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Permanent Record (autobiography)

Permanent Record is a 2019 autobiography by Edward Snowden, whose revelations sparked a global debate about surveillance. It was published on September 17, 2019 (Constitution Day), by Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company.[3][4] The book describes Snowden's childhood as well as his tenure at the Central Intelligence Agency and National Security Agency and his motivations for the leaking of highly classified information in 2013 that revealed global surveillance programs. Snowden also discusses his views on authoritarianism, democracy, and privacy. The writer Joshua Cohen is credited by Snowden for "helping to transform my rambling reminiscences and capsule manifestoes into a book."[5]

Permanent Record
First edition cover
AuthorEdward Snowden
Audio read byHolter Graham[1]
Cover artistPlaton (photo)[2]
Rodrigo Corral (design)[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Subjects
PublisherMetropolitan Books
Publication date
September 17, 2019
Media typePrint (hardcover and paperback), e-book
Pages352
ISBN978-1-250-23723-1
OCLC1114558657
327.12730092 B 23
LC ClassJF1525.W45 S655 2019

Upon release, the United States filed a lawsuit against Snowden for alleged violations of non-disclosure agreements with the CIA and NSA. The lawsuit did not aim to restrict the book's content or distribution, but to capture the proceeds Snowden earns from it. In December 2019, U.S. District Judge Liam O'Grady ruled in favor of the U.S. government. Permanent Record has been censored in China, with the removed content including comments about authoritarian states, privacy-supporting technologies, and the right to privacy.

Summary edit

Part One edit

Snowden recounts growing up in a patriotic military family in Elizabeth City, North Carolina and moving to Crofton, Maryland just shy of his ninth birthday. In Crofton, his father worked as a chief warrant officer in the Aeronautical Engineering Division at Coast Guard Headquarters and his mother at the National Security Agency (NSA). He was introduced to computers by his father, using his Commodore 64 home computer. From around the age of twelve, he became obsessed with the internet, using a dial-up Internet access and trying to spend his "every waking moment" online. He eventually learned computer programming and became a hacker as a teenager, taking his focus away from his schoolwork to the detriment of his grades. He recalls one instance of discovering a security flaw on the website of the Los Alamos National Laboratory. He called the lab to notify them of this and later received a call from a man thanking him and offering a job once he turned 18.

Toward the end of his freshman year at Arundel High School, Snowden's parents were getting divorced and sold their Crofton house. He moved into his mother's condo near Ellicott City. At the beginning of his sophomore year, he was unusually fatigued and was eventually diagnosed with infectious mononucleosis. He missed four months of classes, and was told he would have to repeat his sophomore year. Instead, he dropped out of Arundel High and enrolled at Anne Arundel Community College (AACC), taking classes two days a week. He also later passed the General Education Development (GED) exams at a high school near Baltimore, a promise he made to himself when he dropped out.

Snowden started freelancing as a web designer for a woman from his Japanese class at AACC. He wanted to advance his career further, taking a Microsoft certification course at the Computer Career Institute of a Johns Hopkins University satellite campus. In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, Snowden joined the United States Army to show he wasn't "just a brain in a jar" and was on track to become a Special Forces sergeant through the 18X enlistment option but suffered stress fractures during training at Fort Benning in Georgia. Snowden says his greatest regret was his own "reflexive, unquestioning support" for the War on Terror and the resulting "promulgation of secret policies, secret laws, secret courts and secret wars."

 
Snowden first became interested in computers by using his father's Commodore 64 home computer.

Snowden still wanted to serve his country and realized he had taken his talent for technology for granted, and began taking classes again at Anne Arundel Community College. Knowing he would need a high-level security clearance to work for an intelligence agency, he searched for jobs that would sponsor his application for the Single Scope Background Investigation. He became an employee at the University of Maryland's Center for Advanced Study of Language, a research center sponsored by the NSA. Around the same time, he met his then-girlfriend Lindsay Mills through the site Hot or Not. He eventually passed the full-scope polygraph and successfully attained the TS/SCI security clearance, completing his final interview at the NSA's Friendship Annex when he was twenty-two years old.

Part Two edit

After attending a 2006 job fair at the Ritz-Carlton in Tysons Corner, Virginia, Snowden accepted an offer for a position at the CIA and was assigned to the global communications division at the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. In March 2007, the CIA stationed Snowden with diplomatic cover in Geneva, Switzerland, where he was responsible for maintaining computer-network security. In February 2009, Snowden resigned from the CIA.

Shortly after, Snowden took a job as contractor for the NSA in Japan, but was officially an employee of Perot Systems (which was acquired by Dell soon after his arrival). He worked at the NSA's Pacific Technical Center (PTC), at Yokota Air Base. His job there was "helping to connect the NSA's systems architecture with the CIA's." On one occasion, the PTC hosted a conference featuring briefings given by experts from all the intelligence components. The conference concerned how the Chinese intelligence services were targeting the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC) and how the IC could respond. When the only technology briefer was unable to attend at the last minute, Snowden was selected to replace them in assessing China's surveillance capabilities. He stayed up all night preparing his presentation, sifting through top secret reports off the NSA network and the CIA network.

He was stunned by the extent to which China was able to constantly collect, store, and analyze the billions of daily telephone and Internet communications of their over a billion citizenry. However, Snowden began to believe that it was impossible for the US to have so much information about what the Chinese were doing without having done some of the very same things itself. Snowden, however, admits that at the time he "tamped down" his unease and fully supported defensive and targeted surveillance. He was further suspicious when he, around the same time, read the Unclassified Report on the President's Surveillance Program. His suspicion drove him to search for the classified report, but was unable to find it. It was only later, long after he had forgotten about it, that the classified version mistakenly appeared on his desktop.

After reading the report, he says he spent months in a sad, low daze:

I felt more adult than ever, but also cursed with the knowledge that all of us had been reduced to something like children, who’d be forced to live the rest of our lives under omniscient parental supervision. I felt like a fraud, making excuses to Lindsay to explain my sullenness. I felt like a fool, as someone of supposedly serious technical skills who’d somehow helped to build an essential component of this system without realizing its purpose. I felt used, as an employee of the IC who only now was realizing that all along I’d been protecting not my country but the state. I felt, above all, violated.

Snowden moved to Columbia, Maryland in 2011, still working for Dell but now attached again to the CIA. He had switched to a sales position, a move which he describes as a way to distract himself from his unease and begin to have a normal life. However, the rise of cloud computing disturbed Snowden. He began expressing his concerns to Lindsay. Around the same time, Snowden began experiencing intense dizziness and, eventually, his first epileptic seizure. Following a series of seizures, Snowden took a short-term disability leave from Dell. The final chapter of Part Two, "On the Couch", describes his time spent recovering on his mother's blue couch as well his thoughts on authoritarian states and privacy in the context of the 2011 Arab Spring.

Part Three edit

In March 2012, he began working at "the Tunnel", a former aircraft factory turned NSA facility located under a pineapple field in Kunia, on the island of Oahu, Hawaii. He was working on a Dell contract for the NSA. Snowden moved to Hawaii for the more relaxed lifestyle and the less stressful duties of his new position, in an effort to lessen the triggers of his seizures. He was the sole employee of the Office of Information Sharing, where he worked as a SharePoint systems administrator. He began actively searching for the NSA's surveillance capabilities and abuses at this time. As part of his work, Snowden developed a system called Heartbeat which created an automated queue from the classified documents posted to the Intelligence Community's "readboards". Heartbeat would perpetually scan for new and unique documents and create a kind of aggregated newsfeed personalized for each employee, based on their interests and their security clearance. Heartbeat was highly comprehensive, accessing beyond the NSA's network into the networks of the CIA and the FBI as well as into the Department of Defense's top-secret Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System. Heartbeat's servers stored a copy of each scanned document, allowing Snowden to "perform the kind of deep interagency searches that the heads of most agencies could only dream of." Snowden says that nearly all of the documents that he later leaked to journalists were received through Heartbeat.

 
Edward Snowden's former house in Waipahu, Hawaii.

In "Whistleblowing", Snowden discusses the Constitution of the United States and argues that the Intelligence Community have "hacked" it by acting with impunity from the executive branch, the legislative branch, and the judiciary branch. He also discusses the history of whistleblowing and argues that the terms "leaking" and "whistleblowing" should not be used interchangeably because he believes "leaking" is done out of self-interest, not out of public interest.

When Snowden decided to go public, he realized he would have to have documentation or he risked being doubted. He chose not to self-publish to avoid being "lost among the crazy" of people posting classified secrets to the Internet every day. He avoided WikiLeaks because he felt their new strategy of publishing leaks as they received them would be no different to him self-publishing. He felt a document dump was not appropriate as his leaks were too "tangled and technical". He considered The New York Times but was unimpressed with how Bill Keller intentionally delayed the reporting of the Terrorist Surveillance Program until after George W. Bush's 2004 reelection. He chose a number of journalists to contact, primarily messaging documentarian Laura Poitras and journalist Glenn Greenwald. He communicated with them over e-mail under the aliases "Cincinnatus", "Citizenfour" and "Verax". To stay anonymous, he went war-driving, exploiting local Wi-Fi networks with an antenna and magnetic GPS sensor while driving in his car around Oahu. He used Tor and the Kismet mapping software, running on the Tails operating system which allowed him to easily spoof his laptop's MAC address.

Under the guise of compatibility testing, Snowden transferred documents from the Heartbeat server to outdated desktop Dell PCs from his office, then onto SD cards after deduplicating, compressing and encrypting them. He carried the SD cards out through security, hiding them inside a Rubik's Cube, in his sock, in his cheek, and in his pocket. At home, he transferred them onto a single external drive which he left out in the open on his desk.

He left Dell on March 15, 2013, and began working as an "infrastructure analyst" at the National Threat Operations Center (NTOC) in Honolulu through a contractor job at Booz Allen Hamilton. The NTOC had access to XKEYSCORE. Snowden witnessed coworkers use XKEYSCORE to view information about their current and former lovers, called LOVEINT. He also recalls one time that affected him, watching a personal video of a father and his young son. Between March–May 2013, Snowden began rapidly preparing to leave the country, emptying his bank accounts and erasing and encrypting his old computers. He researched his safest and most conducive destination, narrowing it down to Hong Kong. The day after Lindsay left on a camping trip, Snowden took an emergency medical leave of absence from work, citing epilepsy. He brought four laptops with him: one for secure communications, one for normal communications, a decoy, and a laptop that had never connected to any networks and would never be used to do so. He flew to Tokyo then to Hong Kong on May 20, 2013, paying in cash both times.

He stayed in The Mira Hong Kong hotel, where Glenn and Laura met him on June 2, 2013. Between June 3 and 9 in Snowden's hotel room, Glenn and his Guardian colleague Ewen MacAskill interviewed Snowden, with Laura filming what later featured in her Academy Award-winning documentary Citizenfour (2014). On June 5, The Guardian published Glenn's first story, on the FISA court warrant that ordered Verizon to provide a daily feed to the NSA containing "telephony metadata". On June 6, The Guardian published Glenn's revelation of PRISM and The Washington Post published Laura and Barton Gellman's story on PRISM on June 7. Snowden's identity was revealed on June 9 through a video interview directed by Laura published on The Guardian's website. The U.S. government charged Snowden under the Espionage Act on June 14 and formally requested his extradition on June 21, Snowden's 30th birthday.

 
 
Laura Poitras (left) and Glenn Greenwald (right) were both contacted by Edward Snowden anonymously over encrypted email.

Accompanied by Sarah Harrison of WikiLeaks, Snowden attempted to travel to Ecuador for political asylum. They planned to fly to Moscow, then to Havana, then to Caracas, then to Quito, Ecuador because they were unable to fly directly from Hong Kong and all of the other connecting flights traveled through United States airspace. They arrived at Moscow's Sheremetyevo International Airport on June 23, but were taken aside and questioned by a man from Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB). The man asked Snowden to work for them, but Snowden rejected the offer and said he had no intention to stay in Russia. The man was surprised and informed Snowden that the U.S. State Department had canceled his passport. He proceeded to ask Snowden to share information with them but he refused. Snowden was detained in Sheremetyevo for forty days, during which he applied to twenty-seven countries for political asylum but none offered. On August 1, the Russian government granted Snowden temporary asylum.

The book's penultimate 28th chapter is composed of entries from Lindsay Mills's 2013 diary. Snowden explained that no one but her had the experience or the right to recount that period of her life: "the FBI interrogations, the surveillance, the press attention, the online harassment, the confusion and pain, the anger and sadness."[6]

In the final chapter, "Love and Exile", Snowden expresses his feelings on the impact of his revelations, including ACLU v. Clapper and the EU's General Data Protection Regulation, and his hopes for the future of technology and privacy. He also discusses adjusting to life in Moscow with Lindsay. In the chapter's final sentence, Snowden reveals he and Lindsay were married in 2017.

Publication edit

The book was published on September 17, 2019, by Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company. It was purposely published on September 17 to coincide with Constitution Day, which Snowden discusses in the book.[7]

Civil lawsuit edit

On September 17, 2019, the Federal Government of the United States filed a lawsuit in the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia against Snowden for alleged violations of non-disclosure agreements with the CIA and NSA.[8] The complaint alleges that Snowden violated prepublication obligations related to the publication of his memoir Permanent Record. The complaint lists the publishers Macmillan and Holtzbrink as relief defendants.[9] The government stated that its lawsuit "does not seek to stop or restrict the publication or distribution" of the book, but instead aims to capture the proceeds Snowden would be earning from it.[8] In December 2019, Judge Liam O'Grady concurred with the plaintiff.[10]

Snowden refused during the civil lawsuit to produce documents showing how much he was paid. As a result, federal prosecutors sought sanctions against Snowden.[11] On August 7, 2020, U.S. Magistrate Judge Theresa Buchanan agreed to impose sanctions on Snowden, ruling that he "unequivocally acted in bad faith".[12][better source needed]

Snowden himself referred to the lawsuit on an episode of The Daily Show, stating it was largely responsible for the book's increased sales via the Streisand effect.[13]

Censorship edit

On November 11, 2019, Snowden posted on his Twitter that the simplified Chinese edition of Permanent Record, published in mainland China, had been censored. Parts of the book were removed, in violation of his publishing agreement. The Chinese version removed Snowden's observation on the motivations of Arab Spring protestors: "The crowds were calling for an end to oppression, censorship, and precarity. They were declaring that in a truly just society, the people were not answerable to the government, the government was answerable to the people." The following section, in which Snowden comments on the nature of authoritarian states, was also largely censored. In the section, Snowden writes, "Authoritarian states are typically not governments of laws, but governments of leaders, who demand loyalty from their subjects and are hostile to dissent." The Chinese version also censored Snowden's references to the Tor anonymity network, China's military cyber intelligence and its capabilities, China's Great Firewall, as well Snowden's characterization of Hong Kong as having "nominal autonomy". The Chinese version censored topics not directly related to China as well, including Snowden's commentary on the right to privacy. Snowden invited his Twitter followers to help him create a "correct and unabridged version" of Permanent Record in Chinese to be published freely online.[14][15][16]

Reception edit

Permanent Record received favorable reviews, with a cumulative "Positive" rating at the review aggregator website Book Marks, based on 13 book reviews from mainstream literary critics.[17] The book debuted at number two on The New York Times nonfiction best-seller list for the week ending September 21, 2019.[18] On the day it was released, Permanent Record reached number one on Amazon's bestseller list.[19]

Kirkus Reviews wrote, "Snowden's book likely won't change the minds of his detractors, but he makes a strong case for his efforts."[20] Greg Myre of NPR wrote, "Snowden has no new bombshells in his book. But he offers a very readable memoir about growing up with the Internet, a detailed rationale for his actions, and a look at how government surveillance has evolved since his disclosures."[21] Jill Lepore of The New Yorker wrote, "Some people write memoirs; other people craft legends. Snowden, who once aspired to be a model and is in some quarters regarded as a modern messiah, is the second kind."[22]

Publishers Weekly felt the book lacked a strong case for the argument that NSA surveillance "leads inevitably to oppressive control" but concluded, "Still, Snowden's many admirers will find his saga both captivating and inspiring."[23] Greg Miller of The Washington Post praised Snowden's "lucid and compelling language" concerning the architecture of the surveillance networks he exposed but felt the memoir was lessened by withholding "any truly revealing material about his own life" and lamented its lack of details on Snowden's experience in Russia and any regrets he may have.[24] The Economist called the book "well-written, frequently funny" but concluded, "Whatever his relationship with the Russian authorities, and whenever it began, everything he says in Permanent Record—about himself, and about America—must be seen through the prism of his dependence on the Kremlin."[25]

References edit

  1. ^ "Permanent Record". Macmillan. Retrieved September 18, 2019.
  2. ^ Zakrzewski, Cat (October 1, 2019). "The Technology 202: Here's what Edward Snowden thinks about Trump's whistleblower". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  3. ^ Flood, Alison (August 1, 2019). "Edward Snowden memoir to reveal whistleblower's secrets". The Guardian. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  4. ^ Szalai, Jennifer (September 13, 2019). "In Edward Snowden's New Memoir, the Disclosures This Time Are Personal". The New York Times. Retrieved September 22, 2019.
  5. ^ Edward Snowden (September 17, 2019). Permanent Record. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-1-250-23724-8.
  6. ^ de León, Concepción (August 1, 2019). "Edward Snowden's Memoir Is Coming in September". The New York Times. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Stueve, Joshua (September 17, 2019). "United States Files Civil Lawsuit Against Edward Snowden". Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Virginia. Retrieved September 17, 2019.
  8. ^ Hunt, Joseph (September 17, 2019). "United States of America v. Edward Snowden". Department of Justice. Retrieved September 17, 2019.
  9. ^ Drew, Jonathan (December 18, 2019). "Judge rules in favor of US effort to take Snowden book money". Associated Press. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  10. ^ Larson, Erik (July 7, 2020). "Snowden Faces Possible Sanctions in Suit Over Tell-All Book". Bloomberg News. Retrieved August 16, 2020.
  11. ^ Blake, Andrew (August 8, 2020). "Edward Snowden, NSA leaker, sanctioned in federal court for refusing to cooperate in civil suit". The Washington Times. Retrieved August 16, 2020.
  12. ^ Beresford, Trilby (September 19, 2019). "Edward Snowden on How Getting Sued by the Government Resulted in a Best-Selling Book". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  13. ^ Kuo, Lily (November 12, 2019). "Edward Snowden says autobiography has been censored in China". The Guardian. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  14. ^ Zhen, Liu (November 12, 2019). "Whistle-blower Edward Snowden slams China censorship of his book, vows to put uncut version online". South China Morning Post. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  15. ^ Steger, Isabella (November 12, 2019). "Edward Snowden blew the whistle on how Chinese censors scrubbed his book". Quartz. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  16. ^ "Book Marks reviews of Permanent Record by Edward Snowden". Book Marks. Retrieved October 16, 2021.
  17. ^ "Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction - Best Sellers - Books". The New York Times. October 6, 2019. Retrieved October 16, 2021.
  18. ^ "US sues for Edward Snowden's income from new book". Deutsche Welle. September 17, 2019. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  19. ^ "Permanent Record by Edward Snowden". Kirkus Reviews. September 17, 2019. Retrieved September 18, 2019.
  20. ^ Myre, Greg (September 12, 2019). "In 'Permanent Record,' Edward Snowden Says 'Exile Is An Endless Layover'". NPR.org. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  21. ^ Lepore, Jill (September 16, 2019). "Review: Edward Snowden and the Rise of Whistle-Blower Culture in "Permanent Record"". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  22. ^ "Nonfiction Book Review: Permanent Record by Edward Snowden". Publishers Weekly. September 17, 2019. Retrieved September 18, 2019.
  23. ^ Miller, Greg (September 13, 2019). "Edward Snowden explains how he pulled off one of the largest leaks in U.S. history". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  24. ^ "Edward Snowden's memoir reveals some (but not all)". The Economist. September 13, 2019. Retrieved October 9, 2019.

External links edit

permanent, record, autobiography, permanent, record, 2019, autobiography, edward, snowden, whose, revelations, sparked, global, debate, about, surveillance, published, september, 2019, constitution, metropolitan, books, imprint, henry, holt, company, book, des. Permanent Record is a 2019 autobiography by Edward Snowden whose revelations sparked a global debate about surveillance It was published on September 17 2019 Constitution Day by Metropolitan Books an imprint of Henry Holt and Company 3 4 The book describes Snowden s childhood as well as his tenure at the Central Intelligence Agency and National Security Agency and his motivations for the leaking of highly classified information in 2013 that revealed global surveillance programs Snowden also discusses his views on authoritarianism democracy and privacy The writer Joshua Cohen is credited by Snowden for helping to transform my rambling reminiscences and capsule manifestoes into a book 5 Permanent RecordFirst edition coverAuthorEdward SnowdenAudio read byHolter Graham 1 Cover artistPlaton photo 2 Rodrigo Corral design 2 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectsGlobal surveillance autobiographyPublisherMetropolitan BooksPublication dateSeptember 17 2019Media typePrint hardcover and paperback e bookPages352ISBN978 1 250 23723 1OCLC1114558657Dewey Decimal327 12730092 B 23LC ClassJF1525 W45 S655 2019 Upon release the United States filed a lawsuit against Snowden for alleged violations of non disclosure agreements with the CIA and NSA The lawsuit did not aim to restrict the book s content or distribution but to capture the proceeds Snowden earns from it In December 2019 U S District Judge Liam O Grady ruled in favor of the U S government Permanent Record has been censored in China with the removed content including comments about authoritarian states privacy supporting technologies and the right to privacy Contents 1 Summary 1 1 Part One 1 2 Part Two 1 3 Part Three 2 Publication 2 1 Civil lawsuit 2 2 Censorship 3 Reception 4 References 5 External linksSummary editPart One edit Snowden recounts growing up in a patriotic military family in Elizabeth City North Carolina and moving to Crofton Maryland just shy of his ninth birthday In Crofton his father worked as a chief warrant officer in the Aeronautical Engineering Division at Coast Guard Headquarters and his mother at the National Security Agency NSA He was introduced to computers by his father using his Commodore 64 home computer From around the age of twelve he became obsessed with the internet using a dial up Internet access and trying to spend his every waking moment online He eventually learned computer programming and became a hacker as a teenager taking his focus away from his schoolwork to the detriment of his grades He recalls one instance of discovering a security flaw on the website of the Los Alamos National Laboratory He called the lab to notify them of this and later received a call from a man thanking him and offering a job once he turned 18 Toward the end of his freshman year at Arundel High School Snowden s parents were getting divorced and sold their Crofton house He moved into his mother s condo near Ellicott City At the beginning of his sophomore year he was unusually fatigued and was eventually diagnosed with infectious mononucleosis He missed four months of classes and was told he would have to repeat his sophomore year Instead he dropped out of Arundel High and enrolled at Anne Arundel Community College AACC taking classes two days a week He also later passed the General Education Development GED exams at a high school near Baltimore a promise he made to himself when he dropped out Snowden started freelancing as a web designer for a woman from his Japanese class at AACC He wanted to advance his career further taking a Microsoft certification course at the Computer Career Institute of a Johns Hopkins University satellite campus In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks Snowden joined the United States Army to show he wasn t just a brain in a jar and was on track to become a Special Forces sergeant through the 18X enlistment option but suffered stress fractures during training at Fort Benning in Georgia Snowden says his greatest regret was his own reflexive unquestioning support for the War on Terror and the resulting promulgation of secret policies secret laws secret courts and secret wars nbsp Snowden first became interested in computers by using his father s Commodore 64 home computer Snowden still wanted to serve his country and realized he had taken his talent for technology for granted and began taking classes again at Anne Arundel Community College Knowing he would need a high level security clearance to work for an intelligence agency he searched for jobs that would sponsor his application for the Single Scope Background Investigation He became an employee at the University of Maryland s Center for Advanced Study of Language a research center sponsored by the NSA Around the same time he met his then girlfriend Lindsay Mills through the site Hot or Not He eventually passed the full scope polygraph and successfully attained the TS SCI security clearance completing his final interview at the NSA s Friendship Annex when he was twenty two years old Part Two edit After attending a 2006 job fair at the Ritz Carlton in Tysons Corner Virginia Snowden accepted an offer for a position at the CIA and was assigned to the global communications division at the CIA headquarters in Langley Virginia In March 2007 the CIA stationed Snowden with diplomatic cover in Geneva Switzerland where he was responsible for maintaining computer network security In February 2009 Snowden resigned from the CIA Shortly after Snowden took a job as contractor for the NSA in Japan but was officially an employee of Perot Systems which was acquired by Dell soon after his arrival He worked at the NSA s Pacific Technical Center PTC at Yokota Air Base His job there was helping to connect the NSA s systems architecture with the CIA s On one occasion the PTC hosted a conference featuring briefings given by experts from all the intelligence components The conference concerned how the Chinese intelligence services were targeting the U S Intelligence Community IC and how the IC could respond When the only technology briefer was unable to attend at the last minute Snowden was selected to replace them in assessing China s surveillance capabilities He stayed up all night preparing his presentation sifting through top secret reports off the NSA network and the CIA network He was stunned by the extent to which China was able to constantly collect store and analyze the billions of daily telephone and Internet communications of their over a billion citizenry However Snowden began to believe that it was impossible for the US to have so much information about what the Chinese were doing without having done some of the very same things itself Snowden however admits that at the time he tamped down his unease and fully supported defensive and targeted surveillance He was further suspicious when he around the same time read the Unclassified Report on the President s Surveillance Program His suspicion drove him to search for the classified report but was unable to find it It was only later long after he had forgotten about it that the classified version mistakenly appeared on his desktop After reading the report he says he spent months in a sad low daze I felt more adult than ever but also cursed with the knowledge that all of us had been reduced to something like children who d be forced to live the rest of our lives under omniscient parental supervision I felt like a fraud making excuses to Lindsay to explain my sullenness I felt like a fool as someone of supposedly serious technical skills who d somehow helped to build an essential component of this system without realizing its purpose I felt used as an employee of the IC who only now was realizing that all along I d been protecting not my country but the state I felt above all violated Snowden moved to Columbia Maryland in 2011 still working for Dell but now attached again to the CIA He had switched to a sales position a move which he describes as a way to distract himself from his unease and begin to have a normal life However the rise of cloud computing disturbed Snowden He began expressing his concerns to Lindsay Around the same time Snowden began experiencing intense dizziness and eventually his first epileptic seizure Following a series of seizures Snowden took a short term disability leave from Dell The final chapter of Part Two On the Couch describes his time spent recovering on his mother s blue couch as well his thoughts on authoritarian states and privacy in the context of the 2011 Arab Spring Part Three edit In March 2012 he began working at the Tunnel a former aircraft factory turned NSA facility located under a pineapple field in Kunia on the island of Oahu Hawaii He was working on a Dell contract for the NSA Snowden moved to Hawaii for the more relaxed lifestyle and the less stressful duties of his new position in an effort to lessen the triggers of his seizures He was the sole employee of the Office of Information Sharing where he worked as a SharePoint systems administrator He began actively searching for the NSA s surveillance capabilities and abuses at this time As part of his work Snowden developed a system called Heartbeat which created an automated queue from the classified documents posted to the Intelligence Community s readboards Heartbeat would perpetually scan for new and unique documents and create a kind of aggregated newsfeed personalized for each employee based on their interests and their security clearance Heartbeat was highly comprehensive accessing beyond the NSA s network into the networks of the CIA and the FBI as well as into the Department of Defense s top secret Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System Heartbeat s servers stored a copy of each scanned document allowing Snowden to perform the kind of deep interagency searches that the heads of most agencies could only dream of Snowden says that nearly all of the documents that he later leaked to journalists were received through Heartbeat nbsp Edward Snowden s former house in Waipahu Hawaii In Whistleblowing Snowden discusses the Constitution of the United States and argues that the Intelligence Community have hacked it by acting with impunity from the executive branch the legislative branch and the judiciary branch He also discusses the history of whistleblowing and argues that the terms leaking and whistleblowing should not be used interchangeably because he believes leaking is done out of self interest not out of public interest When Snowden decided to go public he realized he would have to have documentation or he risked being doubted He chose not to self publish to avoid being lost among the crazy of people posting classified secrets to the Internet every day He avoided WikiLeaks because he felt their new strategy of publishing leaks as they received them would be no different to him self publishing He felt a document dump was not appropriate as his leaks were too tangled and technical He considered The New York Times but was unimpressed with how Bill Keller intentionally delayed the reporting of the Terrorist Surveillance Program until after George W Bush s 2004 reelection He chose a number of journalists to contact primarily messaging documentarian Laura Poitras and journalist Glenn Greenwald He communicated with them over e mail under the aliases Cincinnatus Citizenfour and Verax To stay anonymous he went war driving exploiting local Wi Fi networks with an antenna and magnetic GPS sensor while driving in his car around Oahu He used Tor and the Kismet mapping software running on the Tails operating system which allowed him to easily spoof his laptop s MAC address Under the guise of compatibility testing Snowden transferred documents from the Heartbeat server to outdated desktop Dell PCs from his office then onto SD cards after deduplicating compressing and encrypting them He carried the SD cards out through security hiding them inside a Rubik s Cube in his sock in his cheek and in his pocket At home he transferred them onto a single external drive which he left out in the open on his desk He left Dell on March 15 2013 and began working as an infrastructure analyst at the National Threat Operations Center NTOC in Honolulu through a contractor job at Booz Allen Hamilton The NTOC had access to XKEYSCORE Snowden witnessed coworkers use XKEYSCORE to view information about their current and former lovers called LOVEINT He also recalls one time that affected him watching a personal video of a father and his young son Between March May 2013 Snowden began rapidly preparing to leave the country emptying his bank accounts and erasing and encrypting his old computers He researched his safest and most conducive destination narrowing it down to Hong Kong The day after Lindsay left on a camping trip Snowden took an emergency medical leave of absence from work citing epilepsy He brought four laptops with him one for secure communications one for normal communications a decoy and a laptop that had never connected to any networks and would never be used to do so He flew to Tokyo then to Hong Kong on May 20 2013 paying in cash both times He stayed in The Mira Hong Kong hotel where Glenn and Laura met him on June 2 2013 Between June 3 and 9 in Snowden s hotel room Glenn and his Guardian colleague Ewen MacAskill interviewed Snowden with Laura filming what later featured in her Academy Award winning documentary Citizenfour 2014 On June 5 The Guardian published Glenn s first story on the FISA court warrant that ordered Verizon to provide a daily feed to the NSA containing telephony metadata On June 6 The Guardian published Glenn s revelation of PRISM and The Washington Post published Laura and Barton Gellman s story on PRISM on June 7 Snowden s identity was revealed on June 9 through a video interview directed by Laura published on The Guardian s website The U S government charged Snowden under the Espionage Act on June 14 and formally requested his extradition on June 21 Snowden s 30th birthday nbsp nbsp Laura Poitras left and Glenn Greenwald right were both contacted by Edward Snowden anonymously over encrypted email Accompanied by Sarah Harrison of WikiLeaks Snowden attempted to travel to Ecuador for political asylum They planned to fly to Moscow then to Havana then to Caracas then to Quito Ecuador because they were unable to fly directly from Hong Kong and all of the other connecting flights traveled through United States airspace They arrived at Moscow s Sheremetyevo International Airport on June 23 but were taken aside and questioned by a man from Russia s Federal Security Service FSB The man asked Snowden to work for them but Snowden rejected the offer and said he had no intention to stay in Russia The man was surprised and informed Snowden that the U S State Department had canceled his passport He proceeded to ask Snowden to share information with them but he refused Snowden was detained in Sheremetyevo for forty days during which he applied to twenty seven countries for political asylum but none offered On August 1 the Russian government granted Snowden temporary asylum The book s penultimate 28th chapter is composed of entries from Lindsay Mills s 2013 diary Snowden explained that no one but her had the experience or the right to recount that period of her life the FBI interrogations the surveillance the press attention the online harassment the confusion and pain the anger and sadness 6 In the final chapter Love and Exile Snowden expresses his feelings on the impact of his revelations including ACLU v Clapper and the EU s General Data Protection Regulation and his hopes for the future of technology and privacy He also discusses adjusting to life in Moscow with Lindsay In the chapter s final sentence Snowden reveals he and Lindsay were married in 2017 Publication editThe book was published on September 17 2019 by Metropolitan Books an imprint of Henry Holt and Company It was purposely published on September 17 to coincide with Constitution Day which Snowden discusses in the book 7 Civil lawsuit edit On September 17 2019 the Federal Government of the United States filed a lawsuit in the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia against Snowden for alleged violations of non disclosure agreements with the CIA and NSA 8 The complaint alleges that Snowden violated prepublication obligations related to the publication of his memoir Permanent Record The complaint lists the publishers Macmillan and Holtzbrink as relief defendants 9 The government stated that its lawsuit does not seek to stop or restrict the publication or distribution of the book but instead aims to capture the proceeds Snowden would be earning from it 8 In December 2019 Judge Liam O Grady concurred with the plaintiff 10 Snowden refused during the civil lawsuit to produce documents showing how much he was paid As a result federal prosecutors sought sanctions against Snowden 11 On August 7 2020 U S Magistrate Judge Theresa Buchanan agreed to impose sanctions on Snowden ruling that he unequivocally acted in bad faith 12 better source needed Snowden himself referred to the lawsuit on an episode of The Daily Show stating it was largely responsible for the book s increased sales via the Streisand effect 13 Censorship edit On November 11 2019 Snowden posted on his Twitter that the simplified Chinese edition of Permanent Record published in mainland China had been censored Parts of the book were removed in violation of his publishing agreement The Chinese version removed Snowden s observation on the motivations of Arab Spring protestors The crowds were calling for an end to oppression censorship and precarity They were declaring that in a truly just society the people were not answerable to the government the government was answerable to the people The following section in which Snowden comments on the nature of authoritarian states was also largely censored In the section Snowden writes Authoritarian states are typically not governments of laws but governments of leaders who demand loyalty from their subjects and are hostile to dissent The Chinese version also censored Snowden s references to the Tor anonymity network China s military cyber intelligence and its capabilities China s Great Firewall as well Snowden s characterization of Hong Kong as having nominal autonomy The Chinese version censored topics not directly related to China as well including Snowden s commentary on the right to privacy Snowden invited his Twitter followers to help him create a correct and unabridged version of Permanent Record in Chinese to be published freely online 14 15 16 Reception editPermanent Record received favorable reviews with a cumulative Positive rating at the review aggregator website Book Marks based on 13 book reviews from mainstream literary critics 17 The book debuted at number two on The New York Times nonfiction best seller list for the week ending September 21 2019 18 On the day it was released Permanent Record reached number one on Amazon s bestseller list 19 Kirkus Reviews wrote Snowden s book likely won t change the minds of his detractors but he makes a strong case for his efforts 20 Greg Myre of NPR wrote Snowden has no new bombshells in his book But he offers a very readable memoir about growing up with the Internet a detailed rationale for his actions and a look at how government surveillance has evolved since his disclosures 21 Jill Lepore of The New Yorker wrote Some people write memoirs other people craft legends Snowden who once aspired to be a model and is in some quarters regarded as a modern messiah is the second kind 22 Publishers Weekly felt the book lacked a strong case for the argument that NSA surveillance leads inevitably to oppressive control but concluded Still Snowden s many admirers will find his saga both captivating and inspiring 23 Greg Miller of The Washington Post praised Snowden s lucid and compelling language concerning the architecture of the surveillance networks he exposed but felt the memoir was lessened by withholding any truly revealing material about his own life and lamented its lack of details on Snowden s experience in Russia and any regrets he may have 24 The Economist called the book well written frequently funny but concluded Whatever his relationship with the Russian authorities and whenever it began everything he says in Permanent Record about himself and about America must be seen through the prism of his dependence on the Kremlin 25 References edit Permanent Record Macmillan Retrieved September 18 2019 a b Edward Snowden September 17 2019 Copyright Permanent Record Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 1 250 23724 8 Zakrzewski Cat October 1 2019 The Technology 202 Here s what Edward Snowden thinks about Trump s whistleblower The Washington Post Retrieved October 1 2019 Flood Alison August 1 2019 Edward Snowden memoir to reveal whistleblower s secrets The Guardian Retrieved August 1 2019 Szalai Jennifer September 13 2019 In Edward Snowden s New Memoir the Disclosures This Time Are Personal The New York Times Retrieved September 22 2019 Edward Snowden September 17 2019 Permanent Record Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 1 250 23724 8 de Leon Concepcion August 1 2019 Edward Snowden s Memoir Is Coming in September The New York Times Retrieved October 7 2019 a b Stueve Joshua September 17 2019 United States Files Civil Lawsuit Against Edward Snowden Department of Justice U S Attorney s Office Eastern District of Virginia Retrieved September 17 2019 Hunt Joseph September 17 2019 United States of America v Edward Snowden Department of Justice Retrieved September 17 2019 Drew Jonathan December 18 2019 Judge rules in favor of US effort to take Snowden book money Associated Press Retrieved July 18 2021 Larson Erik July 7 2020 Snowden Faces Possible Sanctions in Suit Over Tell All Book Bloomberg News Retrieved August 16 2020 Blake Andrew August 8 2020 Edward Snowden NSA leaker sanctioned in federal court for refusing to cooperate in civil suit The Washington Times Retrieved August 16 2020 Beresford Trilby September 19 2019 Edward Snowden on How Getting Sued by the Government Resulted in a Best Selling Book The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved October 4 2019 Kuo Lily November 12 2019 Edward Snowden says autobiography has been censored in China The Guardian Retrieved November 12 2019 Zhen Liu November 12 2019 Whistle blower Edward Snowden slams China censorship of his book vows to put uncut version online South China Morning Post Retrieved November 12 2019 Steger Isabella November 12 2019 Edward Snowden blew the whistle on how Chinese censors scrubbed his book Quartz Retrieved November 12 2019 Book Marks reviews of Permanent Record by Edward Snowden Book Marks Retrieved October 16 2021 Combined Print amp E Book Nonfiction Best Sellers Books The New York Times October 6 2019 Retrieved October 16 2021 US sues for Edward Snowden s income from new book Deutsche Welle September 17 2019 Retrieved October 19 2019 Permanent Record by Edward Snowden Kirkus Reviews September 17 2019 Retrieved September 18 2019 Myre Greg September 12 2019 In Permanent Record Edward Snowden Says Exile Is An Endless Layover NPR org Retrieved October 2 2019 Lepore Jill September 16 2019 Review Edward Snowden and the Rise of Whistle Blower Culture in Permanent Record The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Retrieved October 2 2019 Nonfiction Book Review Permanent Record by Edward Snowden Publishers Weekly September 17 2019 Retrieved September 18 2019 Miller Greg September 13 2019 Edward Snowden explains how he pulled off one of the largest leaks in U S history The Washington Post Retrieved October 4 2019 Edward Snowden s memoir reveals some but not all The Economist September 13 2019 Retrieved October 9 2019 External links editPermanent Record at Macmillan com Permanent Record CN Edition With Underlined Redactions at Archive org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Permanent Record autobiography amp oldid 1209227518, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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