Monday, September 23, 2013

The Banality of Systemic Evil

Article

This article  , posted in the New York Times, pretty much sums up my opinion about Edward Snowden and other whistle blowers. Since I have noticed that articles like this tend to vanish at a time, I am not only hot linking to it , but copying it in full , for future reference.

I hate when my favorite articles just vanish.  Feel free to hit the "article" link above and give them a few eye ball views for their advertising revenue.

The Banality of Systemic Evil

(1) You never go around your boss. (2) You tell your boss what he wants to hear, even when your boss claims that he wants dissenting views. (3) If your boss wants something dropped, you drop it. (4) You are sensitive to your boss’s wishes so that you anticipate what he wants; you don’t force him, in other words, to act as a boss. (5) Your job is not to report something that your boss does not want reported, but rather to cover it up. You do your job and you keep your mouth shut.
Jackall went through case after case in which managers violated this code and were drummed out of a business (for example, for reporting wrongdoing in the cleanup at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant).
Aaron Swartz counted “Moral Mazes” among his “very favorite books.” Swartz was the Internet wunderkind who was hounded by a government prosecution threatening him with 35 years in jail for illicitly downloading academic journals that were behind a pay wall. Swartz, who committed suicide in January at age 26 (many believe because of his prosecution), said that “Moral Mazes” did an excellent job of “explaining how so many well-intentioned people can end up committing so much evil.
Swartz argued that it was sometimes necessary to break the rules that required obedience to the system in order to avoid systemic evil. In Swartz’s case the system was not a corporation but a system for the dissemination of bottled up knowledge that should have been available to all. Swartz engaged in an act of civil disobedience to liberate that knowledge, arguing that “there is no justice in following unjust laws. It’s time to come into the light and, in the grand tradition of civil disobedience, declare our opposition to this private theft of public culture.”
Chelsea Manning, the United States Army private incarcerated for leaking classified documents from the Departments of Defense and State, felt a similar pull to resist the internal rules of the bureaucracy. In a statement at her trial she described a case where she felt this was necessary. In February 2010, she received a report of an event in which the Iraqi Federal Police had detained 15 people for printing “anti-Iraqi” literature. Upon investigating the matter, Manning discovered that none of the 15 had previous ties to anti-Iraqi actions or suspected terrorist organizations. Manning had the allegedly anti-Iraqi literature translated and found that, contrary to what the federal police had said, the published literature in question “detailed corruption within the cabinet of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki’s government and the financial impact of his corruption on the Iraqi people.”
When Manning reported this discrepancy to the officer in charge (OIC), she was told to “drop it,” she recounted.
Manning could not play along. As she put it, she knew if she “continued to assist the Baghdad Federal Police in identifying the political opponents of Prime Minister al-Maliki, those people would be arrested and in the custody of the Special Unit of the Baghdad Federal Police and very likely tortured and not seen again for a very long time — if ever.” When her superiors would not address the problem, she was compelled to pass this information on to WikiLeaks.
Snowden too felt that, confronting what was clearly wrong, he could not play his proper role within the bureaucracy of the intelligence community. As he put it,
[W]hen you talk to people about [abuses] in a place like this where this is the normal state of business people tend not to take them very seriously and move on from them. But over time that awareness of wrongdoing sort of builds up and you feel compelled to talk about [them]. And the more you talk about [them] the more you’re ignored. The more you’re told it’s not a problem until eventually you realize that these things need to be determined by the public and not by somebody who was simply hired by the government.

The bureaucracy was telling him to shut up and move on (in accord with the five rules in “Moral Mazes”), but Snowden felt that doing so was morally wrong.
In a June Op-Ed in The Times, David Brooks made a case for why he thought Snowden was wrong to leak information about the Prism surveillance program. His reasoning cleanly framed the alternative to the moral code endorsed by Swartz, Manning and Snowden. “For society to function well,” he wrote, “there have to be basic levels of trust and cooperation, a respect for institutions and deference to common procedures. By deciding to unilaterally leak secret N.S.A. documents, Snowden has betrayed all of these things.”
The complaint is eerily parallel to one from a case discussed in “Moral Mazes,” where an accountant was dismissed because he insisted on reporting “irregular payments, doctored invoices, and shuffling numbers.” The complaint against the accountant by the other managers of his company was that “by insisting on his own moral purity … he eroded the fundamental trust and understanding that makes cooperative managerial work possible.”
But wasn’t there arrogance or hubris in Snowden’s and Manning’s decisions to leak the documents? After all, weren’t there established procedures determining what was right further up the organizational chart? Weren’t these ethical decisions better left to someone with a higher pay grade? The former United States ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, argued that Snowden “thinks he’s smarter and has a higher morality than the rest of us … that he can see clearer than other 299, 999, 999 of us, and therefore he can do what he wants. I say that is the worst form of treason.”
For the leaker and whistleblower the answer to Bolton is that there can be no expectation that the system will act morally of its own accord. Systems are optimized for their own survival and preventing the system from doing evil may well require breaking with organizational niceties, protocols or laws. It requires stepping outside of one’s assigned organizational role. The chief executive is not in a better position to recognize systemic evil than is a middle level manager or, for that matter, an IT contractor. Recognizing systemic evil does not require rank or intelligence, just honesty of vision.
Persons of conscience who step outside their assigned organizational roles are not new. There are many famous earlier examples, including Daniel Ellsberg (the Pentagon Papers), John Kiriakou (of the Central Intelligence Agency) and several former N.S.A. employees, who blew the whistle on what they saw as an unconstitutional and immoral surveillance program (William Binney, Russ Tice and Thomas Drake, for example). But it seems that we are witnessing a new generation of whistleblowers and leakers, which we might call generation W (for the generation that came of age in the era WikiLeaks, and now the war on whistleblowing).
The media’s desire to psychoanalyze members of generation W is natural enough. They want to know why these people are acting in a way that they, members of the corporate media, would not. But sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander; if there are psychological motivations for whistleblowing, leaking and hacktivism, there are likewise psychological motivations for closing ranks with the power structure within a system — in this case a system in which corporate media plays an important role. Similarly it is possible that the system itself is sick, even though the actors within the organization are behaving in accord with organizational etiquette and respecting the internal bonds of trust.
Just as Hannah Arendt saw that the combined action of loyal managers can give rise to unspeakable systemic evil, so too generation W has seen that complicity within the surveillance state can give rise to evil as well — not the horrific evil that Eichmann’s bureaucratic efficiency brought us, but still an Orwellian future that must be avoided at all costs.


---- end article , begin my own ranting ----

"For the leaker and whistleblower the answer to Bolton is that there can be no expectation that the system will act morally of its own accord."

This statement dovetails into my primary complaint against the USA spying on the whole world. How can The System (the United States) act morally in a situation where they are openly abusing non-voters (non usa citizens) . They are unelected , they have no motivation to stop at all. They have USA Senators caught on camera lying to the american public , people who can get them booted out of office. And you think they're going to be truthful to people whom are powerless to stop them from abusing anything they feel like abusing ?

No taxation without representation is the american principle. Only your elected officials can tax you ,not the evil british forieners (thus the boston tea party) . It extends to far more than just a monetary tax. It extends to any kind of burden you put on any people that you don't represent.
   So yes, as Obama said , the Germans probably are listening in on German calls. But they are elected by the people of germany , and they can be booted out of power if they abuse the priviledge. But Americans listening in on German calls , 600 000 a month , and they're doing everything they can to expand that to the whole world  ? There's no representation. There's nothing the german people , the people of the world who are not USA citizens , can do to take these people to task for it when they mess up.
   And these are their allies they are doing this to , not their mortal enemies that they are at war with.

   this is not acceptable. I demand they stop.
  And I know full well they won't.



Saturday, September 14, 2013

New Apple iPhone pushes biometrics 'into the mainstream'

Article

What makes Apple’s "Touch ID" significant is that it makes the enhanced convenience and security of biometrics a standard feature on the world’s most recognized smartphone platform.
And smartphones are where people are increasingly doing most of their business, from email to shopping to banking, says Martin Drew, president of iView Systems, an internet security firm based in Oakville, Ont.
"People hold their entire lives on these devices these days. If someone had access to your smartphone for two hours, the damage they could do to your life would be phenomenal," says Drew.
He says the biggest benefit of biometrics is that it makes typing passwords obsolete.


So  an american company like apple, which is requied by US Law to hand over every scrap of data it gets on every single user in the world , is now going to have your finger prints. Which is to say , NSA is now going to have finger prints of everyone in the whole wide world. The Same NSA that fabricated rape charges against Assage (the wikileaks guy) and is currently fabricating similar charges against another hacker taking refuge in canada with NSA documents in his possession ? 

This is the same USA that likes to arrange "regime changes" in Mexico on a regular basis, and at least once in Iraq and Afghanistan ? 

Oh ...you're going to point out that artical where it says Apple doesn't keep the entire finger print on file , it only keeps certain key points that distinguish one user from another ? it only keeps the parts that mean anything in other words ? 

As if that makes a difference.   How hard can it be to program a simple "connect the dots" program to regenerate a finger print from the important points that actually distinguish one person from another ? 

Two people can keep a secret , but only if one is dead. My favorite quote from Robert Heinlien a science fiction author. What does it mean ? It means no secret stays secret forever. Sooner or later , it will come out. Just like PRISM came out . Mark my words, USA will be caught stealing copyright secrets from other nations (they currently deny doing so , but with PRISM it's well within their means) and they will be caught planting finger prints and trying to frame someone. 

And they're going to look good with egg on their face, no one trusting them anymore , and no one wanting to do business with any USA company any more. Heck , I already don't want to do business with any USA company. 

Don't take my word for it, you don't need to. These secrets always come out on their own.  The only idiot is the one who thinks they wont. 

And yes, I 'm looking straight at Obama , or whoever the next president of the NSA might be.     

 




 

Monday, September 09, 2013

USA Making spyware

Article

Way down deep on the first page.

(The TAO is a highly secret NSA unit that “specializes in surreptitiously installing spyware and tracking devices on targeted computers and mobile-phone networks” and that has played a role in the hunt for al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, the Washington Post reported previously.)

Can I sue them for data tresspassing if I find any on my computer ?
I mean  , I'm not an american , I didn't give them permission to do squat on my computer. And they can't retroactively write laws for me they can for their own citizens.

I would like to sue them, I think. I'd lose of course, I have no doubt they'd put pressure on the Canadian government and suddenly their actions are all perfectly legal and back dated 20 years or some such .. but still, it would be fun.