Glenn Greenwald on NSA Bugging Tech Hardware, Economic Espionage & Spying on U.N.
Nearly a year after he first met Edward Snowden, Pulitzer Prize-winning
journalist Glenn Greenwald continues to unveil new secrets about the
National Security Agency and the surveillance state. His new book, "No
Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA and the U.S. Surveillance State,"
is being published today. It includes dozens of previously secret NSA
documents, including new details on how the NSA routinely intercepts
routers, servers and other computer hardware devices being exported from
the United States. According to leaked documents published in the book,
the NSA then implants backdoor surveillance tools, repackages the
devices with a factory seal and sends them on. This gives the NSA access
to entire networks and all their users. The book includes one
previously secret NSA file that shows a photo of an agent opening a box
marked CISCO. Below it reads a caption: "Intercepted packages are opened
carefully." Another memo observes that some signals intelligence
tradecraft is "very hands-on (literally!)." Greenwald joins us in the
studio to talk about this and other new revelations about the NSA,
including its global economic espionage, spying at the United Nations,
and attempting to monitor in-flight Internet users and phone calls. For
his reporting on the NSA, Greenwald recently won a George Polk Award and
was part of the team from The Guardian that just won the Pulitzer Prize
in Public Service. "Once people understood that this extraordinary
system of suspicionless surveillance, which was truly unprecedented in
scope, had been created completely in the dark, it became more than a
surveillance story," Greenwald says. "it became a story about government
secrecy and accountability and the role of journalism, and certainly
privacy and surveillance in the digital age."
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