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Dec 20, 2015
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so what is it about snowden? i interviewed thomas drake, the other whistleblower who i talked about in washington, whose career was completely destroyed. he was an upper level executive at nsa and when he tried to attempted to go through the system, reported his concerns about not only privacy violations but also wasting of billions of dollars of taxpayer money on inefficient programs, really it was corruption. people, private contractors are connected to the officials that were proving these are grams were benefiting. he went to inspector general. he did everything he was supposed to do as a whistleblower. nevertheless, they raided his house, set out to destroy his career. they blackballed them, destroyed his marriage. he ended up, and now he is working at the genius bar and apple store in maryland. that's where he works. i've talked to about this like what is it about you, why you? what about -- i was wrong. what i saw was wrong. and i kept insisting, yes, but what about your colleagues? they all saw the same s
so what is it about snowden? i interviewed thomas drake, the other whistleblower who i talked about in washington, whose career was completely destroyed. he was an upper level executive at nsa and when he tried to attempted to go through the system, reported his concerns about not only privacy violations but also wasting of billions of dollars of taxpayer money on inefficient programs, really it was corruption. people, private contractors are connected to the officials that were proving these...
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Dec 21, 2015
12/15
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CSPAN2
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none of this would have happened without snowden. he had access to the full roster of everyone working at the nsa and could have made public the entire intelligence community to undercover assets worldwide. he could have revealed their freedom station and mission in shutdown intelligence system in one afternoon. but this was never his intention. he wanted only that until he documented to be carried out without our consent or knowledge. our politicians including clinton argued that snowden could have turned internal mechanisms to have grievances heard. but i can't tell you for personally experience that this argument is as cogent as the authors -- offer made from the bad t party. from "alice in wonderland". have some wine. alice looked all around but there was nothing on it. i don't see one. there isn't any. [applause] >> how should we do this? >> any questions? >> your discussion of moral heroes of what is legal or moral is some examples of saugerties is that the vague moral hero? and a great admirer of the philosopher who writes abo
none of this would have happened without snowden. he had access to the full roster of everyone working at the nsa and could have made public the entire intelligence community to undercover assets worldwide. he could have revealed their freedom station and mission in shutdown intelligence system in one afternoon. but this was never his intention. he wanted only that until he documented to be carried out without our consent or knowledge. our politicians including clinton argued that snowden could...
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Dec 5, 2015
12/15
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CSPAN2
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after ed snowden, privacy, secrecy, security in the
after ed snowden, privacy, secrecy, security in the
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Dec 24, 2015
12/15
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CSPAN
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snowden releases. understand your own lives, and the context. we all use these services, they are not unique to us as citizens , to someone in britain, australia, canada, germany, you as are not unique to united states citizens, to me or to you as brits, to someone in australia, susan -- new zealand's my canada, portugal, germany, switzerland, russia. the amount of information is incredible. it is insightful, and his it is almost orwellian. data mining, data analytics, social engineering, can produce such a detailed map of your lives from the cradle to the grave. you need to think now. is this the world you want, is this internet you want, is is the connectivity that the world demands? if so, you give up elements of national freedom, and you pay for it one way or the other. we will all pay for it whether through a reduction of civil liberties, privacy more likely, and also a financial cost. a digital device within the states is partly generational. the availability, and low-cost of the technology will decrease over time. and the take-up increase
snowden releases. understand your own lives, and the context. we all use these services, they are not unique to us as citizens , to someone in britain, australia, canada, germany, you as are not unique to united states citizens, to me or to you as brits, to someone in australia, susan -- new zealand's my canada, portugal, germany, switzerland, russia. the amount of information is incredible. it is insightful, and his it is almost orwellian. data mining, data analytics, social engineering, can...
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Dec 5, 2015
12/15
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CSPAN2
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but to send a signal up to get out with chelsea manning and edward snowden to toe the line. end to not walk away on this bed is the intimidation factor. and that is the resources that the political thugs have. >> you contributed but the obama administration people have said it is day happenstance or a coincidence stood journalists be concerned? >> absolutely it is not happenstance. this isn't a democrat or republican issue every administration since world war to end world war i the government has the inherent desire from criticism but the obama administration has done it in a way because part of that was not just the threat of jail but the loss of your pension, a classification instructor stuart never work again in your field but they have decided and voiced by a judge that no longer going after the journalists as the primary purpose because that makes them heroes did it is self-defeating. and you go after everybody end tegea the university of maryland or "the washington post" and the next time they sat down to say sorry i have to move but the last time i had to spend half a
but to send a signal up to get out with chelsea manning and edward snowden to toe the line. end to not walk away on this bed is the intimidation factor. and that is the resources that the political thugs have. >> you contributed but the obama administration people have said it is day happenstance or a coincidence stood journalists be concerned? >> absolutely it is not happenstance. this isn't a democrat or republican issue every administration since world war to end world war i the...
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Dec 23, 2015
12/15
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coming up, now it's edward snowden versus hillary clinton. wendy davis will be back with us to discuss the new poll showing increasing support for abortion rights in america including among republicans. ya know, viagra helps guys with erectile dysfunction get and keep an erection. talk to your doctor about viagra. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain or adempas® for pulmonary hypertension. your blood pressure could drop to an unsafe level. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. ask your doctor about viagra. whfight back fastts tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue and neutralizes stomach acid at the source tum, tum, tum, tum smoothies! only from tums prge! a manufacturer. well that's why i dug this out for you. it's your grandpappy's hammer and he would have wante
coming up, now it's edward snowden versus hillary clinton. wendy davis will be back with us to discuss the new poll showing increasing support for abortion rights in america including among republicans. ya know, viagra helps guys with erectile dysfunction get and keep an erection. talk to your doctor about viagra. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain or adempas® for pulmonary hypertension. your blood pressure could drop...
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Dec 22, 2015
12/15
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KWWL
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russell house museum and the snowden house preserve and interpret elements of the victorian age; the bluedorn science imaginarium provides exhibitions and programming that inspire the study of the sciences. and the sullivan broththrs iowa veterans museum honors the service and sacrifice of iowa veterans from the civil war to present. we'll be right back. graf generator, static electricity, current electricity, inventors and invention thenwe're going to show you the same exppriment with r re krispipis we're making ariel's hair standup as as we reveal the power of electricity using materials such as a van de graf generator, static electricity, show you the same exxeriment with rice kriiies the missiin of the grout better understanding of our world by collecting, preserving collects, preserves and interprets cultural and natural history of the region; the rensselaer russell house museum and the snowden house preserve and interpret elements of the victorian age; the bluedorn science imaginarium provides exhibitions and programming that inspire the study of the iences. and the sullivan br
russell house museum and the snowden house preserve and interpret elements of the victorian age; the bluedorn science imaginarium provides exhibitions and programming that inspire the study of the sciences. and the sullivan broththrs iowa veterans museum honors the service and sacrifice of iowa veterans from the civil war to present. we'll be right back. graf generator, static electricity, current electricity, inventors and invention thenwe're going to show you the same exppriment with r re...
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Dec 7, 2015
12/15
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CSPAN
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snowden and manny. will end ups system because of the benefits we are talked about and will give us true more -- truly more security at the end of the day and then move the system forward and we will learn. and move thisheir one out. then you get on with the new process. if we dod like to say have emerging technologies, i believe we will see a change not only in business and technology efforts and the ultraconservative top -- counterintelligence, that person, he or she, has a real responsibility. people,hat current prominent counterintelligence in and intelligence community welcomed this as a way to do better risk management. there is more enlightenment. they have to be hard-nosed whether it is the bureau or cia or in defense. gives us hopehis for the kind of change that you want. >> one comment. we have to ensure we are not parochial. not only in the united states of america where people are engaged in this question. i can ensure you hostels services are looking at digital evaluation tools, key u.s. go
snowden and manny. will end ups system because of the benefits we are talked about and will give us true more -- truly more security at the end of the day and then move the system forward and we will learn. and move thisheir one out. then you get on with the new process. if we dod like to say have emerging technologies, i believe we will see a change not only in business and technology efforts and the ultraconservative top -- counterintelligence, that person, he or she, has a real...
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Dec 23, 2015
12/15
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what you heard hillary clinton say in the era of terrorism, we're past the reaction of snowden.needs to be some kind of compromise, a way to allow us to protect data, the way tim cook was say, and the way to allow law enforcement to get in if they have a legal order. and what you hear tim cook saying is i know politicians believe that it's always nice to compromise, but in this case, there is no compromise. in this case, the mathematics are driving this, and the mathematics show that if you create some kind of an opening, the chinese, the russians, the iranians, north koreans, will all focus their efforts on bursting through that without that legal order. >> lance james, do you see any technological middle ground here? anything that you could imagine working the way hillary clinton imagines that manhattan project working? >> well, not exactly. i'm actually surprised to see the democratic party even, you know, trying to find a middle ground on the backdoor issue. this issue came -- we had this in the 1990s. and basically, if you kind of look at it, there's two reasons. i think ti
what you heard hillary clinton say in the era of terrorism, we're past the reaction of snowden.needs to be some kind of compromise, a way to allow us to protect data, the way tim cook was say, and the way to allow law enforcement to get in if they have a legal order. and what you hear tim cook saying is i know politicians believe that it's always nice to compromise, but in this case, there is no compromise. in this case, the mathematics are driving this, and the mathematics show that if you...
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he was the nsa director when snowden dropped his digital cyber bomb. general alexander will tell us in a fox business exclusive if america is now more vulnerable to attacks thanks to edward snowden, and what can we do about it now? so with the markets fighting for oxygen, we're less than an hour to the chosing bell so, come on, let's start the "countdown." there. ♪ ♪ liz: breaking news. right now when you see this number on your screen, we have the dow down 158 points, that is well off the lows. the nasdaq just a second ago punched into positive territory, not quite there yet, kind of trying to claw back and forth here. but right now the nasdaq is lower by about three points. a far cry from its low of the session earlier today, the nasdaq was down about 56 points. i need you to look at the u.s. dollar. why? well, you can see because it all relates to the oil situation here, the dollar is stronger against major currencies, but canadian dollar -- canada, of course, hugely dependent on oil and on gasoline and all the things that are plummeting right now,
he was the nsa director when snowden dropped his digital cyber bomb. general alexander will tell us in a fox business exclusive if america is now more vulnerable to attacks thanks to edward snowden, and what can we do about it now? so with the markets fighting for oxygen, we're less than an hour to the chosing bell so, come on, let's start the "countdown." there. ♪ ♪ liz: breaking news. right now when you see this number on your screen, we have the dow down 158 points, that is...
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Dec 21, 2015
12/15
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CSPAN2
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and that was before the snowden revelation came out which often gets lost. the president has said this was something he cared about beforehand. that is one thing i really point to all the time to people to say this is proof that he actually meant that. he really -- there has been concern in the white house of the kind of oversight that you can do of the intelligence community publicly and how to go about addressing some of those privacy issues. that will continue to be the case even in the future as, you know, as we start to raise some of the concerns on the security issues that we've seen in recent months. >> host: is this an area overall of cooperation between the administration and the congress? >> guest: yeah, this is an area, i think cybersecurity has been an area where we have had a lot of bipartisan work and a lot of work between the administration and congress. and you've actually seen that starting from where we started with that bill that, where the administration threatened to veto. we've seen a move toward the center here, and that's the reason i
and that was before the snowden revelation came out which often gets lost. the president has said this was something he cared about beforehand. that is one thing i really point to all the time to people to say this is proof that he actually meant that. he really -- there has been concern in the white house of the kind of oversight that you can do of the intelligence community publicly and how to go about addressing some of those privacy issues. that will continue to be the case even in the...
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Dec 16, 2015
12/15
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FOXNEWSW
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the guy -- i mean. >> i don't think he likes snowden, cruz.om of speech thing. >> very soft on snowden. >> lastóh word. >> i you agree if you are soft on snowden, you work at a waffle house not the white house. i'm also extremely tired of this whose establishment and who is not establishment. the fact is it's making establishment edgy. it's like now khakis are like leather chance. >> karl rove is the new timothy leary. >> or something. all right, boys. we appreciate you coming. in factor tip of the day. new movie that does good things for race relations in america. the tip moments away. [o i never know when i'll need relief.oosenicorette mini. his day of coaching begins with knee pain, when... this is brad. hey brad, wanna trade the all day relief of two aleve for six tylenol? what's the catch? there's no catch. you want me to give up my two aleve for six tylenol? no. for my knee pain, nothing beats my aleve. historical parchments, jackets, hats, pens, shirts, mugs, you name it, all reasonably priced. also, killing reagan, other killing books
the guy -- i mean. >> i don't think he likes snowden, cruz.om of speech thing. >> very soft on snowden. >> lastóh word. >> i you agree if you are soft on snowden, you work at a waffle house not the white house. i'm also extremely tired of this whose establishment and who is not establishment. the fact is it's making establishment edgy. it's like now khakis are like leather chance. >> karl rove is the new timothy leary. >> or something. all right, boys. we...
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Dec 31, 2015
12/15
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BLOOMBERG
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cory: what we were talking about before, the snowden effects -- i have looked at businesses like thisterrible businesses because they have huge capital expenditures and not a lot of them andiators between competitors, but maybe that runs counter to trend. if you have to build data centers everywhere for political and governmental reasons, not necessarily business reasons. place,the cloud has a and it's called a data center. you just have to walk into one of these. maybe you will do a segment on it. you see the interconnection of connectsd those cross are what create the franchise value. it's all about hosting and speed and access, and that is where the data centers are really having an impact, but the snowden effect -- there is another investment name we have been involved with called cyberarc, an israeli tech company. you already have authorization to access the bloomberg network, but you are a bad guy -- both are true. david: they may be. i will let hr deal with that. basically, they watch what you do, so that there is not another .nowden effect the interesting thing about cyber sec
cory: what we were talking about before, the snowden effects -- i have looked at businesses like thisterrible businesses because they have huge capital expenditures and not a lot of them andiators between competitors, but maybe that runs counter to trend. if you have to build data centers everywhere for political and governmental reasons, not necessarily business reasons. place,the cloud has a and it's called a data center. you just have to walk into one of these. maybe you will do a segment on...
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Dec 19, 2015
12/15
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BLOOMBERG
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is all about the value of knowledge. >> the first part of simon's exhibition is directly inspired snowden'ss.a. information. it is a deconstruction not of the content but rather the graphics used in the slides. >> for everybody in particular the artistic community snowden's release of this huge amount of slides through the media was a big eye opener for the way the world has interacted with certain parts of government. for me and for a lot of my peers it was also a literal revelation, right? it was like, okay. this is the way that these are important systems visualizes and communicated. so i've tried to look in my exhibition at what this graphic design says and how to read it. >> simon is a very modern artist interested in visual culture so he is looking to see how the world is represented, then he wants to take those representations, decode them, and recode them into a variety of majestic works that make the rest of us look again at the visual language that surrounds us. he's worked with brands and now is working with one of the biggest brands of all, the national security agency. >> along
is all about the value of knowledge. >> the first part of simon's exhibition is directly inspired snowden'ss.a. information. it is a deconstruction not of the content but rather the graphics used in the slides. >> for everybody in particular the artistic community snowden's release of this huge amount of slides through the media was a big eye opener for the way the world has interacted with certain parts of government. for me and for a lot of my peers it was also a literal...
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Dec 20, 2015
12/15
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WNYW
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this snowden episode that the american government despite spying on its citizens, there is no evidence of that. the way you protect the freedoms is to protect the homeland. but the bigger issue has to be what do we do in syria and iraq and a caliphate and the size of indiana. 30,000 battle tested terrorists that exist, organized with hundreds of millions of dollars in stolen money, ransom money, basically hijacking the economy. anthony: does that require ground troops? ops. i would say give me the options to destroy isis. i would relieve them of the duty to have more constraints than the norms of warfare and allow them to do their job. anthony: homeland security is front page right now. you made a decision before it was front page news again to want to be president. let' s go back there. what is it that makes you want to be president of the united states? governor bush: the two things i believe that i can bring to the presidency is, one, to protect the homeland, to rebuild our military, to project america' s leadership in the world again. long before this episode, this president really
this snowden episode that the american government despite spying on its citizens, there is no evidence of that. the way you protect the freedoms is to protect the homeland. but the bigger issue has to be what do we do in syria and iraq and a caliphate and the size of indiana. 30,000 battle tested terrorists that exist, organized with hundreds of millions of dollars in stolen money, ransom money, basically hijacking the economy. anthony: does that require ground troops? ops. i would say give me...
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Dec 12, 2015
12/15
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BLOOMBERG
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emily: tell me about your relationship with edward snowden. kim: i think he is a hero.dmire him for his courage. he will be remembered in history as one of the great people of our time. emily: what is he up to now? kim: he is happy, he is fine. he is in russia. i think he is pleased that the debate has been triggered, based on the good things he has done. especially to americans. emily: when it comes to china, iran, islamic terrorists, the united states government, what are you most worried about when it comes to spying, hacking? kim: i am worried about the situation in ukraine. i think putin is someone i would be very careful with. i think that obama has done a good thing in negotiating with iran and trying to find a resolution to this nuclear standoff. emily: what about some of the other countries? like north korea and sony? should we be concerned about north korea? kim: well, you do not really believe that north korea hacked sony. i do not believe that for a minute. emily: who did, then? kim: well, some sophisticated group that has an interest in what hollywood is do
emily: tell me about your relationship with edward snowden. kim: i think he is a hero.dmire him for his courage. he will be remembered in history as one of the great people of our time. emily: what is he up to now? kim: he is happy, he is fine. he is in russia. i think he is pleased that the debate has been triggered, based on the good things he has done. especially to americans. emily: when it comes to china, iran, islamic terrorists, the united states government, what are you most worried...
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Dec 15, 2015
12/15
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david: even before snowden, there was a lot of scary talk coming from countries. started to understand how powerful the internet was, their country's government started to want to take control of it. in 2012, there was a meeting of the itu in dubai where there were scary things said by a lot of country, and i think we dodged a bullet at that meeting. snowden has piled fuel on that fire by making it appear that the u.s., which is the long-term defender of internet freedom, seems like a hypocrite. we didn't really seem to be quite as honest as we pretended to be about wanting internet freedom because we were looking at all kinds of stuff. that has made it harder for the u.s. to defend its traditional values where it should be a multi-stakeholder model, not a multilateral model, which is governmental control. i worried tremendously that we still don't have the consensus we want. it's great if the u.n. it wants to talk about getting access to more people, but it may want to talk about it in control of it. that talk has not ended. emily: a huge difference between multi
david: even before snowden, there was a lot of scary talk coming from countries. started to understand how powerful the internet was, their country's government started to want to take control of it. in 2012, there was a meeting of the itu in dubai where there were scary things said by a lot of country, and i think we dodged a bullet at that meeting. snowden has piled fuel on that fire by making it appear that the u.s., which is the long-term defender of internet freedom, seems like a...
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Dec 21, 2015
12/15
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. >>> edward snowden is relying on technology for an upcoming event. he will use video to gave speech to a convention in web. trying to recruit liberty loving people to move to the granite state. snowden has spent the past two years living in russia on asylum in in 2013 he leaked millions of documents to a u k paper. >>> the big ticket is coming back to boston. garnett and timberwolves at the garden. he helped lead to a champion snip 2008. the boston bruins just one point out of first place. bs hosting new jersey. and erickson opens the score and erickson opens the scoring. his 13th of the season. and put the heat on, and redirects the puck home that tied the game at 1. this game goes to a shootout that is your game winner. bruins host solution tomorrow. >>> 4:46. let's head on out and start with the maps right now where you start with green. volume is moving along at a speed limit ride on the expressway and on the pike. 93 south and route 1 looks good 93 south and route 1 looks good. zakim bridge wide open. 13 minutes on route 1 from 128 to the tobin.
. >>> edward snowden is relying on technology for an upcoming event. he will use video to gave speech to a convention in web. trying to recruit liberty loving people to move to the granite state. snowden has spent the past two years living in russia on asylum in in 2013 he leaked millions of documents to a u k paper. >>> the big ticket is coming back to boston. garnett and timberwolves at the garden. he helped lead to a champion snip 2008. the boston bruins just one point out...
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Dec 21, 2015
12/15
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>> contractor edward snowden is set to speak in new hampshire soon. snowden will appear via video in february. the group is trying to through the granite state. snowden is living in russia on asylum after leaking millions of u.s. surveillance documents to auke newspaper in 2013. >>> a father takes to the internet in search for help. >> i'm just an average extraordinary guy trying to take care of his son. >> minutes from you now the one item he could not provide to his baby boy. >>> first a pla shetty-wielding man under arrest. john kasich's an impatient rascal. paces, pushes. his state is now booming. unlike some, john kasich has proven he can do the job. brought back jobs from mexico and china. keep us safe, make us boom. because he's done it before. only an impatient rascal can bring america back. john kasich. new day for america is . >> we are closely monitoring some breaking news out of las vegas there has been a major accident on the vegas strip and part of the road is shut down there. this is a live video from traffic in that area from a traffic
>> contractor edward snowden is set to speak in new hampshire soon. snowden will appear via video in february. the group is trying to through the granite state. snowden is living in russia on asylum after leaking millions of u.s. surveillance documents to auke newspaper in 2013. >>> a father takes to the internet in search for help. >> i'm just an average extraordinary guy trying to take care of his son. >> minutes from you now the one item he could not provide to his...
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Dec 19, 2015
12/15
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>> there's no evidence that edward snowden's revelations played a role in that. snowed season for targeted legal surveillance. what he has exposed is illegal mass surveillance of ordinary americans. when we say our hands are tied, we're buying into this narrative we need to take the gloves off, an ugly expression dick cheney used after 9/11. the balance between security and safety is one we're grappling with. the idea that encryption or that what edward snowden revealed is to blame i think is something ginned up by those whose very policies have failed us by evading iraq, by the disaster in libya, and they're trying to shift the blame. let us find legal tools. and if you look at, you know, mumbai, you look at london, you look at france, we've had, you know, blame those who instigated this. blame our policies. but not roll back of encryption. >> we're at the end but i feel like you wanted to get in. >> it's about finding that balance. it's not we're about to give up surveillance tools or that it's a surveillance state. it's important to know with the san bernardin
>> there's no evidence that edward snowden's revelations played a role in that. snowed season for targeted legal surveillance. what he has exposed is illegal mass surveillance of ordinary americans. when we say our hands are tied, we're buying into this narrative we need to take the gloves off, an ugly expression dick cheney used after 9/11. the balance between security and safety is one we're grappling with. the idea that encryption or that what edward snowden revealed is to blame i...
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Dec 6, 2015
12/15
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[duracell slamtones] >>> my next guest might be the only person in the world who hates edward snowdene than me. in other words, he's my hero. my next guest, i'm sorry, kennedy. joining us is former cia director and ambassador for negotiations on conventional armed forces in europe, and for the defense of democracy, wow, ambassador, james woolsey. that's a heck of a title. that might be the longest title i've ever heard. >> it is. >> let me ask you, what was your reaction when you found out that the fbi classified san bernardino as terrorism? were you shocked? >> no. i mean, it looked that way from the beginning. i think they were only several days in designating that. because the president has adopted such a weak-kneed characterization of everything that happens. never talking about jihadis, et cetera, that they were probably waiting to see if he would do something. i don't know. but the director of the fbi is a very able and tough and independent man. and maybe he was just being a little bit careful. >> so these -- clearly these guys slipped through the cracks. this woman got a visa.
[duracell slamtones] >>> my next guest might be the only person in the world who hates edward snowdene than me. in other words, he's my hero. my next guest, i'm sorry, kennedy. joining us is former cia director and ambassador for negotiations on conventional armed forces in europe, and for the defense of democracy, wow, ambassador, james woolsey. that's a heck of a title. that might be the longest title i've ever heard. >> it is. >> let me ask you, what was your reaction...
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Dec 3, 2015
12/15
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CSPAN3
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edward snowden has scared everybody.es, edward snowden is without a doubt a traitor and should be tried for treason. but it is also clear -- it is also clear that so many of our politicians either don't have the courage or the understanding to talk with the american people about how we ought to be winning this fight. we are the most sophisticated technological nation on the planet. we're losing because of ineptitude and a lack of leadership. it is why -- it is yet another reason why we must take our government back. >> last question, and i'll tee one up for you to hit out of the park. the democrats repeatedly trying to make the claim that the gop has a war on women. how do you respond to them? >> well, you'll have to wait for that debate between me and hillary clinton to hear that. but, you see, actually, this is why -- this is why -- we need a fearless fighter to face hillary clinton, who will force her to fight on ground that we can win on. look, hillary clinton doesn't want to run on her track record as secretary of s
edward snowden has scared everybody.es, edward snowden is without a doubt a traitor and should be tried for treason. but it is also clear -- it is also clear that so many of our politicians either don't have the courage or the understanding to talk with the american people about how we ought to be winning this fight. we are the most sophisticated technological nation on the planet. we're losing because of ineptitude and a lack of leadership. it is why -- it is yet another reason why we must...
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but every think of edward snowden and i don't think well of edward snowden, if one can agree that was too easy for him to get the access he got. we have to get smarter about using big data, open source collection and behavioral analytics to fly possible security risks. we are getting smarter but are we getting smart enough? third come after people make it into the system we are not securing their information. that's a disservice to her dedicated public servants including some who are in deep cover even as we speak. we must do better. but the right approach we can and we have a phone on the panel here to suggest 21st century solutions. introducing our speakers is a close friend, chris kojm. he recently -- a visiting professor at george washington's elliott school of international affairs. he also contributed to a fabulous book on intelligence oversight that we are putting together with nyu center's center on law and security that will be released in from oxford university press. chris, before that had 25 years and he just calculated that, quarter of a century with my predecessor here s
but every think of edward snowden and i don't think well of edward snowden, if one can agree that was too easy for him to get the access he got. we have to get smarter about using big data, open source collection and behavioral analytics to fly possible security risks. we are getting smarter but are we getting smart enough? third come after people make it into the system we are not securing their information. that's a disservice to her dedicated public servants including some who are in deep...
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Dec 5, 2015
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the commercial world is far ahead of what snowden -- where snowden has left us with respect it to beingablyo manipulate data and understand how we might zero in on terrorist groups. >> mr. woolsey, bret, thank you both for joining us tonight. is the homegrown terror threat now a bigger danger than ever following the san bernadino massacre? new jersey governor and presidential candidate chris christie enters the no spin zone with hesitate plan to stop it that's next. i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪ and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... that's huge for my bottom line. what's in your wallet? >>> in the campaign 2016 segment tonight, strong the homegrown terror threat. the
the commercial world is far ahead of what snowden -- where snowden has left us with respect it to beingablyo manipulate data and understand how we might zero in on terrorist groups. >> mr. woolsey, bret, thank you both for joining us tonight. is the homegrown terror threat now a bigger danger than ever following the san bernadino massacre? new jersey governor and presidential candidate chris christie enters the no spin zone with hesitate plan to stop it that's next. i am totally blind....
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Dec 19, 2015
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of thefirst part exhibition is directly inspired by snowden.f deconstruction the content but rather of the graphics used in the slides. this denny: his release of information was an eye-opener for the way that the world has interacted with certain parts of government. it was also a visual revelation. that is really important systems visualized and communicated within these powerful places. i tried to look in my exhibition of what these men. >> simon denny is a very modern artists who is interested in visual culture. he wants to take those representations, d12 them, and then recode them. to make the rest of us look again at the visual languages surrounding it. brands anded with now he is working with one of the biggest brands of all, the national security agency. >> some of these were directly commissioned by simon denny. simon denny: his work was used without his permission. that i was going to reinterpret the number of things on his profile. a kind of performance. it makes us think about how it feels to have work that we have used in ways that
of thefirst part exhibition is directly inspired by snowden.f deconstruction the content but rather of the graphics used in the slides. this denny: his release of information was an eye-opener for the way that the world has interacted with certain parts of government. it was also a visual revelation. that is really important systems visualized and communicated within these powerful places. i tried to look in my exhibition of what these men. >> simon denny is a very modern artists who is...
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Dec 3, 2015
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if edward snowden isn't a traitor.yet we have republican candidates who won't, because of civil liberties. here's the big problem that is going to occur as we have handcuffed our intelligence community's ability to be able to detect these communications, more of these horrific events are going to occur in the united states. and then there will be a call for a reduction in civil liberties. we had a situation where it was properly balanced and worked very hard on, and we have two republican candidates, i hate to say, who led the charge to imbalance that to the detriment to the security of our country. so, i would restore that balance and make sure that we have all the ability that we need. we are at war, and, again, i go back to the fact that our presidents have not been clear in communicating to the american public the nature of this threat and why it is so real. i will do that and will have the supports necessary to have the intelligence gathering capabilities to prevent these types of attacks. >> final last question.
if edward snowden isn't a traitor.yet we have republican candidates who won't, because of civil liberties. here's the big problem that is going to occur as we have handcuffed our intelligence community's ability to be able to detect these communications, more of these horrific events are going to occur in the united states. and then there will be a call for a reduction in civil liberties. we had a situation where it was properly balanced and worked very hard on, and we have two republican...
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Dec 12, 2015
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. >> ed snowden is the nsa whistle-blower. colleagues of mine at the post who exposed that and got ed snowden's papers and so forth, interviewed him extensively, i don't think there are questions that necessarily have not been asked frankly, there is a big debate going on about the significance of all this is, it served the purpose of warning everyone, do you have an iphone hillary clinton is discovering that. >> to answer your question -- [inaudible] [laughter] >> really? is the security camera on the plaque? [inaudible] >> i am sorry. >> being young. >> it is started in the book we did all the president's men, we young, unmarried, both divorced, i had come out of the navy, and i love reporting, i had been at the post nine months when the watergate burglary occurred, 1972, i would work the police beat and come in and do stories during the day. i had been in the navy under the thumb of the authorities and the liberation of go find good stories, ben bradlee, the truth is emerging too slowly. get off your butt, the morning of th
. >> ed snowden is the nsa whistle-blower. colleagues of mine at the post who exposed that and got ed snowden's papers and so forth, interviewed him extensively, i don't think there are questions that necessarily have not been asked frankly, there is a big debate going on about the significance of all this is, it served the purpose of warning everyone, do you have an iphone hillary clinton is discovering that. >> to answer your question -- [inaudible] [laughter] >> really? is...
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Dec 4, 2015
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program that this decided to keep, comes out because of the snowden leak.says we have to make choices in society. can't have a hundred percent privacy and a hundred percent security. it is all most like he is talking to himself six years earlier. either that was political or that was naive. rose: we will find that when he writes his memoir after he leaves. charlie savage: his lawyerly thinking is one of the things that is the key to understanding him. there other ways in which that is played out in his government. if you think about how lawyers are trained to think. incremental, they really have to grapple with the best arguments of the other side and be prepared to rebut them. they have a rigorous preparation process. that is so different from how george w. bush and dick cheney redhaired ministration. they were ceos. they were deciders. the lawyerly mindset is to really engage with what can go wrong. what is the possible second or third order of consequences. areics would say, you dithering. what you just do what you're going to do? obama keeps going back
program that this decided to keep, comes out because of the snowden leak.says we have to make choices in society. can't have a hundred percent privacy and a hundred percent security. it is all most like he is talking to himself six years earlier. either that was political or that was naive. rose: we will find that when he writes his memoir after he leaves. charlie savage: his lawyerly thinking is one of the things that is the key to understanding him. there other ways in which that is played...
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Dec 31, 2015
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secret surveillance programs, following the edward snowden leaks. sources familiar with the nsa intercepts in question say the white house learned that the israelis leaked details of the nuclear deal and asked undecided lawmakers what it would take to win their votes. critics call it a win at all costs strategy. >> ben rhodes, one of obama's closest foreign policy advisers referred to the iran deal as obamacare for the second term of the white house. they wanted to let nothing stand in the way of achieving that goal. >> the national security council's matt price said we do not conduct any foreign intelligence surveillance activities unless there is a specific and validated national security purpose. this applies to ordinary citizens, and world leaders alike. while a spokeswoman for speaker paul ryan added we have seen the report and are looking into the matter. >> this is a question of ethics. when the white house was receiving nsa reports with the private conversations of members of congress, they had a responsibility to not read that material and
secret surveillance programs, following the edward snowden leaks. sources familiar with the nsa intercepts in question say the white house learned that the israelis leaked details of the nuclear deal and asked undecided lawmakers what it would take to win their votes. critics call it a win at all costs strategy. >> ben rhodes, one of obama's closest foreign policy advisers referred to the iran deal as obamacare for the second term of the white house. they wanted to let nothing stand in...
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Dec 26, 2015
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you is what is your view in light of the discussion over cyber attacks, your view concerning edward snowden. >> that's a tough one. it sort of perfectly summarizes what i was talking about a moment ago, this enormous struggle that we have to go through. on the one hand, it is, i mean, my feeling is that edward snowden showed enormous courage and even patriotism in doing what he did -- [applause] to alert us to the dangers of any government agency, in this case the nsa. vacuuming up so much of our personal data. on the other hand, i come down in "lights out" very much on the side of having to give the nsa its head. i am convinced that we are confronting a dreadful threat. the cyber threat to the united states can be existential. and the best equipped agency in the country is the nsa. and in the final an decision facing -- analysis facing what we face today, if i have to choose between the nsa being able to violate my privacy and having my privacy and a lot else violated by the chinese or the iranians or russians, i go with the nsa. [applause] >> thank you. >> mr. koppel, i've been a fan of y
you is what is your view in light of the discussion over cyber attacks, your view concerning edward snowden. >> that's a tough one. it sort of perfectly summarizes what i was talking about a moment ago, this enormous struggle that we have to go through. on the one hand, it is, i mean, my feeling is that edward snowden showed enormous courage and even patriotism in doing what he did -- [applause] to alert us to the dangers of any government agency, in this case the nsa. vacuuming up so...
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Dec 17, 2015
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. >> people like snowden are saying these are the documents they are listening to everything we do, now it seems like the government is saying we need to listen to what you are doing, and people are rolling out the red carpet, do it, so which is right. >> this is one of the first speeches i have heard the president or any top official give where they don't mention constitutional protections. he did not say while -- and while, we are protecting civil liberties. this is going to be a very important period in the country, to see how much, this increased climate of fear, will enable certain constitutional protections to be rolled back. this' been a lot of concern by people in washington, concerned about terrorism, that this leaves us vulnerable. this is a period of concern and we will see what happens. >> both of you stand by, when we come back, we will continue the conversation, the conversation seems to be on everybody's mind. how realistic is the threat, stay with us, we will be right back. >> at 9:30 - "america tonight" - top investigative reporting, uncovering new perspectives. >> ever
. >> people like snowden are saying these are the documents they are listening to everything we do, now it seems like the government is saying we need to listen to what you are doing, and people are rolling out the red carpet, do it, so which is right. >> this is one of the first speeches i have heard the president or any top official give where they don't mention constitutional protections. he did not say while -- and while, we are protecting civil liberties. this is going to be a...
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Dec 21, 2015
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snowden is living in russia on asylum after leaking millions of u.s. surveillance documents to auke newspaper in 2013. >>> a father takes to the internet in search for help. >> i'm just an average extraordinary guy trying to take care of his son. >> minutes from you now the one item he could not provide to his baby boy. >>> first a pla shetty-wielding -- machete. >> we are closely monitoring some breaking news out of las vegas there has been a major accident on the vegas strip and part of the road is shut down there. this is a live video from traffic in that area from a traffic cam. we want to switch now to that camera here showing a much clearer view of the traffic and what you can see is it took lots of police cars a major traffic backup. we're seeing reports that a car apparently jumped the curb and ran over a crowd of people. the crash happened in the area of the planet hollywood hotel. we can't confirm any injuries right now. but we'll have much more on throughout the newscast. >>> now to pepperell where the man yielding this machete was tasered b
snowden is living in russia on asylum after leaking millions of u.s. surveillance documents to auke newspaper in 2013. >>> a father takes to the internet in search for help. >> i'm just an average extraordinary guy trying to take care of his son. >> minutes from you now the one item he could not provide to his baby boy. >>> first a pla shetty-wielding -- machete. >> we are closely monitoring some breaking news out of las vegas there has been a major accident...
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but everyone from secret agents to edward snowden looks to what he has to say on one topic -- encryptionare photos online with friends, my intention is to share with them. it's not to share with twitter the company, or facebook the company, or the government. >> he builds an app that makes encryption easy to use. it's also used by whatsapp. >> it's encrypted from their device to the recipient's device. nobody in between can see what they're saying. >> it's making it easier than ever to protect your self, and harder for law enforcement to crack down, spurring conversations like these. >> all of our papers, all of our information will have strong encryption. that will have profound consequences for law enforcement. >> where this is headed is some kind of stockpile of encryption keys. i think this proposal is a big time loser. >> i lean further in the direction of strong encryption than some do. but i am saympathetic to law enforcement because i know the pressure they're under to keep us safe. >> this man was the deputy director of the nsa. >> encryption is one of many ways that an adversar
but everyone from secret agents to edward snowden looks to what he has to say on one topic -- encryptionare photos online with friends, my intention is to share with them. it's not to share with twitter the company, or facebook the company, or the government. >> he builds an app that makes encryption easy to use. it's also used by whatsapp. >> it's encrypted from their device to the recipient's device. nobody in between can see what they're saying. >> it's making it easier...
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Dec 6, 2015
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revealed. >> end mass surveillance. >> director james clapper says that snowden's leaks have irreparablygence gathering. >> it did a lot of damage to our signal intelligence capabilities, particularly in counterterrorism, regrettably. the terrorists really went to school on the revelations about our trade craft, tactics and techniques. >> encryption and mass surveillance will remain controversial issues. but neither changes the fundamental fact that information in the u.s. flows freely. >> the thing that makes us so competitive and so powerful in a modern world which is basically the networking of information and the way that we flow data back and forth is also our biggest vulnerability. >> in other words, for intelligence agencies like the nsa, the phones in our pockets, the computers on our desks, and the speed of our connection to a world of resources is simultaneously our greatest strength and most desperate weakness. >>> coming up, a place you probably never heard of. >> we're approaching the mission ground station at white sands, new mexico. >> and never seen until now. i don't wan
revealed. >> end mass surveillance. >> director james clapper says that snowden's leaks have irreparablygence gathering. >> it did a lot of damage to our signal intelligence capabilities, particularly in counterterrorism, regrettably. the terrorists really went to school on the revelations about our trade craft, tactics and techniques. >> encryption and mass surveillance will remain controversial issues. but neither changes the fundamental fact that information in the...
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revealed. >> end mass surveillance. >> director james clapper says that snowden's likes have irreparablylligence gathering. >> it did a lot of damage to our signal capability intelligence, specifically in counterterrorism, regrettably. the terrorists really went to school on the revelations about our tradecraft tactics and techniques. >> encryption and mass surveillance will remain controversial issues but neither changes the fundamental fact that information in the u.s. flows freely. >> the thing that makes us so competitive and so powerful in a modern world, which is basically the networking of information and the way that we flow data back and forth, is also our biggest vulnerability. >> in other words, for intelligence agencies like the nsa, the phones in our pockets, computers on our desks and the speed to connection to a world of resources is simultaneously our greatest strength and most desperate weakness. >>> coming up, a place you've probably never heard of. we're approaching the mission ground station at white sands, new mexico. >> and never seen until now. they think that it's
revealed. >> end mass surveillance. >> director james clapper says that snowden's likes have irreparablylligence gathering. >> it did a lot of damage to our signal capability intelligence, specifically in counterterrorism, regrettably. the terrorists really went to school on the revelations about our tradecraft tactics and techniques. >> encryption and mass surveillance will remain controversial issues but neither changes the fundamental fact that information in the u.s....
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Dec 21, 2015
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snowden, do you think those were good or bad for the country. bad. ush: >> and if you weren't running for president, who would you vote for? [laughter] mr. bush: that's a trick question. why is it bad? law, for ed the starters. law.secondly, he broke the and thirdly, he jeopardized national security interests for our country. fourthly, there are men and women in positions that work for agencies with three letters that now are in jeopardy. he has made it impossible -- not impossible. he's made it extraordinarily hard for us to reestablish the necessaryips that are for our intelligence communities o be able to do their jobs. the net effect of this is now we it. the impacts of so now you have a situation where it might be nice to know, back, who this couple in san bernardino were interacting with. i'd like to know. i hope that the president of the united states would like to know. that security breach that took place makes it harder, the breach, makes ty it harder to have a conversation maybe, you know, the german intelligence authorities, or the french
snowden, do you think those were good or bad for the country. bad. ush: >> and if you weren't running for president, who would you vote for? [laughter] mr. bush: that's a trick question. why is it bad? law, for ed the starters. law.secondly, he broke the and thirdly, he jeopardized national security interests for our country. fourthly, there are men and women in positions that work for agencies with three letters that now are in jeopardy. he has made it impossible -- not impossible. he's...
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. >>> how edward snowden's revelation of the phone program is restricting access in the investigatn into the san bernardino shooting. >>> and actor morgan freeman in a plane scare. what he's saying about the incident this morning. it's 9:36. >>> well morgan freeman says he's just fine after a tire blew on a plane he was in while it was trying to take off. the plane was in mississippi. it had to make a crash landing. and the actor says his quote excellent pilot kept things under control and everybody was safe. wow. >> scary times. >>> well around this time every year, many jurisdictions celebrate adoption day in court. >> and this year here in washington alone, 25 children were welcomed into permanent loving families at the d.c. superior court. barbara harrison has more. ♪ >> reporter: the leslie family singers were back again this year to harold the beginning of another adoption day in court. the 29th year since d.c. launched the event. one of the first of its kind in the nation. and i've been lucky to be here on this day every year, when the d.c. superior courthouse is filled with ballo
. >>> how edward snowden's revelation of the phone program is restricting access in the investigatn into the san bernardino shooting. >>> and actor morgan freeman in a plane scare. what he's saying about the incident this morning. it's 9:36. >>> well morgan freeman says he's just fine after a tire blew on a plane he was in while it was trying to take off. the plane was in mississippi. it had to make a crash landing. and the actor says his quote excellent pilot kept...
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Dec 11, 2015
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. >> scott, that sounds like a real departure from the edward snowden view of the world.s is a very post snowden comment to say government and the high-tech community should get together and work on this. >> i think they should, but i don't think that's going to be the main way we get to isis. it's a very intimate, personalized social communication where a young woman from syria will text another young woman from chicago and seattle and say look, i know how hard it is to leave your mother and brother and sister, and let me try to help you explain why there's something more important in life so you can explain it to them. it's that intimate personal contact. and that's where we have to target. right now, we're trying to hit the technology and we're doing mass repetitive negative messaging with almost no effect whatsoever. i think if we're going to do something, it's got to be at that personal and intimate level, and it's got to be a message that appears to the glory, the joy of isis. people don't realize it, it is a joyful movement. our propaganda, it's vicious, it's bruta
. >> scott, that sounds like a real departure from the edward snowden view of the world.s is a very post snowden comment to say government and the high-tech community should get together and work on this. >> i think they should, but i don't think that's going to be the main way we get to isis. it's a very intimate, personalized social communication where a young woman from syria will text another young woman from chicago and seattle and say look, i know how hard it is to leave your...
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Dec 7, 2015
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whatever you think of edward snowden and i don't think well, it was too easy of him to get the accesswe have to get smarter about using big data, open source collection and behavioral and litics to flag risks. are we getting smart enough? third, after people make it into the system, we are not securing their information. that's a disservice to our dedicated public servants including those in deep cover. we must do better. with the right texan the right approach, we can. and we have a phenomenal panel to suggest some 21 century solutions. introducing our speakers is a close friend of the wilson center. chris recently chaired the national intelligence council. and he now serves as a visiting professor at the elliott school of international affairs and contributed to a fabulous book on intelligence oversight that we are putting together. it will be released soon from oxford university press. chris before that had 25 years, i think we just calculated that. my er of a century with predecessor here. served here 12 years and was enormously valued chairman of the house foreign affairs committ
whatever you think of edward snowden and i don't think well, it was too easy of him to get the accesswe have to get smarter about using big data, open source collection and behavioral and litics to flag risks. are we getting smart enough? third, after people make it into the system, we are not securing their information. that's a disservice to our dedicated public servants including those in deep cover. we must do better. with the right texan the right approach, we can. and we have a phenomenal...
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Dec 17, 2015
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and also, you know, we saw after the snowden revelations is there was a lot of resentment in the techmmunity for the amount of government oversight. so now if law enforcement goes to what's app and says we need access to these private communications, what's app, because its communications are encrypted, can turn it over but they won't have access to it. so we're entering this new time where we have to have and facilitate better discussions between the tech community and the government. >> thanks very much. the happiest place on earth is adding extra security in the wake of the attacks in paris and san bernardino. walt disney world announced they'll be adding metal detectors at the entrance to the park in orlando, florida. they'll also do the same thing at disneyland out in california. disney world will stop selling toy guns at the park. other parks like universal orlando and sea world in florida, they're adding metal detectors, at least for the time being. >>> up next, from russia with love. vladimir putin offering high praise for one of the 2016 presidential candidates here in the un
and also, you know, we saw after the snowden revelations is there was a lot of resentment in the techmmunity for the amount of government oversight. so now if law enforcement goes to what's app and says we need access to these private communications, what's app, because its communications are encrypted, can turn it over but they won't have access to it. so we're entering this new time where we have to have and facilitate better discussions between the tech community and the government. >>...
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the fact as dagen pointed out edward snowden committed criminal acts where he exposed to rhett e restthe world exactly what we were doing. kennedy: exposed some criminal acts governments with perpetrating against its own people including warrantless searches. >> they weren't categorically criminal. kennedy: they were unconstitutional. they were warrantless searches and government lied bit and government lied again when it talked about the administrations and countries we were or were not spying on. i don't think we need to have open recipe book telling everyone in the world what we're doing especially when israel and united states created jointly 57 ratoses for us to be spying on each other. they are clearly doing the exact same thing. but congress should really sit up and take note how much power they're giving to the security administration, the nsa, when they're using that power to spy on them. >> so you do not think snowed enis repugnant entitled millenial? >> i said repugnant loser millenial. >> sorry. >> new concerns about the situation in afghanistan. the top commander wants to
the fact as dagen pointed out edward snowden committed criminal acts where he exposed to rhett e restthe world exactly what we were doing. kennedy: exposed some criminal acts governments with perpetrating against its own people including warrantless searches. >> they weren't categorically criminal. kennedy: they were unconstitutional. they were warrantless searches and government lied bit and government lied again when it talked about the administrations and countries we were or were not...
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after that broke, because of revelations made by edward snowden, the former nsa contract employee, thetration said it wasn't going to spy on its allies any longer. however, it turns out according to the "wall street journal" that the spying did continue on the israeli prime minister, benjamin netenyahu among others, also caught up in this the spying was the now president of turkey. now what happened is that the u.s. was getting this information about what netenyahu and his government were trying to do while the u.s. and the other members of the p5-plus-1 were trying to negotiate a deal with iran on its nuclear program. it has now come out that the spying basically caught up, not just conversations that the israeli government was having with its supporters, but it also caught up conversations that the israelis were having with members of congress, and there are laws here in the united states that ban spying on u.s. persons, including members of congress. so this is a rather eyebrow-raising story, but at the heart of it is the fact that the israelis do spy on the united states and the un
after that broke, because of revelations made by edward snowden, the former nsa contract employee, thetration said it wasn't going to spy on its allies any longer. however, it turns out according to the "wall street journal" that the spying did continue on the israeli prime minister, benjamin netenyahu among others, also caught up in this the spying was the now president of turkey. now what happened is that the u.s. was getting this information about what netenyahu and his government...
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i do not know if there is a direct connection between things that edward snowden is fighting today, and what the pinkerton's were doing, but it is very reminiscent. host: you are working on your dissertation at harvard. what is the timetable for finishing? do you hope to publish any of this in a book someday? what is your plan? guest: i am only in my third year. 0th years, i 1 would love to end of the shorter end than that. i would love the dissertation to become a book, one that appeals to a wider audience, not just academics. i love sharing stories. host: thank you for talking about your subject with us. >> every weekend, on american history tv, on c-span 3, 48 hours of programs and events .hat tell our nation story this afternoon at 2:00, historians and authors on the life and legacy of stokely equalhael, a voice for rights and black power in the united states. they are joined by a former student nonviolent gordon in committee field secretary, charles cobb. >> stokely called it an apprenticeship in struggle. no matter where you come out five years later, stokely eventually moved to a
i do not know if there is a direct connection between things that edward snowden is fighting today, and what the pinkerton's were doing, but it is very reminiscent. host: you are working on your dissertation at harvard. what is the timetable for finishing? do you hope to publish any of this in a book someday? what is your plan? guest: i am only in my third year. 0th years, i 1 would love to end of the shorter end than that. i would love the dissertation to become a book, one that appeals to a...