fitx0 reviewed Vigilancia permanente by Edward Snowden
Review of 'Vigilancia permanente' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
Si lo lees, la NSA te ficha.
hardcover
Published Sept. 17, 2019 by FISCHER, S..
Edward Snowden, the man who risked everything to expose the US government’s system of mass surveillance, reveals for the first time the story of his life, including how he helped to build that system and what motivated him to try to bring it down.
In 2013, twenty-nine-year-old Edward Snowden shocked the world when he broke with the American intelligence establishment and revealed that the United States government was secretly pursuing the means to collect every single phone call, text message, and email. The result would be an unprecedented system of mass surveillance with the ability to pry into the private lives of every person on earth. Six years later, Snowden reveals for the very first time how he helped to build this system and why he was moved to expose it.
Spanning the bucolic Beltway suburbs of his childhood and the clandestine CIA and NSA postings of his adulthood, Permanent …
Edward Snowden, the man who risked everything to expose the US government’s system of mass surveillance, reveals for the first time the story of his life, including how he helped to build that system and what motivated him to try to bring it down.
In 2013, twenty-nine-year-old Edward Snowden shocked the world when he broke with the American intelligence establishment and revealed that the United States government was secretly pursuing the means to collect every single phone call, text message, and email. The result would be an unprecedented system of mass surveillance with the ability to pry into the private lives of every person on earth. Six years later, Snowden reveals for the very first time how he helped to build this system and why he was moved to expose it.
Spanning the bucolic Beltway suburbs of his childhood and the clandestine CIA and NSA postings of his adulthood, Permanent Record is the extraordinary account of a bright young man who grew up online – a man who became a spy, a whistleblower, and, in exile, the Internet’s conscience. Written with wit, grace, passion, and an unflinching candor, Permanent Record is a crucial memoir of our digital age and destined to be a classic.
Si lo lees, la NSA te ficha.
With the caveat that this is by necessity a one-sided story, it raises really good points and struggles. Very much worth the time to understand some far corners of patriotism, democracy, watching the watchers, ...
Edward Snowden is often depicted as a genius. After reading this book, I don't believe that to be true.
Geniuses are "above human beings", whereas Snowden depicts himself as being extra-human. And a smart one on top of that.
Having grown up at the same time as him, and followed a career in technology as well, this biography talked even more to me, as I could really identity to him. What he says is entirely true, extremely well written very moving.
Itâs curious that weâve become so reconciled with the massive amount of state secrets we learned about when Edward Snowden worked with journalists to expose its vast extent and power in 2013. Since then, heâs lived in exile almost as long as he worked for the US intelligence services, helping to build a system that would capture, store, and make searchable the digital traces of communications of the entire world, an all-encompassing shift from targeted to mass surveillance. Yet weâve become somehow used to the idea, defensively forgetting that nearly everything we do is not forgotten.returnreturnSnowdenâs memoir, Permanent Record, doesnât reveal any state secrets he hasn't already selectively shared with the world. It doesnât tell us anything about how he got those secrets out that hasnât already been covered in Laura Poitrasâs film, Citizenfour. Itâs more personal and reflective. It explains how he became entranced by technology and the internet, …
Itâs curious that weâve become so reconciled with the massive amount of state secrets we learned about when Edward Snowden worked with journalists to expose its vast extent and power in 2013. Since then, heâs lived in exile almost as long as he worked for the US intelligence services, helping to build a system that would capture, store, and make searchable the digital traces of communications of the entire world, an all-encompassing shift from targeted to mass surveillance. Yet weâve become somehow used to the idea, defensively forgetting that nearly everything we do is not forgotten.returnreturnSnowdenâs memoir, Permanent Record, doesnât reveal any state secrets he hasn't already selectively shared with the world. It doesnât tell us anything about how he got those secrets out that hasnât already been covered in Laura Poitrasâs film, Citizenfour. Itâs more personal and reflective. It explains how he became entranced by technology and the internet, how he ended up following a family tradition by working for the government, which meant in practice working for private companies, how he became alarmed by the systems people like him were building, and why he decided he had a moral duty to the country he served to share what he knew with journalists to get the word out. Itâs a portrait of a young geek who grew up close to the beltway and in the shadow of 9/11, so he signed up to serve rather than become a silicon valley entrepreneur. After an accident sidelined him from the military before he was out of training, he decided to follow his parentsâ footsteps and get a security clearance so he could apply his tech skills to government service.returnreturnHe describes the anxiety around having his past scoured as he was vetted at age 22 as a way to explore the implications of all the traces we leave behind, juvenile beliefs long shed, jokes that arenât funny anymore, now all part of our permanent record. But he passed easily and that not only gave him a chance to get a job with the government, it made him attractive to contractors. Those give the agencies a workforce by allowing them to circumvent legal caps on the number of government employees. (As in higher ed, itâs easier to get money to pay for commercial services than to hire people.) âItâs Americaâs most legal and convenient method of transferring public money to the private purse,â he writes. Soon after he got his clearance he realized he couldnât serve his country unless he worked for the private sector, which is where high-level systems work is done. And it was being done by âcomputer dudesâ like him. At an âindocâ orientation they were told they were special, the elite, which struck him as odd.returnreturn"You donât need to tell a bunch of computer whizzes that they possess superior knowledge and skills that uniquely qualify them to act independently and make decisions on behalf of their fellow citizens without any oversight or review. Nothing inspires arrogance like a lifetime controlling machines that are incapable of criticism.returnreturn"This, to my thinking, actually represented the great nexus of the Intelligence Community and the tech industry: both are entrenched and unelected powers that pride themselves on maintaining absolute secrecy about their developments. Both believe that they have the solutions for everything, which they never hesitate to unilaterally impose. Above all they both believe that these solutions are inherently apolitical, because they are based on data, whose prerogatives are regarded as preferable to the chaotic whims of the common citizen.returnreturnWithin a few short years he was in a position to see how the entire system operated, and what he saw threw him into a moral crisis. Eventually he decided the only way he could serve the nation would be to expose what was going on, whatever the personal cost. Toward the end of the book, he shifts from memoir to an argument for why privacy matters. It matters because âany elected government that relies on surveillance to maintain control of a citizenry that regards surveillance as anathema to democracy has effectively ceased to be a democracy.âreturnreturnBut itâs not just the state that uses surveillance for control. Both government and businesses exploit our permanent records.returnreturn "Algorithms analyze it for patterns of established behavior in order to extrapolate behaviors to come, a type of digital prophecy thatâs only slightly more accurate than analog methods like palm reading . . . its science is, in fact, anti-scientific, and fatally misnamed: predictability is actually manipulationâ¦returnreturn "We canât permit our data to be used to sell us the very things that must not be sold, such as journalism. If we do, the journalism we get will be merely the journalism we want, or the journalism the powerful want us to have, not the honest collective conversation thatâs necessary. We canât let the godlike surveillance weâre under be used to âcalculateâ or citizenship scores, or to âpredictâ our criminal activity; to tell us what kind of education we can have, or what kind of job we can have, or whether we can have an education or a job at all; to discriminate against us based on our financial, legal, and medical histories, not to mention our ethnicity or race, which are constructs that data often assumes or imposes. And as for our most intimate data, our genetic information: if we allow it to be used to identify us, then it will be used to victimize us, even to modify us â to remake the very essence of our humanity in the image of the technology that seeks its control.returnreturn"Of course all of the above has already happened."returnreturnPermanent Record is both a memoir of growing up with technology and an argument for breaking the law as an act of moral patriotism.returnreturnAs for me, Iâm interested in data privacy as a condition for intellectual freedom because thatâs stuff librarians care about. The implications of digital record-keeping and prediction are inescapable. Weâve become so inured to these systems we use them for enrollment management â this Washington Post article about it is chilling. Learning analytics, too, have the potential to be invasive in ways that fail to respect studentsâ agency and right to self-determination. I recently had a chance to pose some questions to Kyle Jones, the PI for the Data Doubles project, and his answers made for interesting reading in tandem with Snowdenâs warnings.returnreturnWe have choices to make. Deciding we donât have a choice is the easy way out, but it would be a terrible mistake.
Un témoignage passionnant du lanceur d’alerte Edward Snowden, qui a révélé au monde entier le programme illégal et anticonstitutionnel de surveillance de masse de la NSA cautionné par le gouvernement américain.
Les premiers chapitres m’ont fait penser à Aaron Schwartz, avec cette passion pour l’informatique et cette découverte enthousiasmante de l’Internet des années 1990, quand cet outil laissait espérer une utopie technologique au service du savoir et du partage.
La suite est évidemment plus sombre, avec cette plongée dans les coulisses de la CIA et de la NSA et leurs contingents de sous-traitants, faisant du renseignement américain un terrain de jeu géant et une poule aux œufs d’or pour des compagnies privées.
L’exil d’Edward Snowden à Hong Kong puis à Moscou, après avoir révélé au public les agissements de la NSA et du gouvernement américain, clôture ce récit qui serait incroyable et semblerait tiré d’un roman d’espionnage si nous ne …
Un témoignage passionnant du lanceur d’alerte Edward Snowden, qui a révélé au monde entier le programme illégal et anticonstitutionnel de surveillance de masse de la NSA cautionné par le gouvernement américain.
Les premiers chapitres m’ont fait penser à Aaron Schwartz, avec cette passion pour l’informatique et cette découverte enthousiasmante de l’Internet des années 1990, quand cet outil laissait espérer une utopie technologique au service du savoir et du partage.
La suite est évidemment plus sombre, avec cette plongée dans les coulisses de la CIA et de la NSA et leurs contingents de sous-traitants, faisant du renseignement américain un terrain de jeu géant et une poule aux œufs d’or pour des compagnies privées.
L’exil d’Edward Snowden à Hong Kong puis à Moscou, après avoir révélé au public les agissements de la NSA et du gouvernement américain, clôture ce récit qui serait incroyable et semblerait tiré d’un roman d’espionnage si nous ne savions pas qu’il s’agit de la réalité.
Ce n’est pas forcément une grande œuvre littéraire sur la forme, quoique j’ai été surpris par la qualité de l’écriture et par une dose d’humour bien senti, mais c’est un livre captivant et utile.
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Given his IT background I was surprised at how articulate and how well written his account was. The flow is incredibly smooth, the story gripping and interesting. I naturally finished it in one sitting, I couldn’t look away. Obviously an extremely intelligent, principled man who was unashamed to take an objective look at his past. He left out none of the embarrassing details, even leaving in his porn preferences at a younger age. He gave clear explanation for non-techie readers, but none of it was boring for the technically inclined either. This is an essential book for any citizen of America, or any other nation exhibiting totalitarian tendencies.