Mikael Holmström i Svenska Dagbladet 9.7. De underrättelser som Sverige samlar in om det allt starkare Ryssland blir hårdvaluta i den byteshandel som sker med andra västländer."
Isa Saharkhiz, a distinguished Iranian journalist and a key political reformer behind the 1999 Tehran Spring of press freedom, was arrested on June 20, 2009 in the small village of Tirkadeh in northern Iran where he had been hiding. The intelligence agent
Talmon Marco discusses steps by upstart free calls and messaging application to monetise service and why privacy matters . By Juliette Garside
The Guardian Friday 30 August 2013
Time will tell whether revelations by the Guardian and other media about the extent of Skype's cooperation with intelligence agencies will harm its business. But Marco believes individuals should care.
"Personally, I would be concerned being on a service knowing that everybody can listen to my conversations," he says. "People should be concerned about their privacy."
Laurie Penny The Guardian, Friday 3 January 2014 "The worst thing about the porn filter, though, is not that it accidentally blocks a lot of useful information but that it blocks information at all. With minimal argument, a Conservative-led government has given private firms permission to decide what websites we may and may not access. This sets a precedent for state censorship on an enormous scale – all outsourced to the private sector, of course, so that the coalition does not have to hold up its hands to direct responsibility for shutting down freedom of speech." - BT's opt-in filtering system , covers "sites with information about illegal manipulation of electronic devices [and] distribution of software"
The English monarchy could have stopped the Founding Fathers in their tracks if they only possessed “metadata” regarding which colonist talked to whom.
Reportage i Die Zeit, bygger på data från Deutsche Telekom via gröna politikern Malte Spitz mobiltelefon under 6 månader år 2009. "... the Chaos Computer Club has rechristened the powerful mini-computers we carry around with us as "tracking devices" revealing where we’ve been and what we’ve been doing."
04/03/2016 by Intellectual Property Watch
The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, today issued a statement urged United States law enforcement authorities to exercise caution in their legal fight against Apple computer company, saying it could have “extremely damaging implications for the human rights of many millions of people, including their physical and financial security.”
A decision against Apple “is potentially a gift to authoritarian regimes, as well as to criminal hackers,” he said.
via Euractiv 20.1.14 - massmedia not registrd as print media or broadcatsers but provide "information product" to the public must register wirth the state as "information agencies - blocking of websites authorised - licensing of internet providers - all telcos obliged to buy and install equipment to intercept communications (previously state bought the equipment)
Max Ehrenfreund, Washington Post 5 Dec 2013, on CO-TRAVELER The National Security Agency is gathering nearly 5 billion records a day on the location of cellphones around the world. Ashkan Soltani, a Washington Post contributor and an independent privacy and security researcher, sat down with The Post's Alice Rhee to explain.