Three Reasons Edward Snowden Can’t Stop the NSA
Three Reasons Edward Snowden Can’t Stop the NSA · The Fiscal Times

The hard-to-believe story of Edward Snowden got a little more unbelievable last week, when an NSA memo revealed that a civilian employee at the agency resigned after it was learned Snowden had persuaded him to share his security password.

“At Mr. Snowden’s request, the civilian entered his password at Mr. Snowden’s computer terminal. Unbeknownst to the civilian, Mr. Snowden was able to capture the password, allowing him even greater access to classified information,” the agency wrote in the Feb. 10 memo to congressional committees. “The civilian was not aware that Mr. Snowden intended to unlawfully disclose classified information. However, by sharing his PKI [public key infrastructure] certificate, he failed to comply with security obligations.”

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The memo also said that a member of the military and a contractor had been barred from NSA offices for helping Snowden make off with confidential documents.

If this is true, the NSA memo puts Snowden’s actions in a very different light. The former IT contractor has denied duping coworkers into giving up their passwords, but the memo seems to refute that.

Getting to the truth of the Snowden affair is difficult right now, since he’s holed up in Russia and rarely gives interviews.

Some of the information he leaked is now being viewed in a new light. According to reports last week, the NSA collects data on less than 30 percent of all U.S. cell phone data, much less than originally reported.

Related: And the Nobel Peace Prize Goes to Edward Snowden!

Stories about the American surveillance networked were shocking to some at first. Now, they seem routine. Barring a revelation that he’s keeping in his back pocket, the worst of the damage caused by Snowden is likely done – although Glenn Greenwald, the journalist from the British newspaper The Guardian who enabled Snowden to reveal the extent of NSA surveillance, claims there’s a great deal more information Snowden can reveal.

As the saga enters this stage, it’s now possible to assess the legacy that Snowden and his actions have left. A close look at the affair shows that he got plenty of media attention, disrupted American surveillance, changed U.S. data mining policy, and caused serious rifts between traditional allies. Not bad for an unknown IT worker whose motives are still being questioned and debated.

Does Snowden want to throw gas on a fire just to see how long it takes to put it out? Does he aspire to be the next Julian Assange and hold court in the deep web? Or is he a true believer that big data mining – whether by government or American Express – should be stopped and he’s the guy to do it?