Spying Abuses Are Still a Concern, 10 Years After Edward Snowden
Despite some headway in protecting privacy, the surveillance state hasn’t gone away.
Despite some headway in protecting privacy, the surveillance state hasn’t gone away.
From Russiagate to COVID discourse, elites in government and the media are trying to control and centralize free speech and open inquiry.
The Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs author and former Reason staffer reports back from post-privacy America.
Officials shield government abuses from litigation by claiming “national security.” The Supreme Court declined to weigh in.
These days, he may run for president. His politics have changed.
Part of a law that authorizes warrantless snooping is about to expire, opening up a opportunity to better protect our privacy rights.
The law has been abused to prosecute citizens for reasons other than spying. But there are better examples than Trump to highlight problems.
A senator and two congressmen team up to help protect whistleblowers from vindictive prosecution.
"The kind of values I've always embraced are heard more on Fox than on CNN and MSNBC, where they're not welcome."
In a program separate from the ones disclosed by Edward Snowden, we see more mass secret domestic data collection.
Do Americans have a right to know the extent that the government surveils them?
Two decades after 9/11, the government's appetite for spying has only grown.
We were warned about the dangerous power of the USA PATRIOT Act. Edward Snowden proved that critics were justified.
Online companies might not be as nefarious as you think.
We don’t need new tools or agencies to track alleged domestic terrorists.
The president has the worst record for clemency in modern history.
If Trump isn’t interested, maybe the Biden administration could get started with a few acts of mercy.
The surveillance whistleblower has a child on the way and little sign a pardon is forthcoming.
The National Security Agency arranged for security systems to be secretly compromised. Then the Chinese government allegedly found its way in.
A federal appeals court concludes that the agency's mass collection of phone records was illegal and probably unconstitutional.
All the worst people are still mad he blew the whistle on government snooping.
At least something good could come out of this mess of an investigation.
National security journalist Barton Gellman talks about "the surveillance-industrial state," the possibility of a Biden presidency or a second Trump term, and his gripping new book.
Barton Gellman's new book is a riveting account of exposing NSA excesses to the light of the day.
Government officials have only themselves to blame if citizens decline to share their information.
A judge rules whistleblower’s failure to subject Permanent Record to pre-publication review violates non-disclosure agreement.
Yes, Trump (and everybody else) has a right to face their accusers when they’re charged with crimes. But that hasn’t actually happened.
Freedom could never be imposed at the point of a gun, but perhaps it could be sown by the spread of silicon and fiber. Or so I thought.
America's most famous whistleblower calls for restricting the power of government.
Snowden didn’t subject his autobiography Permanent Record to pre-publication review by the federal government that’s also trying to throw him in prison.
After years of political fights over our privacy, a potential end in mass phone metadata collection
For years, security state advocates fought to maintain the authority to snoop on your phone records. Are they really giving up?
Since his whistleblowing, the United Kingdom has granted itself even more power to snoop on citizens.
After being resoundingly voted out of the party's vice-chairmanship over his comments about veterans, school shootings, and age-of-consent laws, the activist/entrepreneur throws his hat in the ring against Adam Kokesh and a presumed Bill Weld.
Our terrible federal espionage laws won't let her argue the leak served the public's interest.
The government still snoops on its own citizens, but we're more aware of it-and we can push back.
We can think of at least one whistleblower who agrees.
The crew of The Post celebrates leaking the Pentagon Papers but gets all touchy when Obama's secret surveillance is mentioned.
FBI, Intel want broad snooping powers to stay intact. That may not be an option.
It's time to rein in warrantless domestic surveillance before it's too late.
Welcome to the club! Now let us tell you how to fix it.
More than 150 million phone call records of Americans were collected in 2016.
A war on WikiLeaks will ultimately threaten a free press.
Yes, they're even spying on the president.
Proposal seen as targeting whistleblowers and journalists.
Working on even stronger tech to protect from snooping.
Given the administration's treatment of whistleblowers, this would be a big deal.