploit&#8221;. Worms are pieces of software that spread unseen between machines, mainly &#8211; but not exclusively &#8211; via the internet (see &#8220;Cell spam&#8221;). Once they have installed themselves, they do the bidding of whoever created them.</p>
<p>  If every Windows user had downloaded the security patch Microsoft supplied, all would have been well. Not all home users regularly do so, however, and large companies often take weeks to install a patch. That provides windows of opportunity for criminals.</p>
<p>  &hellip;</p>
<p>  The new worm soon ran into a listening device, a &#8220;network telescope&#8221;, housed by the San Diego Supercomputing Center at the University of California. The telescope is a collection of millions of dummy internet addresses, all of which route to a single computer. It is a useful monitor of the online underground: because there is no reason for legitimate users to reach out to these addresses, mostly only suspicious software is likely to get in touch.</p>
<p>  The telescope&#8217;s logs show the worm spreading in a flash flood. For most of 20 November, about 3000 infected computers attempted to infiltrate the telescope&#8217;s vulnerable ports every hour &#8211; only slightly above the background noise generated by older malicious code still at large. At 6 pm, the number began to rise. By 9 am the following day, it was 115,000 an hour. Conficker was already out of control.</p>
<p>  That same day, the worm also appeared in &#8220;honeypots&#8221; &#8211; collections of computers connected to the internet and deliberately unprotected to attract criminal software for analysis. It was soon clear that this was an extremely sophisticated worm. After installing itself, for example, it placed its own patch over the vulnerable port so that other malicious code could not use it to sneak in. As Brandon Enright, a network security analyst at the University of California, San Diego, puts it, smart burglars close the window they enter by.</p>
<p>  Conficker also had an ingenious way of communicating with its creators. Every day, the worm came up with 250 meaningless strings of letters and attached a top-level domain name &#8211; a .com, .net, .org, .info or .biz &#8211; to the end of each to create a series of internet addresses, or URLs. Then the worm contacted these URLs. The worm&#8217;s creators knew what each day&#8217;s URLs would be, so they could register any one of them as a website at any time and leave new instructions for the worm there.</p>
<p>  It was a smart trick. The worm hunters would only ever spot the illicit address when the infected computers were making contact and the update was being downloaded &#8211; too late to do anything. For the next day&#8217;s set of instructions, the creators would have a different list of 250 to work with. The security community had no way of keeping up.</p>
<p>  No way, that is, until Phil Porras got involved. He and his computer security team at SRI International in Menlo Park, California, began to tease apart the Conficker code. It was slow going: the worm was hidden within two shells of encryption that defeated the tools that Porras usually applied. By about a week before Christmas, however, his team and others &#8211; including the Russian security firm Kaspersky Labs, based in Moscow &#8211; had exposed the worm&#8217;s inner workings, and had found a list of all the URLs it would contact.</p>
<p>  &hellip;</p>
<p>  [Rick Wesson of Support Intelligence] has years of experience with the organisations that handle domain registration, and within days of getting Porras&#8217;s list he had set up a system to remove the tainted URLs, using his own money to buy them up.</p>
<p>  It seemed like a major win, but the hackers were quick to bounce back: on 29 December, they started again from scratch by releasing an upgraded version of the worm that exploited the same security loophole.</p>
<p>  This new worm had an impressive array of new tricks. Some were simple. As well as propagating via the internet, the worm hopped on to USB drives plugged into an infected computer. When those drives were later connected to a different machine, it hopped off again. The worm also blocked access to some security websites: when an infected user tried to go online and download the Microsoft patch against it, they got a &#8220;site not found&#8221; message.</p>
<p>  Other innovations revealed the sophistication of Conficker&#8217;s creators. If the encryption used for the previous strain was tough, that of the new version seemed virtually bullet-proof. It was based on code little known outside academia that had been released just three months earlier by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.</p>
<p>  &hellip;</p>
<p>  Indeed, worse was to come. On 15 March, Conficker presented the security experts with a new problem. It reached out to a URL called rmpezrx.org. It was on the list that Porras had produced, but &#8211; those involved decline to say why &#8211; it had not been blocked. One site was all that the hackers needed. A new version was waiting there to be downloaded by all the already infected computers, complete with another new box of tricks.</p>
<p>  Now the cat-and-mouse game became clear. Conficker&#8217;s authors had discerned Porras and Wesson&#8217;s strategy and so from 1 April, the code of the new worm soon revealed, it would be able to start scanning for updates on 500 URLs selected at random from a list of 50,000 that were encoded in it. The range of suffixes would increase to 116 and include many country codes, such as .kz for Kazakhstan and .ie for Ireland. Each country-level suffix belongs to a different national authority, each of which sets its own registration procedures. Blocking the previous set of domains had been exhausting. It would soon become nigh-on impossible &#8211; even if the new version of the worm could be fully decrypted.</p>
<p>  Luckily, Porras quickly repeated his feat and extracted the crucial list of URLs. Immediately, Wesson and others contacted the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), an umbrella body that coordinates country suffixes. </p>
<p>  &hellip;</p>
<p>  From the second version onwards, Conficker had come with a much more efficient option: peer-to-peer (P2P) communication. This technology, widely used to trade pirated copies of software and films, allows software to reach out and exchange signals with copies of itself.</p>
<p>  Six days after the 1 April deadline, Conficker&#8217;s authors let loose a new version of the worm via P2P. With no central release point to target, security experts had no means of stopping it spreading through the worm&#8217;s network. The URL scam seems to have been little more than a wonderful way to waste the anti-hackers&#8217; time and resources. &#8220;They said: you&#8217;ll have to look at 50,000 domains. But they never intended to use them,&#8221; says Joe Stewart of SecureWorks in Atlanta, Georgia. &#8220;They used peer-to-peer instead. They misdirected us.&#8221;</p>
<p>  The latest worm release had a few tweaks, such as blocking the action of software designed to scan for its presence. But piggybacking on it was something more significant: the worm&#8217;s first moneymaking schemes. These were a spam program called Waledac and a fake antivirus package named Spyware Protect 2009.</p>
<p>  &hellip;</p>
<p>  The same goes for fake software: when the accounts of a Russian company behind an antivirus scam became public last year, it appeared that one criminal had earned more than $145,000 from it in just 10 days.
</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Could Green Dam lead to the largest botnet in history?</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/06/13/could-green-dam-lead-to-the-largest-botnet-in-history/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/06/13/could-green-dam-lead-to-the-largest-botnet-in-history/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 13 Jun 2009 21:56:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.granneman.com/?p=1399</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From Rob Cottingham&#8217;s &#8220;From blocking to botnet: Censorship isn&#8217;t the only problem with China&#8217;s new Internet blocking software&#8221; (Social Signal: 10 June 2009): Any blocking software needs to update itself from time to time: at the very least to freshen its database of forbidden content, and more than likely to fix bugs, add features and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://granneblog.s3.amazonaws.com/Green_Damn_site_blocked.jpg" border="1" alt="Green_Damn_site_blocked.jpg" width="396" height="263" /> </p>
<p>From Rob Cottingham&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="http://www.socialsignal.com/blog/rob-cottingham/censorship-isnt-only-problem-with-chinas-new-internet-blocking-software">From blocking to botnet: Censorship isn&#8217;t the only problem with China&#8217;s new Internet blocking software</a>&#8221; (Social Signal: 10 June 2009):</p>
<blockquote><p>Any blocking software needs to update itself from time to time: at the very least to freshen its database of forbidden content, and more than likely to fix bugs, add features and improve performance. (Most anti-virus software does this.)</p>
<p>If all the software does is to refresh the list of banned sites, that limits the potential for abuse. But if the software is loading new executable code onto the computer, suddenly there&#8217;s the potential for something a lot bigger.</p>
<p>Say you&#8217;re a high-ranking official in the Chinese military. And let&#8217;s say you have some responsibility for the state&#8217;s capacity to wage so-called cyber warfare: digital assaults on an enemy&#8217;s technological infrastructure.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>It strikes you: there&#8217;s a single backdoor into more that 40 million Chinese computers, capable of installing&#8230; well, nearly anything you want.</p>
<p>What if you used that backdoor, not just to update blocking software, but to create something else?</p>
<p>Say, the biggest botnet in history?</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>Still, a botnet 40 million strong (plus the installed base already in place in Chinese schools and other institutions) at the beck and call of the military is potentially a formidable weapon. Even if the Chinese government has no intention today of using Green Dam for anything other than blocking pornography, the temptation to repurpose it for military purposes may prove to be overwhelming.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Al Qaeda&#8217;s use of social networking sites</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/05/19/al-qaedas-use-of-social-networking-sites/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/05/19/al-qaedas-use-of-social-networking-sites/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 May 2009 15:29:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.granneman.com/?p=1370</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From Brian Prince&#8217;s &#8220;How Terrorism Touches the &#8216;Cloud&#8217; at RSA&#8221; (eWeek: 23 April 2009): When it comes to the war on terrorism, not all battles, intelligence gathering and recruitment happen in the street. Some of it occurs in the more elusive world of the Internet, where supporters of terrorist networks build social networking sites to recruit [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From Brian Prince&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Security/How-Terrorism-Touches-The-Cloud-at-RSA-287707/?kc=EWKNLNAV04242009STR4">How Terrorism Touches the &#8216;Cloud&#8217; at RSA</a>&#8221; (<em>eWeek</em>: 23 April 2009):</p>
<blockquote><p>When it comes to the war on terrorism, not all battles, intelligence gathering and recruitment happen in the street. Some of it occurs in the more elusive world of the Internet, where supporters of terrorist networks build social networking sites to recruit and spread their message.  <br />
Enter Jeff Bardin of Treadstone 71, a former code breaker, Arabic translator and U.S. military officer who has been keeping track of vBulletin-powered sites run by supporters of al Qaeda. There are between 15 and 20 main sites, he said, which are used by terrorist groups for everything from recruitment to the distribution of violent videos of beheadings.</p>
<p>&hellip; “One social networking site has over 200,000 participants. &hellip;</p>
<p>The videos on the sites are produced online by a company called &#8220;As-Sahab Media&#8221; (As-Sahab means &#8220;the cloud&#8221; in English). Once shot, the videos make their way from hideouts to the rest of the world via a system of couriers. Some of them contain images of violence; others exhortations from terrorist leaders. Also on the sites are tools such as versions of &#8220;Mujahideen Secrets,&#8221; which is used for encryption.</p>
<p>“It’s a pretty solid tool; it’s not so much that the tool is so much different from the new PGP-type [tool], but the fact is they built it from scratch, which shows a very mature software development lifecycle,” he said.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>4 sources of tension between science and religion</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/04/18/4-sources-of-tension-between-science-and-religion/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/04/18/4-sources-of-tension-between-science-and-religion/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2009 05:15:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.granneman.com/?p=1286</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From Steven Weinberg&#8217;s &#8220;Without God&#8221; (The New York Review of Books: 25 September 2008): But if the direct conflict between scientific knowledge and specific religious beliefs has not been so important in itself, there are at least four sources of tension between science and religion that have been important. The first source of tension arises [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From Steven Weinberg&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="http://www.nybooks.com/articles/21800">Without God</a>&#8221; (<em>The New York Review of Books</em>: 25 September 2008):</p>
<blockquote><p>But if the direct conflict between scientific knowledge and specific religious beliefs has not been so important in itself, there are at least four sources of tension between science and religion that have been important.</p>
<p>The first source of tension arises from the fact that religion originally gained much of its strength from the observation of mysterious phenomena &#8211; thunder, earthquakes, disease &#8211; that seemed to require the intervention of some divine being. There was a nymph in every brook, and a dryad in every tree. But as time passed more and more of these mysteries have been explained in purely natural ways. Explaining this or that about the natural world does not of course rule out religious belief. But if people believe in God because no other explanation seems possible for a whole host of mysteries, and then over the years these mysteries were one by one resolved naturalistically, then a certain weakening of belief can be expected.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>Of course, not everything has been explained, nor will it ever be. The important thing is that we have not observed anything that seems to require supernatural intervention for its explanation. There are some today who cling to the remaining gaps in our understanding (such as our ignorance about the origin of life) as evidence for God. But as time passes and more and more of these gaps are filled in, their position gives an impression of people desperately holding on to outmoded opinions.</p>
<p>The problem for religious belief is not just that science has explained a lot of odds and ends about the world. There is a second source of tension: that these explanations have cast increasing doubt on the special role of man, as an actor created by God to play a starring part in a great cosmic drama of sin and salvation. We have had to accept that our home, the earth, is just another planet circling the sun; our sun is just one of a hundred billion stars in a galaxy that is just one of billions of visible galaxies; and it may be that the whole expanding cloud of galaxies is just a small part of a much larger multiverse, most of whose parts are utterly inhospitable to life. As Richard Feynman has said, &#8220;The theory that it&#8217;s all arranged as a stage for God to watch man&#8217;s struggle for good and evil seems inadequate.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>A third source of tension between science and religious belief has been more important in Islam than in Christianity. Around 1100, the Sufi philosopher Abu Hamid al-Ghazzali argued against the very idea of laws of nature, on the grounds that any such law would put God&#8217;s hands in chains. According to al-Ghazzali, a piece of cotton placed in a flame does not darken and smolder because of the heat of the flame, but because God wants it to darken and smolder. Laws of nature could have been reconciled with Islam, as a summary of what God usually wants to happen, but al-Ghazzali did not take that path.</p>
<p>Al-Ghazzali is often described as the most influential Islamic philosopher. I wish I knew enough to judge how great was the impact on Islam of his rejection of science. At any rate, science in Muslim countries, which had led the world in the ninth and tenth centuries, went into a decline in the century or two after al-Ghazzali. As a portent of this decline, in 1194 the Ulama of Córdoba burned all scientific and medical texts.</p>
<p>Nor has science revived in the Islamic world. &#8230; in 2002 the periodical <em>Nature</em> carried out a survey of science in Islamic countries, and found just three areas in which the Islamic world produced excellent science, all three directed toward applications rather than basic science. They were desalination, falconry, and camel breeding.</p>
<p>Something like al-Ghazzali&#8217;s concern for God&#8217;s freedom surfaced for a while in Christian Europe, but with very different results. In Paris and Canterbury in the thirteenth century there was a wave of condemnations of those teachings of Aristotle that seemed to limit the freedom of God to do things like create a vacuum or make several worlds or move the heavens in straight lines. The influence of Thomas Aquinas and Albertus Magnus saved the philosophy of Aristotle for Europe, and with it the idea of laws of nature. But although Aristotle was no longer condemned, his authority had been questioned &#8211; which was fortunate, since nothing could be built on his physics. Perhaps it was the weakening of Aristotle&#8217;s authority by reactionary churchmen that opened the door to the first small steps toward finding the true laws of nature at Paris and Lisieux and Oxford in the fourteenth century.</p>
<p>There is a fourth source of tension between science and religion that may be the most important of all. Traditional religions generally rely on authority, whether the authority is an infallible leader, such as a prophet or a pope or an imam, or a body of sacred writings, a Bible or a Koran. &#8230;</p>
<p>Of course, scientists rely on authorities, but of a very different sort. If I want to understand some fine point about the general theory of relativity, I might look up a recent paper by an expert in the field. But I would know that the expert might be wrong. One thing I probably would not do is to look up the original papers of Einstein, because today any good graduate student understands general relativity better than Einstein did. We progress. Indeed, in the form in which Einstein described his theory it is today generally regarded as only what is known in the trade as an effective field theory; that is, it is an approximation, valid for the large scales of distance for which it has been tested, but not under very cramped conditions, as in the early big bang.</p>
<p>We have our heroes in science, like Einstein, who was certainly the greatest physicist of the past century, but for us they are not infallible prophets.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Bush, rhetoric, &amp; the exercise of power</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/02/06/bush-rhetoric-the-exercise-of-power/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/02/06/bush-rhetoric-the-exercise-of-power/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Feb 2009 17:16:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.granneman.com/?p=1145</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From Mark Danner&#8217;s &#8220;Words in a Time of War: Taking the Measure of the First Rhetoric-Major President&#8221; (Tomgram: 10 May 2007): [Note: This commencement address was given to graduates of the Department of Rhetoric at Zellerbach Hall, University of California, Berkeley, on May 10, 2007] &#8230; I give you my favorite quotation from the Bush [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From Mark Danner&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174791/mark_danner_the_age_of_rhetoric">Words in a Time of War: Taking the Measure of the First Rhetoric-Major President</a>&#8221; (Tomgram: 10 May 2007):</p>
<blockquote><p>[Note: This commencement address was given to graduates of the Department of Rhetoric at Zellerbach Hall, University of California, Berkeley, on May 10, 2007] </p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>I give you my favorite quotation from the Bush administration, put forward by the proverbial &#8220;unnamed Administration official&#8221; and published in the <em>New York Times Magazine</em> by the fine journalist Ron Suskind in October 2004. Here, in Suskind&#8217;s recounting, is what that &#8220;unnamed Administration official&#8221; told him:</p>
<p>&#8220;The aide said that guys like me were &#8216;in what we call the reality-based community,&#8217; which he defined as people who &#8216;believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.&#8217; I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. &#8216;That&#8217;s not the way the world really works anymore,&#8217; he continued. &#8216;We&#8217;re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you&#8217;re studying that reality &#8212; judiciously, as you will &#8212; we&#8217;ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that&#8217;s how things will sort out. We&#8217;re history&#8217;s actors&#8230;. and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>It was the assumption of this so-called preponderance that lay behind the philosophy of power enunciated by Bush&#8217;s Brain [Karl Rove] and that led to an attitude toward international law and alliances that is, in my view, quite unprecedented in American history. That radical attitude is brilliantly encapsulated in a single sentence drawn from the National Security Strategy of the United States of 2003: &#8220;Our strength as a nation-state will continue to be challenged by those who employ a strategy of the weak using international <em>fora</em>, judicial processes and terrorism.&#8221; Let me repeat that little troika of &#8220;weapons of the weak&#8221;: international <em>fora</em> (meaning the United Nations and like institutions), judicial processes (meaning courts, domestic and international), and&#8230;. terrorism. This strange gathering, put forward by the government of the United States, stems from the idea that power is, in fact, everything. In such a world, courts &#8212; indeed, law itself &#8212; can only limit the power of the most powerful state. Wielding preponderant power, what need has it for law? The latter must be, by definition, a weapon of the weak. The most powerful state, after all, <em>makes</em> reality. </p></blockquote>
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		<title>The future of security</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/02/05/the-future-of-security/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.granneman.com/2009/02/05/the-future-of-security/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Feb 2009 00:06:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.granneman.com/blog/?p=786</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From Bruce Schneier&#8217;s &#8220;Security in Ten Years&#8221; (Crypto-Gram: 15 December 2007): Bruce Schneier: &#8230; The nature of the attacks will be different: the targets, tactics and results. Security is both a trade-off and an arms race, a balance between attacker and defender, and changes in technology upset that balance. Technology might make one particular tactic [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From Bruce Schneier&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="http://www.schneier.com/crypto-gram-0712.html#6">Security in Ten Years</a>&#8221; (Crypto-Gram: 15 December 2007):</p>
<blockquote><p>
Bruce Schneier: &#8230; The nature of the attacks will be different: the targets, tactics and results. Security is both a trade-off and an arms race, a balance between attacker and defender, and changes in technology upset that balance. Technology might make one particular tactic more effective, or one particular security technology cheaper and more ubiquitous. Or a new emergent application might become a favored target.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>By 2017, people and organizations won&#8217;t be buying computers and connectivity the way they are today. The world will be dominated by telcos, large ISPs and systems integration companies, and computing will look a lot like a utility. Companies will be selling services, not products: email services, application services, entertainment services. We&#8217;re starting to see this trend today, and it&#8217;s going to take off in the next 10 years. Where this affects security is that by 2017, people and organizations won&#8217;t have a lot of control over their security. Everything will be handled at the ISPs and in the backbone. The free-wheeling days of general-use PCs will be largely over. Think of the iPhone model: You get what Apple decides to give you, and if you try to hack your phone, they can disable it remotely. We techie geeks won&#8217;t like it, but it&#8217;s the future. The Internet is all about commerce, and commerce won&#8217;t survive any other way.</p>
<p>Marcus Ranum: &#8230; Another trend I see getting worse is government IT know-how. At the rate outsourcing has been brain-draining the federal workforce, by 2017 there won&#8217;t be a single government employee who knows how to do anything with a computer except run PowerPoint and Web surf. Joking aside, the result is that the government&#8217;s critical infrastructure will be almost entirely managed from the outside. The strategic implications of such a shift have scared me for a long time; it amounts to a loss of control over data, resources and communications.</p>
<p>Bruce Schneier: &#8230; I&#8217;m reminded of the post-9/11 anti-terrorist hysteria &#8212; we&#8217;ve confused security with control, and instead of building systems for real security, we&#8217;re building systems of control. Think of ID checks everywhere, the no-fly list, warrantless eavesdropping, broad surveillance, data mining, and all the systems to check up on scuba divers, private pilots, peace activists and other groups of people. These give us negligible security, but put a whole lot of control in the government&#8217;s hands.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>That&#8217;s the problem with any system that relies on control: Once you figure out how to hack the control system, you&#8217;re pretty much golden. So instead of a zillion pesky worms, by 2017 we&#8217;re going to see fewer but worse super worms that sail past our defenses.
</p></blockquote>
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		<title>A one-way ticket to crazyville</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2008/12/20/a-one-way-ticket-to-crazyville/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.granneman.com/2008/12/20/a-one-way-ticket-to-crazyville/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Dec 2008 07:54:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.granneman.com/?p=1099</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Image by rsgranne via Flickr Image by rsgranne via Flickr Image by rsgranne via Flickr From Dave Alan&#8217;s &#8220;Interview with Alex Christopher&#8221; (Leading Edge Research Group: 1 June 1996): Legend: DA [Dave Alan, Host] AC: [Alex Christopher] C: [Caller] &#8230; (Note: according to former British Intelligence agent Dr. John Coleman, the London-based Wicca Mason lodges [...]]]></description>
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<dd class="wp-caption-dd zemanta-img-attribution" style="font-size: 0.8em;">Image by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/51035733650@N01/3825391670">rsgranne</a> via Flickr</dd>
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<dd class="wp-caption-dd zemanta-img-attribution" style="font-size: 0.8em;">Image by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/51035733650@N01/3824570725">rsgranne</a> via Flickr</dd>
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<dd class="wp-caption-dd zemanta-img-attribution" style="font-size: 0.8em;">Image by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/51035733650@N01/3825383740">rsgranne</a> via Flickr</dd>
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<p>From Dave Alan&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="http://www.think-aboutit.com/aliens/ac.html">Interview with Alex Christopher</a>&#8221; (Leading Edge Research Group: 1 June 1996):</p>
<blockquote><p>Legend: DA [Dave Alan, Host] AC: [Alex Christopher] C: [Caller]</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>(Note: according to former British Intelligence agent Dr. John Coleman, the London-based Wicca Mason lodges are one-third of the overall global conspiracy. The other two thirds are the Black Nobility banking families who claim direct descent from the early Roman emperors, and also the Maltese Jesuits or the Jesuit &#8211; Knights of Malta network. All three networks each have 13 representatives within the Bilderberg organization, which is a cover for the Bavarian Illuminati, suggestive that Bavaria itself has orchestrated a &#8220;marriage of convenience&#8221; between these three formerly competitive global control groups. &#8211; Branton)</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: All right. The information, primarily, that is in &#8220;Pandora&#8217;s Box&#8221; covers how the major corporations, railroad and banking concerns in this country were set up through a &#8216;trust&#8217; that was originally known as the Virginia Company&#8230; The deal was that everything would remain under English control, or subservient to it, and that brings us right up to today, because we are still looking at everything falling under that &#8216;trust&#8217; system going back to the Crown of England. It is mind boggling to think that everyone in this country has been led to believe that the people in the United States had won independence from England, when in fact they never did. </p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: The capstone, or the dedication stone, for the Denver airport has a Masonic symbol on it. A whole group of us went out to the airport to see some friends off and see this capstone, which also has a time capsule imbedded inside it. It sits at the south eastern side of the terminal which, by the way, is called &#8220;The Great Hall&#8221;, which is what Masons refer to as their meeting hall. And, on this thing it mentions &#8220;the New World Airport Commission&#8221;. &#8230;</p>
<p>AC: It has a Masonic symbol on it, and it also has very unusual geometric designs. It depicts an arm rising up out of it that curves at a 45 degree angle. It also has a thing that looks like a keypad on it. This capstone structure is made of carved granite and stainless steel, and it is very fancy.. This little keypad area at the end of the arm has an out-of-place unfinished wooden block sitting on it. The gentleman that was with me on the first trip out to the airport has since died. They say he committed suicide, but everything else tells me that this is not possible. No one can double-tie a catheter behind his own neck and strangle himself. I just don&#8217;t think that is possible. But, his name was Phil Schneider, and he started blowing the whistle on all this stuff going on in the underground bases that he had helped build for years and years. He worked on the underground bases at Area 51 and Dulce, New Mexico, as well as several other places. Schneider told me that this keypad-looking area looked like a form of techno-geometry that is &#8220;alien-oriented&#8221;, and that it had something to do with a &#8220;directional system&#8221;, whatever that meant, that functioned as a homing beacon to bring ships right into the &#8220;Great Hall&#8221;. </p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>(Note: &#8230; Remember even through the Bilderbergers consist of a &#8220;marriage of convenience&#8221; between Londonese Wicca Masons, Basilian Black Nobility and Roman Maltese Jesuits&#8230; the supreme controllers of the Bildeberger cult itself are the secret black Gnostic cults of Bavaria whose &#8216;Cult of the Serpent&#8217; &#8212; or Illuminati &#8212; can be traced back to Egypt and ultimately to Babylon itself. These Rockefeller-Nazi projects reportedly continued through at least 1975 during which period many thousands more &#8220;underground Nazis&#8221; were brought into America from Europe and also, if we are to believe some reports, from the secret German &#8220;New Berlin&#8221; base under the mountains of Neu Schwabenland, Antarctica that was established during World War II via Nazi-occupied South Africa. Is Neu Schwabenland the REAL power behind the joint Bavarian-Alien New World Order Agenda? &#8230;)</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: &#8230; It took myself and two other people over eight months to figure out all the symbology that is embodied in these murals. It turned out that some of these are &#8216;trigger&#8217; pictures, containing symbology designed to trigger altered personalities of people that have been groomed in MKULTRA type programs for specific tasks that they have been trained to do in terms of something connected with Satanic rituals and mind control. I had one woman that called me out of the blue one night, and she was really disturbed about some information. She told me many different things that later turned out to be known MKULTRA triggers. Also, almost every aspect of these murals contains symbols relating back to secret societies. When you get the overall view of what they are talking about in these things, it is very very scary. It goes back to the Bio-diversity Treaty, getting rid of specific races of people, taking over the world and mind control.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: Well, the gentleman that I was dealing with, Phil Schneider, said that during the last year of construction they were connecting the underground airport system to the deep underground base. He told me that there was at least an eight-level deep underground base there, and that there was a 4.5 square mile underground city and an 88.5 square-mile base underneath the airport.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>DA: You were telling me that there are huge concrete corridors with sprinklers all along the ceiling. What are these sprinkler heads doing in a concrete bunker, pray tell? (Presumably concrete will not &#8216;burn&#8217; if there is a potential fire, so is it possible that something other than &#8216;water&#8217; is meant to be expelled from these sprinklers which are located &#8220;all along&#8221; the ceiling? &#8211; Branton)</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: I think a lot of the people saw things that disturbed them so much that they would not talk about it. I know several people who worked on the project that managed to find their way down into the depths, probably close to the deep underground base, and saw things that scared them so badly they won&#8217;t talk about it. I interviewed a few of the former employees on these construction crews that worked out there on these buildings that ended up buried, and they are afraid to talk. They say that everybody is real nervous about it, and they decided to tell some of the secrets that they knew, but they don&#8217;t want anybody to know who they are. So, I can tell you that it is a very unusual and spooky type of place, and if you are a sensitive person you get nauseated as soon as you enter the perimeter of the airport. Especially when you go down underground. You become very nauseated a nervous. There is also so much electromagnetic flux in the area that if you get out on the open ground around the airport, you will &#8216;buzz&#8217;.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: If Phil is right, and all this hooks up to the deep underground base that he was offered the plans to build back in 1979, and that what this other man TOLD me in private [is] that there is a lot of human SLAVE LABOR in these deep underground bases being used by these aliens, and that a lot of this slave labor is children. HE SAID that when the children reach the point that they are unable to work any more, they are slaughtered on the spot and consumed.</p>
<p>DA: Consumed by who?</p>
<p>AC: Aliens. Again, this is not from me, but from a man that gave his life to get this information out. He worked down there for close to 20 years, and he knew everything that was going on.</p>
<p>DA: Hmmm. Who do these aliens eat?</p>
<p>AC: They specifically like young human children, that haven&#8217;t been contaminated like adults. Well, there is a gentleman out giving a lot of information from a source he gets it from, and he says that there is an incredible number of children snatched in this country.</p>
<p>DA: Over 200,000 each year.</p>
<p>AC: And that these children are the main entree for dinner.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: Yes. From some information that has been put out by a group or team that also works in these underground bases that is trying to get information out to people that love this country, THERE IS A WAR THAT IS GOING ON UNDER OUT FEET, AND ABOVE OUR HEADS, that the public doesn&#8217;t know anything about, and its between these ALIEN forces and the HUMANS that are trying to fight them.</p>
<p>DA: What other types have you seen?</p>
<p>AC: The ones that I have seen are the big-eyed Greys and the Reptilians.</p>
<p>DA: What do these Reptilians look like?</p>
<p>AC: There are three different types.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: &#8230; Anyway, they were both totally flipped out. I finally got them calmed down enough to let me go home. I went home and went to bed. The next thing I know, I woke up and there is this &#8216;thing&#8217; standing over my bed. He had wrap-around yellow eyes with snake pupils, and pointed ears and a grin that wrapped around his head. He had a silvery suit on, and this scared the living daylights out of me. I threw the covers over my head and started screaming&#8230;.I mean, here is this thing with a Cheshire-cat grin and these funky glowing eyes&#8230;this is too much. I have seen that kind of being on more than one occasion.</p>
<p>DA: What else can you say about it?</p>
<p>AC: Well, he had a hooked nose and he was [humanoid] looking, other than the eyes, and had kind of grayish skin. Later on in 1991, I was working in a building in a large city, and I had taken a break about 6:00, and the next thing I knew it was 10:30 at night, and I thought I had taken a short break. I started remembering that I was taken aboard a ship, through four floors of an office building, and through a roof. There on the ship is were I encountered &#8216;GERMANS&#8217; AND &#8216;AMERICANS&#8217; WORKING TOGETHER, and also the GREY ALIENS, and then we were taken to some other kind of facility and there I saw the REPTILIANS again &#8230; the one&#8217;s I call the &#8220;baby Godzilla&#8217;s&#8221;, that have the short teeth and yellow slanted eyes, and who look like a VELOCI-RAPTOR, kind of.</p>
<p>DA: So, why would these people pick on you?</p>
<p>AC: Well, I found one common denominator in the abduction, and it keeps on being repeated over and over again. I deal with lots of people who have been abducted, and the one common denominator seems to be the blood line, and its the blood line that goes back to ancient Indian or Native American blood lines. </p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: Well, at that facility I saw the almond-eyed Greys, but the thing that sticks in my mind are the beings that look like reptiles, or the veloci-raptors. They are the cruelest beings you could ever imagine, and they even smell hideous. There were a couple of very unusual areas down there where I was taken which looked like cold storage lockers, where these things were in hibernation tubes, and that is about all I remember, other than seeing some black helicopters and little round-wing disk type aircraft</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>In the book &#8220;Cosmic Conflict&#8221;, the author talks about the ancient city that was uncovered by the Germans before World War II, and tells about their effort to revive some frozen humans they found in this underground city, and that the true humans couldn&#8217;t be revived, but the ones that could be revived were in fact reptilians in disguise, and the reptilians have the capability to do shape-shifting and create a [laser] holographic image so when you look at them you see a human, but under that there is no human there. &#8230; Allegedly the reptilians re-animated and killed the Soviet scientists and through some type of psychic osmosis drained their minds and assimilated their memories and features through a molecular shape-shifting type process. &#8230; The alien &#8216;impostors&#8217; then called for backup and more scientists came out and were &#8216;replaced&#8217;, and these eventually returned to Russia and began to infiltrate the Communist government.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: These people that have done all this research and are part of the underground government are telling that the humans on this planet have been at war with these reptilian aliens for thousands of years. At one point, things got so hot on the planet, like it is now, aliens took on this holographic image and infiltrated the human race in order to take it over and undermine it, just like this New World Order is doing right now. They&#8217;re saying that the same thing happened to civilization on Earth before, and that the humans before actually had the capability for interplanetary travel, and that it was so bad here with the reptilians that they had to leave&#8230; What they are also saying is that these beings that are human-looking that are visiting our planet, at this time, trying to inform people what is going on, and guide them, are actually OUR ANCESTORS THAT ESCAPED FROM EARTH before, when it was under reptilian domination.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: I went to South Florida a couple of weeks ago and interviewed a man who had done research for 30 years, and oddly enough, he tapped into some of the same information I had, in that our government has had round-winged, saucer-type technology, high mach speed aircraft since the 1920&#8242;s, and that in 1952 they had over 500 of these aircraft hidden in secret bases. Now, if they had that in 1952, considering that military technology grows by 44 years for every year that goes by, what do you imagine they have now, 44 years later, after technology has advanced the equivalent of 1,936 years? </p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>AC: He claims to be one of the ones who jumped overboard off the Eldridge when it went into hyperspace during the Philadelphia Experiment. He actually traveled forward in time, and asked the people that he encountered there what happened in his future. At that time, he was given the information about the New World Order and that Denver was the location for the NWO Western Sector, and that Atlanta was supposed to be the control center for the Eastern Sector. Can it be that the fact that the Olympics is supposed to be in Atlanta is part of a scenario?</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Protected: American courts and government and the f-word</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2008/11/30/american-courts-and-government-and-the-f-word/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2008 01:34:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<title>The NSA and threats to privacy</title>
		<link>http://blog.granneman.com/2008/11/27/the-nsa-and-threats-to-privacy/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Nov 2008 07:08:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Granneman</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[From James Bamford&#8217;s &#8220;Big Brother Is Listening&#8221; (The Atlantic: April 2006): This legislation, the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, established the FISA court—made up of eleven judges handpicked by the chief justice of the United States—as a secret part of the federal judiciary. The court’s job is to decide whether to grant warrants requested by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From  James Bamford&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200604/nsa-surveillance">Big Brother Is Listening</a>&#8221; (<em>The Atlantic</em>: April 2006):</p>
<blockquote><p>This legislation, the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, established the FISA court—made up of eleven judges handpicked by the chief justice of the United States—as a secret part of the federal judiciary. The court’s job is to decide whether to grant warrants requested by the NSA or the FBI to monitor communications of American citizens and legal residents. The law allows the government up to three days after it starts eavesdropping to ask for a warrant; every violation of FISA carries a penalty of up to five years in prison. Between May 18, 1979, when the court opened for business, until the end of 2004, it granted 18,742 NSA and FBI applications; it turned down only four outright.</p>
<p>Such facts worry Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University law professor who worked for the NSA as an intern while in law school in the 1980s. The FISA “courtroom,” hidden away on the top floor of the Justice Department building (because even its location is supposed to be secret), is actually a heavily protected, windowless, bug-proof installation known as a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility, or SCIF.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>It is true that the court has been getting tougher. From 1979 through 2000, it modified only two out of 13,087 warrant requests. But from the start of the Bush administration, in 2001, the number of modifications increased to 179 out of 5,645 requests. Most of those—173—involved what the court terms “substantive modifications.”</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>Contrary to popular perception, the NSA does not engage in “wiretapping”; it collects signals intelligence, or “sigint.” In contrast to the image we have from movies and television of an FBI agent placing a listening device on a target’s phone line, the NSA intercepts entire streams of electronic communications containing millions of telephone calls and e-mails. It runs the intercepts through very powerful computers that screen them for particular names, telephone numbers, Internet addresses, and trigger words or phrases. Any communications containing flagged information are forwarded by the computer for further analysis.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>Names and information on the watch lists are shared with the FBI, the CIA, the Department of Homeland Security, and foreign intelligence services. Once a person’s name is in the files, even if nothing incriminating ever turns up, it will likely remain there forever. There is no way to request removal, because there is no way to confirm that a name is on the list.</p>
<p>In December of 1997, in a small factory outside the southern French city of Toulouse, a salesman got caught in the NSA’s electronic web. Agents working for the NSA’s British partner, the Government Communications Headquarters, learned of a letter of credit, valued at more than $1.1 million, issued by Iran’s defense ministry to the French company Microturbo. According to NSA documents, both the NSA and the GCHQ concluded that Iran was attempting to secretly buy from Microturbo an engine for the embargoed C-802 anti-ship missile. Faxes zapping back and forth between Toulouse and Tehran were intercepted by the GCHQ, which sent them on not just to the NSA but also to the Canadian and Australian sigint agencies, as well as to Britain’s MI6. The NSA then sent the reports on the salesman making the Iranian deal to a number of CIA stations around the world, including those in Paris and Bonn, and to the U.S. Commerce Department and the Customs Service. Probably several hundred people in at least four countries were reading the company’s communications. </p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>Such events are central to the current debate involving the potential harm caused by the NSA’s warrantless domestic eavesdropping operation. Even though the salesman did nothing wrong, his name made its way into the computers and onto the watch lists of intelligence, customs, and other secret and law-enforcement organizations around the world. Maybe nothing will come of it. Maybe the next time he tries to enter the United States or Britain he will be denied, without explanation. Maybe he will be arrested. As the domestic eavesdropping program continues to grow, such uncertainties may plague innocent Americans whose names are being run through the supercomputers even though the NSA has not met the established legal standard for a search warrant. It is only when such citizens are turned down while applying for a job with the federal government—or refused when seeking a Small Business Administration loan, or turned back by British customs agents when flying to London on vacation, or even placed on a “no-fly” list—that they will realize that something is very wrong. But they will never learn why.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>General Michael Hayden, director of the NSA from 1999 to 2005 and now principal deputy director of national intelligence, noted in 2002 that during the 1990s, e-communications “surpassed traditional communications. That is the same decade when mobile cell phones increased from 16 million to 741 million—an increase of nearly 50 times. That is the same decade when Internet users went from about 4 million to 361 million—an increase of over 90 times. Half as many land lines were laid in the last six years of the 1990s as in the whole previous history of the world. In that same decade of the 1990s, international telephone traffic went from 38 billion minutes to over 100 billion. This year, the world’s population will spend over 180 billion minutes on the phone in international calls alone.”</p>
<p>Intercepting communications carried by satellite is fairly simple for the NSA. The key conduits are the thirty Intelsat satellites that ring the Earth, 22,300 miles above the equator. Many communications from Europe, Africa, and the Middle East to the eastern half of the United States, for example, are first uplinked to an Intelsat satellite and then downlinked to AT&#038;T’s ground station in Etam, West Virginia. From there, phone calls, e-mails, and other communications travel on to various parts of the country. To listen in on that rich stream of information, the NSA built a listening post fifty miles away, near Sugar Grove, West Virginia. Consisting of a group of very large parabolic dishes, hidden in a heavily forested valley and surrounded by tall hills, the post can easily intercept the millions of calls and messages flowing every hour into the Etam station. On the West Coast, high on the edge of a bluff overlooking the Okanogan River, near Brewster, Washington, is the major commercial downlink for communications to and from Asia and the Pacific. Consisting of forty parabolic dishes, it is reportedly the largest satellite antenna farm in the Western Hemisphere. A hundred miles to the south, collecting every whisper, is the NSA’s western listening post, hidden away on a 324,000-acre Army base in Yakima, Washington. The NSA posts collect the international traffic beamed down from the Intelsat satellites over the Atlantic and Pacific. But each also has a number of dishes that appear to be directed at domestic telecommunications satellites.</p>
<p>Until recently, most international telecommunications flowing into and out of the United States traveled by satellite. But faster, more reliable undersea fiber-optic cables have taken the lead, and the NSA has adapted. The agency taps into the cables that don’t reach our shores by using specially designed submarines, such as the USS Jimmy Carter, to attach a complex “bug” to the cable itself. This is difficult, however, and undersea taps are short-lived because the batteries last only a limited time. The fiber-optic transmission cables that enter the United States from Europe and Asia can be tapped more easily at the landing stations where they come ashore. With the acquiescence of the telecommunications companies, it is possible for the NSA to attach monitoring equipment inside the landing station and then run a buried encrypted fiber-optic “backhaul” line to NSA headquarters at Fort Meade, Maryland, where the river of data can be analyzed by supercomputers in near real time.</p>
<p>Tapping into the fiber-optic network that carries the nation’s Internet communications is even easier, as much of the information transits through just a few “switches” (similar to the satellite downlinks). Among the busiest are MAE East (Metropolitan Area Ethernet), in Vienna, Virginia, and MAE West, in San Jose, California, both owned by Verizon. By accessing the switch, the NSA can see who’s e-mailing with whom over the Internet cables and can copy entire messages. Last September, the Federal Communications Commission further opened the door for the agency. The 1994 Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act required telephone companies to rewire their networks to provide the government with secret access. The FCC has now extended the act to cover “any type of broadband Internet access service” and the new Internet phone services—and ordered company officials never to discuss any aspect of the program. </p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p> The National Security Agency was born in absolute secrecy. Unlike the CIA, which was created publicly by a congressional act, the NSA was brought to life by a top-secret memorandum signed by President Truman in 1952, consolidating the country’s various military sigint operations into a single agency. Even its name was secret, and only a few members of Congress were informed of its existence—and they received no information about some of its most important activities. Such secrecy has lent itself to abuse.</p>
<p>During the Vietnam War, for instance, the agency was heavily involved in spying on the domestic opposition to the government. Many of the Americans on the watch lists of that era were there solely for having protested against the war. &#8230; Even so much as writing about the NSA could land a person a place on a watch list. </p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>For instance, during World War I, the government read and censored thousands of telegrams—the e-mail of the day—sent hourly by telegraph companies. Though the end of the war brought with it a reversion to the Radio Act of 1912, which guaranteed the secrecy of communications, the State and War Departments nevertheless joined together in May of 1919 to create America’s first civilian eavesdropping and code-breaking agency, nicknamed the Black Chamber. By arrangement, messengers visited the telegraph companies each morning and took bundles of hard-copy telegrams to the agency’s offices across town. These copies were returned before the close of business that day.</p>
<p>A similar tale followed the end of World War II. In August of 1945, President Truman ordered an end to censorship. That left the Signal Security Agency (the military successor to the Black Chamber, which was shut down in 1929) without its raw intelligence—the telegrams provided by the telegraph companies. The director of the SSA sought access to cable traffic through a secret arrangement with the heads of the three major telegraph companies. The companies agreed to turn all telegrams over to the SSA, under a plan code-named Operation Shamrock. It ran until the government’s domestic spying programs were publicly revealed, in the mid-1970s.</p>
<p>&#8230;</p>
<p>Frank Church, the Idaho Democrat who led the first probe into the National Security Agency, warned in 1975 that the agency’s capabilities</p>
<p>&#8220;could be turned around on the American people, and no American would have any privacy left, such [is] the capability to monitor everything: telephone conversations, telegrams, it doesn’t matter. There would be no place to hide. If this government ever became a tyranny, if a dictator ever took charge in this country, the technological capacity that the intelligence community has given the government could enable it to impose total tyranny, and there would be no way to fight back, because the most careful effort to combine together in resistance to the government, no matter how privately it is done, is within the reach of the government to know. Such is the capacity of this technology.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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