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Apple Co-Founder Slams Surveillance State, Hails Edward Snowden

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  • Apple Co-Founder Slams Surveillance State, Hails Edward Snowden

    Published on Friday, June 21, 2013 by Common Dreams
    Apple Co-Founder Steve Wozniak Slams Surveillance State, Hails NSA
    Whistleblower Edward Snowden

    Wozniak: "All these things I thought about the Constitution that made
    us so good as people -- they're kinda nothing. They all disolved with
    the Patriot Act."

    - Andrea Germanos, staff writer

    Steve Wozniak speaking with Piers Morgan this week. (Screenshot)
    Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has cheered NSA whistleblower Edward
    Snowden and admonished the rise of the surveillance state.

    Speaking with CNN's Piers Morgan on Thursday, Wozniak expressed
    support for the whistleblower and said, "I felt about Edward Snowden
    the same way I felt about Daniel Ellsberg, who changed my life, who
    taught me a lot with a book he wrote..." He continued:

    Read the facts - it's a government of, by and for the people. That sorta
    means we own the government. We're the ones that pay for it, and then
    we discover something that our money is being used for. That just
    can't be, that level of crime.
    On the proliferation of computers made possible by geniuses like him
    that enables widespread surveillance, Wozniak told Morgan:

    I actually feel a little guilty about that but not totally. We created
    the computers to free the people up, give them instant communication
    anywhere in the world, any thought you could share it freely. That it
    was going to overcome a lot of the government restrictions. We didn't
    realize that in the digital world there are a lot of ways to use the
    digital technology to control us, to snoop on us. In the old days of
    mailing letters, you licked it, and when you got an envelope that was
    still sealed, nobody had seen it. You could have private
    communication. Now they say because it's e-mail it cannot be private,
    anyone can listen.
    In another recent interview, however, Wozniak offered a more in-depth
    look at his thoughts on government snooping.
    Photo: The DEMO Conference/cc/flickr

    A chance run-in with Wozniak at an airport last week offered Spanish
    language technological news site FayerWayer the opportunity to get the
    tech giant's thoughts on the widespread government spying exposed by
    Snowden. In the interview, Wozniak lamented the current state of
    surveillance in the U.S..

    When asked what he thought about the NSA's PRISM program, Wozniak said:

    I was brought up, for example, and my dad taught me that other
    countries when they got prisoners in a war, they tortured them. But
    we Americans didn't torture them; we gave them good food and clothing
    and everything. And I was so proud of my country, you know? And now
    I find out it's just the opposite, you know.

    And I just wish all these things I thought about the Constitution that
    made us so good as people -- they're kinda nothing. They all disolved
    with the Patriot Act.

    There's all these laws that say we can just sorta call anything
    terrorism and do anything we want without all these rights of courts
    to get in and say we aren't doing the wrong things.

    There's not even a free, open court anymore. And I read the
    Constitution and I don't know how all this stuff happened. It's so
    clear what the Constitution says. It's extremely clear in the Bill of
    Rights. One thing after another, after another. It just got
    overturned, and that's what a king does.

    The king just goes out and has anyone rounded up, killed, put in
    secret prisons.

    When I was brought up, I was taught that communist Russia was the ones
    that were gonna kill us and bomb our country and all this. And
    communist Russia was so bad because they followed their people, they
    snooped on them, they arrested them, they put them in secret prisons,
    they disappeared them. These kind of things were part of Russia.

    You know, we're getting more and more like that. [...]

    Look at the guy who just turned over the information on what the NSA
    program was.

    He said that anyone like him sitting at a terminal could instantly go
    and grab all the data of anyone they felt like, with no courts [...]
    no warrants, nobody having to approve it.

    That means there's a thousand people in the CIA that could just sit
    and whoever they want ... they could just go look at.

    That sort of structure is wrong. But troubles come from the top.
    Watch Morgan's interview with "Woz" below:



    Wozniak's interview with FayerWayer is below:
    http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/06/21-5



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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