Friday, 14 June 2013

3 wise men: Julian Assange, Edward Snowden & Bradley Manning

All facing up to being hunted down for telling the truth in defence of human liberty and human honesty.

The Reality of the Invasive Perniciousness of what the USA Government & Agencies call 'National Security' makes us all insecure.

Three intelligent young men trying to do something human and decent.











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per·ni·cious  

/pərˈniSHəs/

Adjective
Having a harmful effect, esp. in a gradual or subtle way.

Synonyms
malign - noxious - baneful - harmful - pestilent - fatal

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Australia SBS News Re Edward Snowden

China said it "has no information to offer" about a former US government subcontractor who exposed massive US phone and Internet spying and has taken refuge in Hong Kong.
China said Thursday it "has no information to offer" about a former US government subcontractor who exposed massive US phone and Internet spying and has taken refuge in Hong Kong.
  
The bombshell revelations by Edward Snowden, made in the semi-autonomous southern Chinese city, come amid tensions between Washington and Beijing about online espionage.
  
Snowden has vowed to resist any US attempt to extradite him from Hong Kong, a former British colony with an independent judiciary and a strong tradition of free speech.
  
Hong Kong is a special administrative region of China, meaning that Beijing is ultimately responsible for its defence and security. That relationship has drawn intense interest over what role Chinese authorities may play as the drama unfolds.
  
China's government and official media had remained relatively quiet during a three-day public holiday that lasted through Wednesday.
  
On Thursday the foreign ministry provided little insight into Beijing's thinking.
  
"I have no information to offer," ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a regular briefing.
  
She was responding to a question about whether the US had approached China about Snowden's extradition, and what Beijing's reaction would be to such a request.
  
Hua was later asked if any extradition decision would be taken by the Chinese government or by Hong Kong's administration. She replied she had no information.
  
When asked about Snowden's claims to Hong Kong's South China Morning Post that the US has hacked computers in China, Hua reiterated Beijing's position that it is a major victim of cyber-attacks.
  
"We have repeatedly said that cyber-security is a global issue. Like other countries China also faces severe threats of cyber-attacks," she said.
  
"We are opposed to all forms of hacker and cyber-attacks.
  
"We also think that adopting double standards is not beneficial to an appropriate resolution" of the issue, she said.
  
Hua also repeated China's position that the international community should hold dialogue on how to "maintain peace, security, openness and cooperation in cyber-space".
  
China was willing to hold dialogue with the US on the matter as well, she said.
  
Cyber-attacks were one of several issues discussed when the two countries' presidents Barack Obama and Xi Jinping held a two-day summit in California last week.
  
Washington has in recent months intensified its public accusations of Chinese state-backed cyber-attacks -- an allegation which Beijing vehemently denies.
  
Leaks and reports recently revealed that the NSA is tapping the servers of nine Internet giants including Apple, Facebook and Google, and collecting a vast sweep of phone records.
  
The revelations have triggered major debate about privacy and security.
  
Supporters of Snowden call him a brave whistleblower, while the White House has said the international dragnet is needed to keep Americans safe from terror.
  
The China Daily on Thursday cited an analyst who noted the irony that the US's surveillance programme was exposed just as it began ramping up pressure on Beijing.
  
"It turns out that the biggest threat to the pursuit of individual freedom and privacy in the US is the unbridled power of the government," the paper quoted China Foreign Affairs University researcher Li Haidong as saying.
  
The programme "is certain to stain Washington's overseas image and test developing Sino-US ties", it said, citing experts.
  
"How the case is handled could pose a challenge to the burgeoning goodwill between Beijing and Washington given that Snowden is in Chinese territory and the Sino-US relationship is constantly soured on cyber-security."

Royal Australian Army/ABC News

Army email scandal shows 'predatory culture'

The latest Defence scandal has prompted calls for a zero-tolerance approach to misconduct, with experts suggesting that engrained sexism in the Army may be worse than first thought.
Earlier today the Chief of the Army, Lieutenant General David Morrison, revealed that senior personnel are involved in a series of explicit and offensive emails that degrade women.
A sociologist and former infantryman says the senior ranks of those involved show that disciplinary issues are not confined to young members of the Defence Force.
He also says the use of images to degrade women is a long-standing tradition within the Defence Force.

The scandalous erosion of US civil liberties - Al Jazeera Blogs

The scandalous erosion of US civil liberties - Al Jazeera Blogs

Edward Snowden- NSA leak: Little outcry, little change - Al Jazeera Blogs

NSA leak: Little outcry, little change - Al Jazeera Blogs

Edward Snowden/Info from CNN

Hong Kong (CNN) -- China remained tight-lipped Thursday about its stance on NSA leaker Edward Snowden, who is believed to be holed up in a safe house somewhere in the semiautonomous territory of Hong Kong.
Snowden provided fresh fuel Wednesday for the controversy he has sparked, telling a Hong Kong newspaper that U.S. intelligence agents have been hacking networks around the world for years, including hundreds of computers in China.
In the interview with the South China Morning Post, he also said he plans to stay in Hong Kong to fight any attempt to force him to return to the United States because he has "faith in Hong Kong's rule of law." His comments come as the FBI is investigating his case.
His presence in the southern Chinese territory, which has a separate system of government from the mainland, has raised questions about how an effort by the U.S. government to extradite him would unfold, and what role Beijing might play in the process.

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But China's first official comment on the matter gave away no clues.
"We have no information to offer at the moment," a spokeswoman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Hua Chunying, said in response to a question about Snowden at a regular news briefing in Beijing on Thursday. She repeated the same answer to several follow-up questions.
Snowden, 29, has rocked the Obama administration and U.S. intelligence community by providing documents to journalists revealing the existence of secret programs to collect records of domestic telephone calls in the United States and the Internet activity of overseas residents.
Differing reactions
Snowden's case has become a hot issue in Hong Kong, making local newspaper front pages, stirring legal debates and prompting plans for a rally in support of him over the weekend.
The reaction in mainland China, on the other hand, has been muted. State-run media outlets have covered the case cautiously, appearing to try to avoid focusing too much attention on some of the sensitive issues his disclosures have raised, such as government surveillance of citizens.
The Snowden story has also so far failed to make big waves among China's tens of millions of highly active social media users.
Some Chinese state media took the opportunity Thursday to highlight Snowden's comments to the South China Morning Post alleging U.S. government hacking of Chinese targets.
In recent years, the Global Times newspaper said in an editorial, "the United States has always claimed itself to be a victim of Chinese hacking activities. Many speculate that it's a cover up for hacking activities conducted by the U.S. government. Now, Snowden's revelation proves that such activities have already been going on for a long time."
Hacking claims
Among some 61,000 reported targets of the National Security Agency, Snowden told the Hong Kong newspaper, are hundreds of computers in China.
U.S. officials have increasingly accused China of being the source of thousands of attacks on U.S. military and commercial networks. Beijing has denied such attacks.
The South China Morning Post said it had seen documents provided by Snowden but was unable to verify their authenticity. The newspaper also said it was unable to independently verify allegations of U.S. hacking of networks in Hong Kong and mainland China since 2009.

NSA leaker back in shadows

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Where could NSA leaker go?

Prosecution for journalists in leak?
Snowden told the paper that some of the targets included the Chinese University of Hong Kong, public officials and students. The documents also "point to hacking activity by the NSA against mainland targets," it reported.
The claims came just days after U.S. President Barack Obama pressed Chinese President Xi Jinping to address cyberattacks emanating from China that Obama described as "direct theft of United States property."
Snowden's allegations appear to give weight to claims by some Chinese government officials that the country has been a victim of similar hacking efforts coming from the United States.
His claims came as Gen. Keith Alexander, the National Security Agency chief, testified at a U.S. Senate hearing that the country's cyberinfrastructure, including telephones and computer networks, is somewhat vulnerable to attack.
On a scale of one to 10, "our critical infrastructure's preparedness to withstand a destructive cyberattack is about a three, based on my experience," he said.
In the South China Morning Post interview -- published one week after the British newspaper The Guardian revealed the first leaks attributed to Snowden -- he said the agency he once worked for as a contractor typically targets high-bandwidth data lines that connect Internet nodes around the world.
"We hack network backbones -- like huge Internet routers, basically -- that give us access to the communications of hundreds of thousands of computers without having to hack every single one," the newspaper quoted him as saying.
A "backbone" is part of the inner workings of a computer network that links different parts of that network. It is used to deliver data from one part of the network to another and, as such, could expose data from multiple computers if hacked.
'Trying to bully'
While he has not been charged, Snowden has told The Guardian that he expects the United States to try to prosecute him. He worked for the computer consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton until Monday, when he was fired after outing himself as the leaker.
Snowden told the South China Morning Post that he felt U.S. officials were pressuring his family and also accused them of "trying to bully" Hong Kong into extraditing him to prevent the release of more damaging information.
He vowed to resist extradition efforts if it comes to that, saying he "would rather stay and fight the United States government in the courts, because I have faith in Hong Kong's rule of law."
"My intention is to ask the courts and people of Hong Kong to decide my fate," the South China Morning Post quoted Snowden as saying. "I have been given no reason to doubt your system.''
But Hong Kong lawmaker Regina Ip, a former secretary of security for the territory, said Tuesday that while any extradition process could take months, Snowden isn't necessarily beyond the reach of the United States.
"If he thought there was a legal vacuum in Hong Kong which renders him safe from U.S. jurisdiction, that is unlikely to be the case," she said.
Legal experts says that Beijing can get involved in the process to extradite a person from Hong Kong if the case significantly affects defense or foreign affairs.
But some observers say that Chinese authorities are unlikely to want to rock the boat in this instance.
"Given the somewhat fraught Hong Kong-Beijing relationship, the political impact of Beijing interference in this Hong Kong legal matter could be grave," the Beijing-based analyst and blogger, Bill Bishop, wrote in an article for USA Today.
The newspaper said Snowden has been hiding in undisclosed locations in Hong Kong since checking out of his hotel room Monday, a day after he revealed his identity in an interview with The Guardian.
Snowden told the Morning Post he is not trying to evade U.S. authorities.
"People who think I made a mistake in picking Hong Kong as a location misunderstand my intentions," the newspaper quoted him as saying. "I am not here to hide from justice; I am here to reveal criminality."
The NSA and the national intelligence director did not immediately respond to a CNN request for comment.
Asked during a media briefing Wednesday for comment on Snowden's latest claims, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki declined. She said she had not seen the latest South China Morning Post report.
On the defensive
The revelations have renewed debate over surveillance in the United States and overseas in the name of fighting terrorism, with supporters saying the programs revealed by Snowden are legal and have helped stop terror plots. Civil liberties advocates, however, call the measures dangerous and unacceptable intrusions.
Such criticisms have put Obama and his allies on the issue -- both Democrats and Republicans -- on the defensive against mounting criticism from a similarly bipartisan group of critics demanding changes to rein in the programs.
There also is a sharp division among Americans over the issue.
A Gallup poll released Wednesday found that 44% of Americans believe Snowden did the right thing by releasing details about the classified surveillance programs, while 42% said it was wrong and 14% said they were unsure.
The poll for that question had a 6% margin of error.
It also found that more Americans disapprove than approve of the government's surveillance programs, 53% to 37%. Ten percent had no opinion.
The poll for that question had a 4% margin of error.
Those differences were on display Wednesday when Alexander, the director of the National Security Agency, testified at a hearing into cybersecurity technology and civil liberties.
Officials have been unable to explain controversial data mining programs because they have been classified, he testified.
But he rejected Snowden's claim that the NSA could tap into any American's phone or computer.
"I know of no way to do that," Alexander said.
But he testified that phone records obtained by the government helped prevent "dozens" of terrorist events.
He would not discuss disrupted plots broadly, saying they were classified. But he did say federal data mining appeared to play a role in helping to disrupt a plot in recent years to attack the New York subway system.
Alexander said information developed overseas was passed along to the FBI, which he said was able to identify eventual suspect Najibullah Zazi in Colorado and ultimately uncover a plot. Zazi pleaded guilty to terror-related charges in 2010.
EU questions
Fallout over revelations about the NSA's intelligence-gathering has also reached the European Union's governing body, where Vice President Viviane Reding raised concerns that the United States may have targeted some of its citizens.
Reding said she plans to raise the issue during a meeting Friday with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder.
"The respect for fundamental rights and the rule of law are the foundations of the EU-U.S. relationship. This common understanding has been, and must remain, the basis of cooperation between us in the area of justice," Reding, the EU commissioner for justice, said Wednesday.
"Trust that the rule of law will be respected is also essential to the stability and growth of the digital economy, including transatlantic business. This is of paramount importance for individuals and companies alike."

Japanese forces' name and role to change - Asia-pacific - Al Jazeera English

Japanese forces' name and role to change - Asia-pacific - Al Jazeera English