Edward Snowden: Mass Surveillance

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I. Introduction “These programs were never about terrorism: they're about economic spying, social control, and diplomatic manipulation. They're about power.” says Edward Snowden, a former government contractor, who, in 2013, began to leak documents to journalists that revealed the extent of surveillance practices employed by the United States government.(Pye, Vitka, 2017). Snowden’s leaks revealed that the government was using practices such as, getting secret court orders to view American citizens’ phone records, forcing companies to allow the NSA backdoor access past encryptions, tapping the personal devices of world leaders, collecting 200 million text messages a day, intercepting every single phone call made in the Bahamas and Afghanistan, …show more content…

government began, without court authorization or acquisition of warrants, project SHAMROCK. The project intended to gather all telegraphic data entering and leaving the United States. Any messages of particular interest were disseminated among fellow U.S. intelligence agencies. The project continued for 30 years, until 1975 when it was terminated by the NSA, after Congress began to investigate.(Debenedetti, 2013). The methods employed in the mass collection data, such as working with communications companies, like Western Union, is similar to practices later employed by the NSA, such as bulk collection of data through cooperation from companies, like AT&T and Verizon.(Debenedetti, …show more content…

vs. U.S. District Court in 1972. In the case, the supreme court ruled unanimously that the protections described in the 4th amendment, regarding unreasonable search and seizure, applies to surveillance for the purpose of preventing domestic threats. The case established, essentially, that a warrant was needed, even for electronic surveillance. SHAMROCK and the supreme court case are early instances of government surveillance being considered a social issue and could be called to tipping point to labeling it as a social issue, due to the potential infringement on the right to privacy. The stakeholders in any policy made regarding such a broad reaching social issue are the intelligence agencies of the United States and the citizens they aim to protect. Stakeholders will be impacted economically by a potential decrease in government spending, with a decrease in certain government programs. Similarly, if the agencies were to employ means of collecting information that relied less of bulk collection of data and more individual work for members of the respective agencies, it could result in a change in demand for certain employees in each agency, mainly the NSA.(Greene, 2014). Some economists have also speculated that the U.S. government's surveillance policies make foreign consumers and companies more reluctant

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