PDA

View Full Version : Snowden was a 'genius among geniuses,' says alleged NSA coworker




CaseyJones
12-18-2013, 09:34 AM
http://www.theverge.com/2013/12/16/5216212/snowden-gained-nsa-document-access-through-skill-alleged-coworker-says


Though the NSA has tried to paint Edward Snowden as an unqualified and unscrupulous rogue, a new report suggests that he may have only gained access to the sensitive documents he leaked earlier this year because he was anything but. Speaking with Forbes, an alleged NSA employee who knew him says that coworkers viewed Snowden as both smart and trustworthy. "That kid was a genius among geniuses,” the anonymous NSA employee tells Forbes. “NSA is full of smart people, but anybody who sat in a meeting with Ed will tell you he was in a class of his own … I've never seen anything like it.”

The employee, whose comments Forbes reportedly confirmed with Snowden's ACLU lawyer, says that Snowden impressed NSA officials by frequently reporting security vulnerabilities and by developing what has now become a widely used backup system. At one point, Snowden was reportedly even offered a position on the NSA's Tailored Access Operations group — a secret team of highly skilled hackers — but ultimately turned the job down. Nonetheless, Forbes reports that Snowden's technical abilities were enough to land him access to nearly any NSA data he could want, even as a contractor.

While it wasn't until spring this year that Snowden's leaked NSA documents came out, he reportedly voiced his concerns over the agency's activities before then — albeit much more quietly. Forbes reports that Snowden used to wear a sweatshirt to work that satirized the agency's activities: sold by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the sweatshirt's back depicted a parody NSA logo that replaced the American shield with an AT&T data box that had wires spilling out of it and into the talons of an eagle. Forbes also reports that Snowden kept a copy of the Constitution at his desk so that he could cite it when arguing against activities he thought might violate US law.