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Intelligence Officials Fear Snowden's 'Doomsday' Cache 381

Dega704 writes with news that Edward Snowden is believed to have a collection of highly sensitive classified documents that will be released in the event he is detained, hurt, or killed. According to Reuters, "The data is protected with sophisticated encryption, and multiple passwords are needed to open it, said two of the sources, who like the others spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters. The passwords are in the possession of at least three different people and are valid for only a brief time window each day, they said. The identities of persons who might have the passwords are unknown." These details have caused several security experts to express skepticism, but multiple sources, including Glenn Greenwald, believe Snowden has not released all of the documents he appropriated. "U.S. officials and other sources said only a small proportion of the classified material Snowden downloaded during stints as a contract systems administrator for NSA has been made public. Some Obama Administration officials have said privately that Snowden downloaded enough material to fuel two more years of news stories." Whether or not it's true, U.S. and U.K. officials clearly believe it, which can only serve to protect Snowden.
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Intelligence Officials Fear Snowden's 'Doomsday' Cache

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 26, 2013 @09:39PM (#45533913)

    There is likely a key on a tor server that can only be retrieved at certain times.

    More importantly, WTF is the insurance files I'm seeding? FFS.

  • Re:Torn (Score:5, Informative)

    by bigfoottoo ( 2947459 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2013 @10:01PM (#45534071)
    This was covered earlier in http://slashdot.org/story/13/08/18/1641241/wikileaks-releases-a-massive-insurance-file-that-no-one-can-open [slashdot.org]

    A: 3.6Gb http://wlstorage.net/torrent/wlinsurance-20130815-A.aes256.torrent [wlstorage.net] [wlstorage.net]
    B: 49Gb http://wlstorage.net/torrent/wlinsurance-20130815-B.aes256.torrent [wlstorage.net] [wlstorage.net]
    C: 349GB http://wlstorage.net/torrent/wlinsurance-20130815-C.aes256.torrent [wlstorage.net] [wlstorage.net]

    I think we all can agree that 3.6GB was within Snowden's opportunity and ability to gather. But, 49GB and 349GB ?!! That is a LOT of data to quietly move to USB sticks. If the last two truely are Snowden files, then it looks to me like he may have had an accomplice. Wouldn't it be so cool if there is a freedom-loving mole in a high position of the NSA?

  • by safetyinnumbers ( 1770570 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2013 @10:06PM (#45534113)
    Don't the trees block a lot more of the road than they did then?

    There's a webcam [earthcam.com] mounted inside the box near the window if anyone want's to check out the view (the pile of boxes placed there to represent the one's he's said to have placed there to rest the rifle on).
  • Re:Lovely (Score:5, Informative)

    by Uberbah ( 647458 ) on Tuesday November 26, 2013 @10:41PM (#45534337)

    but I have yet to hear a good justification for his leaks about NSA's foreign operations

    Do you have a justification for trying to spy on every person on the planet? Do you have a justification for a system that's more about corporate espionage than stopping terrorism? Do you have a justification for tut-tutting Snowden's revelations when the USG flippantly stated that it was listening in on Al Queda conference calls - about the most valuable counter-intelligence secret you could name?

    but they aren't doing anything that every other country isn't trying to do to the United States

    But this is a bullshit talking point, always has been always will be. It ignores the depth and pervasiveness of the NSA programs, the disparity in capability, and the geographical isolation of the U.S. from the rest of the world. You wouldn't say that Angola has a military, so it's equal in capability to the U.S. military, would you? Then why are you guys doing this with the NSA programs?

  • by hutsell ( 1228828 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2013 @12:36AM (#45534981) Homepage

    ... Where did he train?

    The Marine Corps. There are 3 levels: marksman, sharpshooter and expert. He was rated as a sharpshooter in 1956. In a 1959 test, his ability declined to marksman.

    By the way, his brother [pbs.org] (still alive) feels Lee was a whack job that was doing it on his own. Didn't know he had a brother near his own age — the surprises never end.

  • by mrex ( 25183 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2013 @11:58AM (#45538845)

    Schneier = another built up by press figure only.

    What?! Schneier is the author of Applied Cryptography, the essential text in the field. He's the creator of the Blowfish and Twofish algorithms. His information security firm, Counterpane Systems, was bought out in an eight figure deal by British Telecom. His blog, Schneier On Security, is one of the most closely followed by infosec professionals and digital liberties advocates. In short: Schneier's reputation in the information security industry as an expert par excellence is hard-earned and well-deserved, his credentials singularly impressive, and his ratio of positions staked to positions invalidated unusually high.

    No, Schneier's impressive CVs don't validate arguments supported merely on invocation of his name, and certainly no one is superman or is incapable of error or omniscient even within a field of expertise. To label Schneier's reputation as "a built up by press figure only", however, is singularly ridiculous.

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