The Obama administration's war on privacyGlenn GreenwaldSep. 27, 2010 |
NYT: Mossad Front Company in Hungary Manufactured Exploding Pagers
The Atlantic: Don't Worry About Israel Putting a Bomb in Your Phone
Israel Detonates Hand-Held Walkie Talkies in Lebanon in Second Wave of Explosive Attacks
Trump: If I Lose, 'Jewish People Would Really Have A Lot to Do With That'
NYT: Israel Planted Explosives in Pagers Sold to Hezbollah by Taiwanese Company
In early August, two dictatorial (and U.S.-allied) Gulf states -- Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates -- announced a ban on the use of Blackberries because, as the BBC put it, "[b]oth nations are unhappy that they are unable to monitor such communications via the handsets." Those two governments demand the power to intercept and monitor every single form of communication. No human interaction may take place beyond their prying ears. Since Blackberry communication data are sent directly to servers in Canada and the company which operates Blackberry -- Research in Motion -- refused to turn the data over to those governments, "authorities [] decided to ban Blackberry services rather than continue to allow an uncontrolled and unmonitored flow of electronic information within their borders." That's the core mindset of the Omnipotent Surveillance State: above all else, what is strictly prohibited is the ability of citizens to communicate in private; we can't have any "uncontrolled and unmonitored flow of electronic information." Read More |