Three-and-a-half months after National Security Agency leaker Edward
Snowden came public on the the U.S. government’s massive spying
operations at home and abroad, we spend the hour with Alan Rusbridger,
editor-in-chief of The Guardian, the British newspaper that first
reported on Snowden’s leaked documents. The Guardian has continued
releasing a series of exposés based on Snowden’s leaks coloring in the
details on how the NSA has managed to collect
telephone records in bulk and information on nearly everything a user
does on the Internet. The articles have ignited widespread debate about
security agencies’ covert activities, digital data protection and the
nature of investigative journalism. The newspaper has been directly
targeted as a result — over the summer the British government forced the
paper to destroy computer hard drives containing copies of Snowden’s
secret files, and later detained David Miranda, the partner of Guardian
journalist Glenn Greenwald.
Rusbridger, editor of The Guardian for nearly two decades, joins us to
tell the inside story of The Guardian’s publication of the NSA leaks and the crackdown it has faced from its own government as a result.
Video
Source: democracynow.org
Author: --
Video
Source: democracynow.org
Author: --
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