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Topic: Glenn Greenwald at 30c3: transcript and video (Read 1678 times)

donator
Activity: 1419
Merit: 1015
January 02, 2014, 04:00:21 AM
#4
Does Glen Greenwald have a BTC address?
full member
Activity: 190
Merit: 100
This was possibly one of the best talks I ever heard and that was, without a doubt, the most important speech of the 21st. Century. I have a new found greater appreciation for Glenn Greenwald.

legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1001
December 30, 2013, 11:02:25 AM
#2
Glenn Greenwald is a hero.  He knew that he would be subject to harassment for the rest of his life but he still ran the Snowden story when other journalists refused to look at it. 
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
December 30, 2013, 10:54:59 AM
#1
Keynote video: http://media.ccc.de/browse/congress/2013/30C3_-_5622_-_en_-_saal_1_-_201312271930_-_30c3_keynote_-_glenn_greenwald_-_frank.html

Transcript: https://github.com/poppingtonic/greenwald-30c3-keynote/blob/master/transcript/transcript.md

Excerpt:

Quote
If you go and look at my inbox from July, probably 3-5% of the emails I received were composed of PGP code. That percentage is definitely above 50% today, and probably well above 50%. When we talked about forming our new media company, we barely spent any time on the question. It was simply assumed that we were all going to use the most sophisticated encryption that was available to communicate with one another.

...

It's a really remarkable sea-change, even from the middle of last year, when I would talk to some of the leading national security journalists, in the world, who were working on some of the most sensitive information, and virtually none of them knew what PGP or OTR or any other of the leading privacy technologies were, let alone how to use them. It's really encouraging to see this technology spreading so pervasively.

Quote
But I ultimately think that where the greatest hope lies is with the people in this room and the skills that all of you possess. The privacy technologies that have already been developed: the Tor Browser, PGP, OTR, and a variety of other products are making real inroads in preventing the US government and its allies from invading the sanctity of our communications.

None of them is perfect. None of them is invulnerable, but they all pose a serious obstacle to the US government's ability to continue to destroy our privacy. And ultimately, the battle over Internet freedom, the question of whether or not the Internet will really be this tool of liberation and democratization and whether it'll become the worst tool of human oppression in all of human history will be fought out, I think, primarily, on the technological battlefield.

Some great stuff. Wish I was there Smiley
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