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Marc Andreessen says Snowden is a traitor

cnbc.com

42 points by sabelo 12 years ago · 31 comments

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tptacek 12 years ago

I would not under almost any circumstances, including the revelation that he was working directly with the FSB† when he decided what to leak, use the word "traitor" to describe a national security leaker. In addition to being inaccurate, the word sucks all the oxygen out of the room and makes it impossible to have a dispassionate discussion about what happened.

But if you can get past Andreesen's unfortunate choice of framing, this story is useful as an indicator of how captive we are to our filter bubbles. The valence of Andreesen's feelings about Snowden isn't at all weird. Lots of people share the perspective that Snowden is doing more harm than good, but people on HN seem to have a hard time believing that.

Which I doubt; it's too interesting, and the most boring narrative always wins.

2close4comfort 12 years ago

Well I guess he falls in the "I am complicit giving over your stuff to the government" side of things. Good to know if you are a conscious consumer.

gatehouse 12 years ago

I'm inherently suspicious of a one-word quote, but it seems to be essentially what he said.

I don't think "everybody knew" that the NSA was moonlighting in the drug war: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/08/dea-and-nsa-team-intel...

wutbrodo 12 years ago

Leaving aside the meat of the article, I found this quote interesting:

""" Andreessen said he was not surprised that the National Security Agency was spying. "The biggest surprise for me was that people were so shocked, because I thought we've been funding this agency for 50 years that has tens of thousands of employees and spends tens of billions of dollars a year." """

Does anyone else find this to be the case too? I feel like the actions of taxpayer-funded agencies like the CIA/NSA have been despicable for decades, and I'm puzzled as to why this is the first time that people seem to actually care (which, don't get me wrong, is great). For those of us who gave a shit before Snowden, I feel like there was a sense of being resigned to the fact that most people (even in tech circles like HN) simply don't care; similar to something like climate change. I know that these revelations are relatively novel in that they involve surveillance of Americans' data as well as foreign nationals, but that was the case for warrantless wiretapping in the 2000s. That made news, but there DEFINITELY wasn't as much fuss made about it (to my bafflement at the time).

  • jgon 12 years ago

    This is now the bog standard reply of the closet fascists who support the NSA and their rampant spying. They've had to switch to this response because their previous response "You're just being paranoid", has been utterly blown apart by the Snowden revelations and thank god for that.

    Both replies avoid grappling in a substantive fashion with the question of whether or not these activities are moral and something we should accept in our society, but at least the second reply doesn't actively shut down the conversation. Whereas before they could claim that we are being paranoid and there would be no real comeback to that, and thus our points could be safely dismissed, at least now one can reply "No we shouldn't be surprised, and now let's discuss whether or not it is something that should continue."

    I'll add finally, that yes apparently we should be surprised because the same closet fascists now adopting this whole grizzled "wise to how the world works" persona have previously spent the last few decades strongly claiming that the NSA would never flagrantly violate the constitution in this manner, that they were stalwart defenders of America and apple pie. You can see the same sort of evolution with torture, where the people proclaiming that it is a "necessary" action in today's ruthless dog-eat-dog world were the exact people talking about how not torturing was what separated our good hearted security agents from those savages employed by "evil empires" such as Russia or China.

    At the end of day, I am heartened because now at least the cards are on the table and these activities can't just be denied as the figments of paranoid imaginations. The conversation is moving along a bit, however slowly.

    • wutbrodo 12 years ago

      > This is now the bog standard reply of the closet fascists who support the NSA and their rampant spying.

      Yea man, those "closet fascists and their support of the NSA" and their statements in no uncertain terms that the NSA always been despicable. So let me get this straight: between 1) people who have always been fine with the NSA until a couple mos ago and 2) people who have always been disgusted by them and see this as an (unsurprising) affirmation of that disgust: the LATTER are closet fascists? You realize that even someone like rms fits directly into your characterization of "closet fascist", right? That should help you understand how stupid your conclusion is.

      Your core issue is that you're conflating "hey man this has happened for ages and it's just how the world works" with "this has happened for ages, where the fuck have you been, people who are just deciding to get mad now that it's in fashion?". The former is definitely a bog-standard apologist tactic (though I'd argue that it's been around for a lot longer than just Snowden; it's basically the neo-con anthem, and neocons aren't exactly in the "closet"), but the latter couldn't be more different from apologia.

      > I'll add finally, that yes apparently we should be surprised because the same closet fascists now adopting this whole grizzled "wise to how the world works" persona have previously spent the last few decades strongly claiming that the NSA would never flagrantly violate the constitution in this manner, that they were stalwart defenders of America and apple pie. You can see the same sort of evolution with torture, where the people proclaiming that it is a "necessary" action in today's ruthless dog-eat-dog world

      Again, you're mixing up two different views. "People who actually paid attention before it was fashionable" doesn't consist only of the people defending this bullshit, it also consists of plenty of people that were protesting it. I know it makes you feel better about ignoring this for so long to pretend that the only people paying attention were apologists, but that's just flat-out, 100% wrong.

      • jgon 12 years ago

        For what it's worth I entirely agree with you about people who dislike this and are also unsurprised by it. Andreesen makes it very clear he not the latter.

        He is claiming both that we should be unsurprised by it, and that because of this lack of surprise it isn't a big deal that we should care about. I am emphatically not coming down on people who are now, and have always been, against this type of surveillance.

        • wutbrodo 12 years ago

          My mistake, your comment sounded like a direct rebuttal to what I was expressing, which was that it was unsurprising and still despicable, not unsurprising and thus defensible. It also seemed like you were just assuming that anyone unsurprised must be condoning it. That's my mistake, I misread the subtext of your comment.

  • thaumaturgy 12 years ago

    There are a lot of novelties in the Snowden leak for people, like me, who are interested but try to stay on the sane side of paranoid.

    First and foremost, it's evidence with details. Echelon was more or less an open secret for a while, but even then there wasn't much information available about how it was being used -- just that communications were being collected and searched. It's the difference between, "There are data centers monitoring internet traffic," and, "here's a slide on an NSA presentation for software that will give you any person's entire browser history."

    Second, there's the extent to which communications systems were being compromised. Taps on undersea cables and major backbones? Sure. Direct access to data at Google and Facebook and elsewhere? That was surprising.

    Third, there was the scope. The assumption was always that it was impractical for the NSA or other agencies to store a lot of data about every person. But, now we know they don't store it -- they just exploit other databases.

    There are the methodologies: I might assume that "they" are infiltrating the communications systems of certain foreign states, but to find out that they were doing it in part by hijacking Cisco equipment in transit and chipping them was surprising, mostly because it seems like such a stupid tactic in the event that word ever gets out.

    And, there's the not very small matter of the targets involved. Spying for the sake of the War on Terror and against enemy states and all that is one of those things you grudgingly accept as part of the real world. But spying on our allies? What are they trying to accomplish there? What are they trying to gain that's worth the risk of being found out and pissing off your friends?

    So, for me, the Snowden leaks moved the NSA from, "spooky, secretive, well-funded spy organization filling a necessary role," to, "totally out-of-control freaks that lost the plot years ago and seem to have set their hooks into the topmost levels of government."

    • wutbrodo 12 years ago

      A lot of this makes sense, thanks for the thorough explanation of your perspective. It's a little easier to understand how people could have such a stronger reaction.

      > Spying for the sake of the War on Terror and against enemy states and all that is one of those things you grudgingly accept as part of the real world. But spying on our allies?

      This has happened always and forever; it's always been a standard tool of statecraft. Again I'm not making any moral judgment, but to me this was the LEAST surprising of all the unsurprising revelations (and in fact this is something that I thought even John Q. Layman knew about).

      > So, for me, the Snowden leaks moved the NSA from, "spooky, secretive, well-funded spy organization filling a necessary role," to, "totally out-of-control freaks that lost the plot years ago and seem to have set their hooks into the topmost levels of government."

      I guess that's kinda where we differ. As long as I can remember, it was considered an idealistic overreaction to think of the NSA as a bad actor (with perhaps good intentions). I'm still not 100% clear on how even paying limited attention to the historical actions of 3-letter agencies could lead one to have the former view.

      • thaumaturgy 12 years ago

        > ...and in fact this is something that I thought even John Q. Layman knew about...

        Well, maybe I'm not paying enough attention (or not in the right places). These days, my information on subjects usually comes from some combination of radio, television, magazines (print and online), newspapers, websites, online discussion, and the occasional book.

        For the radio that I listen to (NPR/Radio Lab/et al), I'll usually take it pretty much at face value. I haven't caught them at an outrageous lie yet.

        Television has zero credibility with me, regardless of the network, and so I don't even have regular access to it anymore. Even channels like Discovery have changed a lot in the past decade. At most, they'll pique my interest in a subject that I'll look at on my own later.

        Magazines are pretty dubious. Subject-specific ones, like SciAm or Make, are fine, but political ones like Newsweek, I don't trust.

        Newspapers are a joke.

        I mistrust most websites, with few exceptions -- both the political "left" and "right" ones. If Greenwald came out and said that he had evidence of all of this stuff about the NSA, and he wrote endlessly about it but never actually released any of the evidence, I would be skeptical. (Which is why I appreciate so much what Snowden did.)

        Online discussion gets treated with a dose of salt big enough to gag a horse. Nearly everybody claims to know more about a subject than they actually do, because online, the person with the most conviction wins, so it's almost impossible to separate fact from fiction. Even Wikipedia, you have to have a glance at the history page to make sure somebody's not yanking your chain.

        So that leaves books, which I just don't have quite enough time for anymore. It takes me around a month now to get through 500 pages. :-/

        In short, I haven't felt like I had a trustworthy enough, convenient enough source for political information in quite a long time.

        > I'm still not 100% clear on how even paying limited attention to the historical actions of 3-letter agencies could lead one to have the former view.

        The FBI, CIA, NSA et al have all been guilty of reprehensible things at some point in the past ... but there's a bit of a jump from there to "corrupt". The NSA now looks to be totally corrupt from the top to the bottom, thanks to the evidence that's been brought to light.

  • thinkpad20 12 years ago

    I remember reading years ago about a giant data center being built in Utah for the NSA with the express purpose of collecting electronic data sent in the continental US. It was in Time magazine or something similar, and it wasn't really that big of a deal. Honestly, I think the reason that people cared so much this time was because of the drama of the story: the inside man who revealed thousands of secrets and then bolted to Russia, and the subsequent continuing drama where more information gets periodically released, etc.

    Why are people so shocked and upset about the NSA, when they could have expressed the same outrage at the PATRIOT act, which has been around for a decade, and which is responsible for the legality of much of the NSA's recent history? The NSA is a spy agency. That's what they do. They're using every legal avenue they have to collect as much information as possible. To assume that they're doing anything less than everything possible within legal limits is naive.

  • Spooky23 12 years ago

    Without corroboration, you couldn't really talk about this too much in a public setting, because you'll sound like a conspiracy nut.

    There were enough hints out there to realize that there is mass surveillance, but if you suggested the size and scope of what is actually happening in say 2008, people would think that you are a nut.

    • wutbrodo 12 years ago

      Warrantless wiretapping was going on starting in 2002.

      > you'll sound like a conspiracy nut

      Yea I agree, for periods before 2002 it's a lot harder to explain "this assumption seems entirely consistent with the way they've always acted over decades of history" than it is to say "of course they'd do this, here's proof of the last time they did it".

Fuzzwah 12 years ago

Currently active discussion going on in prior submission of same link:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7852246

  • dang 12 years ago

    Thank you. Burying this one as dupe. ("Burying" means lowering in rank, but not killing the item, so conversation can continue in the thread.)

midhem 12 years ago

History is written by the victors. Traitors? heroes? It is just a point of view, depending on who win at then end. We now know on which side Marc Andressen is seated.

jsmcgd 12 years ago

I don't understand Marc's position. He says that foreign governments knew about the spying but that Edward Snowden is a traitor for telling them what they already knew? So what damage is ES supposed to have done exactly? It is public record that terrorist organizations knew about intelligence services surveillance against them, which I suspect everyone on the planet would guess would be happening. So how has ES acted against the interests of the American people?

It was a shock to many people including myself that the intelligence community would explicity violating the US constitution by conducting wholesale surveillance against all American citizens. Marc would probably say either that it wasn't a violation or that it isn't surprising. I don't think this is a credible position given that the actions of the NSA and others were shocking to the people that worked at these organizations. Unless Marc has a past I'm unaware of, to say that is ridiculous.

I'm deeply disappointed :(

  • mikeyouse 12 years ago

    Knowing that someone is spying on you is worth much less than knowing that they use Camera Model XYZ, which transmits on XYZ frequency and the camera is located at coordinates XX, YY.

    • jsmcgd 12 years ago

      As far as I am aware no information has been revealed that is specific to a national security target only information that targets millions of innocent civilians. I would hope and expect that the intelligence community has much more invasive and targeted tools they deploy against genuine national security threats than what has been revealed so far.

      Edit: To clarify, I'm sure Al-Qaeda already knew not to trust any computer, or cell phone that they used because they were probably completely compromised. So nothing that has been revealed by ES would change their behaviour.

      Edit 2: Also, it doesn't matter. The most important thing for our civilization is not personal or national security but our democracy. A 'security state' is never democratic. Its people are never free.

nabla9 12 years ago

I'm an European and treason and espionage are political crimes. If Snowden is a traitor, then he spied on my behalf against U.S. government. For me and many other citizens of so called free word he is a hero. He should get a medal.

In U.S. media the discussion centers around Americans being spied and if that is illegal. As a non-American, I see U.S. UK and other mass surveillance countries as constantly attacking me personally. As more and more people feel the same way, it will eventually have real consequences to U.S. interests. It might take generation or two, but it will happen.

First world countries are very interdependent and this kind of attacking harms us all. Even in the cynical machtpolitik world view this can be seen as shortsighted strategy.

napoleoncomplex 12 years ago

Yes, let's worry about Silicon Valley's bottom line in all of this. Brave warriors, always on the ropes.

It's always surprising when one discovers the Ellisons and the Andreessens of the world. Luckily their type is a rare exception in the Valley though.

higherpurpose 12 years ago

I started disliking this guy since he coerced Oculus Rift into a sale to Facebook (and I'm assuming soon Imgur, too). He's probably too worried about his investments and what the Snowden revelations impact will be on them, and that's why he's calling him a traitor.

kumar303 12 years ago

"The fallout from the Snowden leaks have hurt U.S. technology firms' ability to sell their products overseas"

What an idiotic, capitalistic claim. So Andreeson calls him a traitor because "business is now harder." Huh? Nevermind invasion of privacy and injustice.

contingencies 12 years ago

Ooh! Big capitalist profiting vastly from status quo throws in lot with conservatism! News at 9.

Trusting any of these filthy rich buffoons, including governments, is imbecilic. The only way to change the system is through decentralized, bottom-up, participation-based (ie. opt-in) change.

seanhandley 12 years ago

A "textbook traitor".... and which textbook would that be?

aerolite 12 years ago

moron

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