5 June 2015
Edward Snowden: The World Says No to Surveillance
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/05/opinion/edward-snowden-the-world-says-no-to-surveillance.html
The New York Times
Edward Snowden: The World Says No to Surveillance
By EDWARD J. SNOWDEN
JUNE 4, 2015
MOSCOW TWO years ago today, three journalists and I worked nervously
in a Hong Kong hotel room, waiting to see how the world would react to the
revelation that the National Security Agency had been making records of nearly
every phone call in the United States. In the days that followed, those
journalists and others published documents revealing that democratic governments
had been monitoring the private activities of ordinary citizens who had done
nothing wrong.
Within days, the United States government responded by bringing charges against
me under World War I-era espionage laws. The journalists were advised by
lawyers that they risked arrest or subpoena if they returned to the United
States. Politicians raced to condemn our efforts as un-American, even treasonous.
Privately, there were moments when I worried that we might have put our
privileged lives at risk for nothing that the public would react with
indifference, or practiced cynicism, to the revelations.
Never have I been so grateful to have been so wrong.
Two years on, the difference is profound. In a single month, the N.S.A.s
invasive call-tracking program was declared unlawful by the courts and disowned
by Congress. After a White House-appointed oversight board investigation
found that this program had not stopped a single terrorist attack, even the
president who once defended its propriety and criticized its disclosure has
now ordered it terminated.
This is the power of an informed public.
Ending the mass surveillance of private phone calls under the Patriot Act
is a historic victory for the rights of every citizen, but it is only the
latest product of a change in global awareness. Since 2013, institutions
across Europe have ruled similar laws and operations illegal and imposed
new restrictions on future activities. The United Nations declared mass
surveillance an unambiguous violation of human rights. In Latin America,
the efforts of citizens in Brazil led to the Marco Civil, an Internet Bill
of Rights. Recognizing the critical role of informed citizens in correcting
the excesses of government, the Council of Europe called for new laws to
protect whistle-blowers.
Beyond the frontiers of law, progress has come even more quickly. Technologists
have worked tirelessly to re-engineer the security of the devices that surround
us, along with the language of the Internet itself. Secret flaws in critical
infrastructure that had been exploited by governments to facilitate mass
surveillance have been detected and corrected. Basic technical safeguards
such as encryption once considered esoteric and unnecessary
are now enabled by default in the products of pioneering companies like Apple,
ensuring that even if your phone is stolen, your private life remains private.
Such structural technological changes can ensure access to basic privacies
beyond borders, insulating ordinary citizens from the arbitrary passage of
anti-privacy laws, such as those now descending upon Russia.
Though we have come a long way, the right to privacy the foundation
of the freedoms enshrined in the United States Bill of Rights remains
under threat. Some of the worlds most popular online services have
been enlisted as partners in the N.S.A.s mass surveillance programs,
and technology companies are being pressured by governments around the world
to work against their customers rather than for them. Billions of cellphone
location records are still being intercepted without regard for the guilt
or innocence of those affected. We have learned that our government intentionally
weakens the fundamental security of the Internet with back doors
that transform private lives into open books. Metadata revealing the personal
associations and interests of ordinary Internet users is still being intercepted
and monitored on a scale unprecedented in history: As you read this online,
the United States government makes a note.
Spymasters in Australia, Canada and France have exploited recent tragedies
to seek intrusive new powers despite evidence such programs would not have
prevented attacks. Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain recently mused,
Do we want to allow a means of communication between people which we
cannot read? He soon found his answer, proclaiming that for too
long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens:
As long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone.
At the turning of the millennium, few imagined that citizens of developed
democracies would soon be required to defend the concept of an open society
against their own leaders.
Yet the balance of power is beginning to shift. We are witnessing the emergence
of a post-terror generation, one that rejects a worldview defined by a singular
tragedy. For the first time since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, we see the
outline of a politics that turns away from reaction and fear in favor of
resilience and reason. With each court victory, with every change in the
law, we demonstrate facts are more convincing than fear. As a society, we
rediscover that the value of a right is not in what it hides, but in what
it protects.
Edward J. Snowden, a former Central Intelligence Agency officer and National
Security Agency contractor, is a director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
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