ICT, Politics, and Cyber Intelligence: Revisiting the Case of Snowden
Politics and Technology in the Post-Truth Era
ISBN: 978-1-78756-984-3, eISBN: 978-1-78756-983-6
Publication date: 7 May 2019
Abstract
This chapter focuses on a critical issue in cyber intelligence in the United States (US) that concerns the engagement of state-owned or state-controlled entities with overseeing citizen’s activity in cyberspace. The emphasis in the discussion is placed on the constitutionality of state actions and the shifting boundaries in which the state can act in the name of security to protect its people from the nation’s enemies. A second piece of this discussion is which state actors and agencies can control the mechanisms by which this sensitive cyber information is collected, stored, and if needed, acted upon. The most salient case with regard to this debate is that of Edward Snowden. It reveals the US government’s abuses of this surveillance machinery prompting major debates around the topics of privacy, national security, and mass digital surveillance. When observing the response to Snowden’s disclosures one can ask what point of view is being ignored, or what questions are not being answered. By considering the silence as a part of our everyday language we can improve our understanding of mediated discourses. Recommendations on cyber-intelligence reforms in response to Snowden’s revelations – and whether these are in fact practical in modern, high-technology societies such as the US – follow.
Keywords
Citation
Boussios, E. (2019), "ICT, Politics, and Cyber Intelligence: Revisiting the Case of Snowden", Visvizi, A. and Lytras, M.D. (Ed.) Politics and Technology in the Post-Truth Era (Emerald Studies in Politics and Technology), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 115-128. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78756-983-620191008
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2019, Emanuel Boussios