The NSA wiretapping story that nobody wanted


computingsa.co.za
Robert McMillan, IDG News Service (San Francisco Bureau)

They sometimes call national security the third rail of politics. Touch it and, politically, you’re dead.

The cliché doesn’t seem far off the mark after reading Mark Klein’s new book, "Wiring up the Big Brother Machine ... and Fighting It." It’s an account of his experiences as the whistleblower who exposed a secret room at a Folsom Street facility in San Francisco that was apparently used to monitor the Internet communications of ordinary Americans.

Klein, 64, was a retired AT&T communications technician in December 2005, when he read the New York Times story that blew the lid off the Bush administration’s warrantless wiretapping programme. Secretly authorised in 2002, the programme lets the US National Security Agency (NSA) monitor telephone conversations and e-mail messages of people inside the US in order to identify suspected terrorists. Klein knew right away that he had proof - documents from his time at AT&T - that could provide a snapshot of how the programme was siphoning data off of the AT&T network in San Francisco.

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