By Steven Levy
Wired - 01.07.14
Google,
Facebook, Microsoft, and the other tech titans have had to fight for
their lives against their own government. An exclusive look inside their
year from hell—and why the Internet will never be the same.
On June 6, 2013, Washington Post
reporters called the communications departments of Apple, Facebook,
Google, Yahoo, and other Internet companies. The day before, a report in
the British newspaper The Guardian had shocked Americans with
evidence that the telecommunications giant Verizon had voluntarily
handed a database of every call made on its network to the National
Security Agency. The piece was by reporter Glenn Greenwald, and the
information came from Edward Snowden, a 29-year-old IT consultant who
had left the US with hundreds of thousands of documents detailing the
NSA’s secret procedures.
Greenwald was the first but not the only journalist that Snowden reached out to. The Post’s
Barton Gellman had also connected with him. Now, collaborating with
documentary filmmaker and Snowden confidante Laura Poitras, he was going
to extend the story to Silicon Valley. Gellman wanted to be the first
to expose a top-secret NSA program called Prism. Snowden’s files
indicated that some of the biggest companies on the web had granted the
NSA and FBI direct access to their servers, giving the agencies the
ability to grab a person’s audio, video, photos, emails, and documents.
The government urged Gellman not to identify the firms involved, but
Gellman thought it was important. “Naming those companies is what would
make it real to Americans,” he says. Now a team of Post reporters was reaching out to those companies for comment.
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