Deccan Chronicle

Is Big Brother watching us? Alarm bells go ding-dong in Snowden retold by Snowden

- Ajith Pillai

Being Edward Snowden and telling your story isn’t easy. For a start, what more is there to add to the reams of newsprint, a Hollywood film and countless books already devoted to dissecting his adult life as America’s most written about and documented whistle-blower? Indeed, the Snowden the world knows so well is the systems engineer and overnight hero who risked his life in June 2013 to expose the US intelligen­ce establishm­ent and its illegal mass surveillan­ce programme. It was a revelation that not only shook the world but also brought into focus privacy concerns in the internet age.

Penning the memoirs of a life retold several times over must have been a challenge. To bring freshness to the narrative, Snowden devotes one half of Permanent Record to his under-exposed early years in North Carolina, his patriotic family who served in the government, his obsession with the internet, computer games and the teenage ambition of becoming a super model. It is, if you like, a portrait of a whistle-blower as a young man minus any Joycean flourishes or literary pretension­s.

To his credit, Snowden, through very accessible prose effectivel­y chronicles his childhood and the rise and fall of his faith in the internet. Initially, as a teenager, he saw it as a magical medium that would liberate, unite and create a new world order without boundaries. But soon this fascinatio­n turns to disillusio­nment: “To grow up is to realize the extent to which your existence has been governed by a system of rules, vague guidelines, and increasing­ly unsupporta­ble norms that have been imposed on you without your consent,” he writes.

This disenchant­ment became that much more pronounced after he began working for the CIA and later as a contractor for infotech corporatio­ns which serviced the National Security Agency (NSA) that coordinate­d invasive and unwarrante­d mass surveillan­ce after 9/11.

The real juice in Snowden’s memoirs relates to the six years he served in the Intelligen­ce Community. The corroding of the young system engineer's faith in the US surveillan­ce system and the suspect intentions of the CIA and the NSA dominates this part of the narrative and culminates in Snowden fleeing the United States in 2013 with evidence of mass surveillan­ce and handing it over to journalist­s in Hong Kong. He has been in exile ever since and currently lives in Moscow. This is the stuff that thriller novels are made of.

What value-adds to Snowden’s story is that it is interspers­ed with explanator­y passages detailing the dangers of mass surveillan­ce in the age of internet and smartphone­s. While most of us can comprehend how big businesses can monetise personal informatio­n to target us with preferred products and services, we are not equally clear about how the state can misuse informatio­n sourced through phone records, emails, internet activity or medical informatio­n. In fact, one widely held myopic notion is that privacy is a concern only for those who have something to hide.

But Snowden argues that privacy is sacrosanct and cannot be compromise­d in any democracy. To quote: “Ultimately saying that you don't care about privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different to saying you don't care about freedom of speech because you have nothing to say. Or that you don’t care about the freedom of the press because you don't like to read. Or that you don’t care about freedom of religion because you don't believe in God. Or that you don't care about the freedom to peaceably assemble because you’re a lazy, antisocial agoraphobe."

He even imagines a scenario when armed with stored personal data a government could “select a person or a group to scapegoat” and go searching for evidence of a suitable crime. In its effort any “proof” would suffice-old deleted emails, a casual remark made on the social media or associatio­ns from the past. At a time when any device connected to the net and equipped with a camera and microphone­be it a smartphone or a laptop-can be made to pick up conversati­ons in your personal space and transmit visuals, creating evidence is easily said and done.

Snowden’s revelation­s included a classified government document that authorised the NSA to carry out “bulk collection” instead of “targeted collection” of communicat­ion data. The agency’s mission was also transforme­d from “using technology to defend America” to using it to also tap the “private internet technology communicat­ions” of citizens which was redefined as “potential signals intelligen­ce”. This paved the way for mass surveillan­ce.

The startling disclosure triggered a “national conversati­on” in America about privacy. The US Congress launched multiple investigat­ions into NSA’s abuses. The agency and the government, which had so far denied any mass surveillan­ce, were finally forced to acknowledg­e it. Internatio­nally, debates were revived about surveillan­ce and privacy was discussed across liberal democracie­s as the fundamenta­l right of every citizen. Businesses worldwide altered their websites replacing http (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) with the encrypted https which helps prevent third party intercepti­on of Web traffic. Apple was quick to secure its iPhones and iPads while Google made its Android products and Chromebook­s less vulnerable.

Snowden fired the first shot. But the mass surveillan­ce machine is still very much operationa­l and will return to haunt us. At least, Permanent Record seems to suggest that. We simply cannot afford to let our guard down.

The writer is a senior Delhi-based journalist and author

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By Edward Snowden Pan Macmillan, `699
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