Monday, August 5, 2013

Edward Snowden is Not the Story

From Histories of Things to Come:
Edward Snowden has been granted asylum in Russia. Some say he is a whistle-blower. Some say he is a spy.  The Guardian insists the real concern here is the fate of the Internet and a potential coming conflict over how it will be used as a tool, not of free information, but of social control:
Repeat after me: Edward Snowden is not the story. The story is what he has revealed about the hidden wiring of our networked world. This insight seems to have escaped most of the world's mainstream media, for reasons that escape me but would not have surprised Evelyn Waugh, whose contempt for journalists was one of his few endearing characteristics. The obvious explanations are: incorrigible ignorance; the imperative to personalise stories; or gullibility in swallowing US government spin, which brands Snowden as a spy rather than a whistleblower.
In a way, it doesn't matter why the media lost the scent. What matters is that they did. So as a public service, let us summarise what Snowden has achieved thus far.
Without him, we would not know how the National Security Agency (NSA) had been able to access the emails, Facebook accounts and videos of citizens across the world; or how it had secretly acquired the phone records of millions of Americans; or how, through a secret court, it has been able to bend nine US internet companies to its demands for access to their users' data.
(Read more.)
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1 comment:

julygirl said...

Next it will be like East Germany during the Communist regime when family members turned each other in to the authorities and neighbors reported neighbors.