Today’s R&D over the hot topic of domestic surveillance by the National Security Agency (NSA). The scope of the NSA’s activities were initially revealed by Edward Snowden and more leaks continue to reveal the expansive nature of the Agency’s activities. President Obama has vowed to review the NSA’s activities and enhance public confidence in the program, but civil liberties groups remain skeptical.
‘@marcambinder: 4 reasons the NSA scandal is troubling: http://t.co/HW9OPUFIXT, and 5 reasons it’s overblown: http://t.co/jV1gyOH6iR
— The Week (@TheWeek) August 21, 2013
Kudos to the WSJ for publishing an FAQ along with its NSA story http://t.co/ArC9UGtldo
— Blake Hounshell (@blakehounshell) August 21, 2013
Blarney, Oakstar, Lithium, Stormbrew – just a few of the code names for widespread NSA surveillance programs: http://t.co/AP2xpNDBsN
— Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) August 21, 2013
If you think Smith v. Maryland permits mass surveillance, you haven’t read Smith v. Maryland, says @Jim_Harper: http://t.co/XvxIsnErYA #NSA
— Cato Institute (@CatoInstitute) August 21, 2013
Have the NSA revelations changed the way we use the Internet? http://t.co/fOokZW2Biy
— The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) August 19, 2013
The crackdown on The Guardian’s NSA reporting came from British Prime Minister David Cameron http://t.co/vEg278G6Uf
— The Atlantic Wire (@TheAtlanticWire) August 21, 2013
Report: #NSA doesn’t know extent of #Snowden damage http://t.co/HzgrRm5EFq
— The Hill (@thehill) August 21, 2013
How much more deception is the NSA hiding? http://t.co/DiGhxSaTnq
— The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) August 21, 2013
You don’t have to work for the NSA to spy on people. All you need is $79. http://t.co/Paymv0Mgmw
— Forbes (@Forbes) August 20, 2013
RT @maxboot: Latest evidence shows #NSA guilty of innocent mistakes, not abuses. My take on #Snowden‘s new leaks: http://t.co/lykYqPivFI
— CFR (@CFR_org) August 19, 2013