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No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the U.S. Surveillance State Audible Audiobook – Unabridged

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 3,666 ratings

In May 2013, Glenn Greenwald set out for Hong Kong to meet an anonymous source who claimed to have astonishing evidence of pervasive government spying and insisted on communicating only through heavily encrypted channels. That source turned out to be the 29-year-old NSA contractor Edward Snowden, and his revelations about the agency’s widespread, systemic overreach proved to be some of the most explosive and consequential news in recent history, triggering a fierce debate over national security and information privacy. As the arguments rage on and the government considers various proposals for reform, it is clear that we have yet to see the full impact of Snowden’s disclosures.

Now for the first time, Greenwald fits all the pieces together, recounting his high-intensity 10-day trip to Hong Kong, examining the broader implications of the surveillance detailed in his reporting for The Guardian, and revealing fresh information on the NSA’s unprecedented abuse of power with never-before-seen documents entrusted to him by Snowden himself. Going beyond NSA specifics, Greenwald also takes on the establishment media, excoriating their habitual avoidance of adversarial reporting on the government and their failure to serve the interests of the people. Finally, he asks what it means both for individuals and for a nation’s political health when a government pries so invasively into the private lives of its citizens - and considers what safeguards and forms of oversight are necessary to protect democracy in the digital age.

Coming at a landmark moment in American history, No Place to Hide is a fearless, incisive, and essential contribution to our understanding of the U.S. surveillance state.

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Product details

Listening Length 9 hours and 49 minutes
Author Glenn Greenwald
Narrator L. J. Ganser
Audible.com Release Date August 19, 2014
Publisher Audible Studios
Program Type Audiobook
Version Unabridged
Language English
ASIN B00MEIPBHI
Best Sellers Rank #32,300 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals)
#14 in Privacy & Surveillance Studies
#15 in Civil Rights Law (Books)
#16 in Politics of Privacy & Surveillance

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
3,666 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and informative. They appreciate the clear, lucid writing style and straightforward prose. The narrative is described as compelling and suspenseful. Readers praise the journalistic quality as outstanding, well-documented, and honest. They find the book provides an insightful look into the inner workings of the government and courts.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

305 customers mention "Insight"289 positive16 negative

Customers find the book insightful and informative about governmental attempts to collect information. They find it suspenseful and interesting, with a powerful indictment of the government's disregard for privacy. The book takes readers behind the scenes before Edward Snowden turned over documents. It provides a riveting account of Snowden's decisions and an extensive analysis of social science research on how people behave.

"...and the author's prose is an easy read for being both coherent and lively...." Read more

"...with Snowden, his colleagues and other journalists is all really engaging and gives a great picture of how things unfolded in what was a landmark..." Read more

"...It is a powerful indictment both of a government brazenly living outside the boundaries of the very law it purports to uphold, and of feckless..." Read more

"...He has very valid arguments against mass surveillance...." Read more

303 customers mention "Readability"299 positive4 negative

Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They say it's useful for understanding what remains to be revealed. The book provides facts and opinions, making it a fast read. Many readers consider it one of the three most important books of the decade and a must-read for all U.S. citizens who believe the First Amendment is alive and well.

"...Mr. Greenwald is what I call a good writer, by which I mean that 'No Place to Hide' is well-organized, and the author's prose is an easy read for..." Read more

"...All in all though this is a worthwhile read." Read more

"...This was a fabulous read. It is written in sober, plain-spoken prose...." Read more

"...Greenwald concludes this impressive book by emphasizing the importance of online privacy as a human right and emphasizing the importance of his..." Read more

181 customers mention "Writing quality"147 positive34 negative

Customers find the book's writing style clear and easy to understand. They appreciate the concise, accessible format that can be read in a couple of sittings. The author writes quickly and engagingly, which makes it easy for readers to generate meaningful dialogue about the issues.

"...I call a good writer, by which I mean that 'No Place to Hide' is well-organized, and the author's prose is an easy read for being both coherent and..." Read more

"...I think this is interesting and good to read my only criticism is the author is not as even handed as he claims to be...." Read more

"...This was a fabulous read. It is written in sober, plain-spoken prose...." Read more

"...book has a very smooth and flowing style, and it is easily accessible by the average reader...." Read more

166 customers mention "Narrative quality"160 positive6 negative

Customers find the book's narrative compelling and suspenseful. They describe it as an engaging, well-paced account of a spy story. Readers also mention that the book is shocking, riveting, and written like a thriller or spy novel.

"...It was fascinating and engaging and it is remarkable it is all true...." Read more

"...It is written in sober, plain-spoken prose. It tells a compelling story about a man our government will prosecute as a criminal, but who is, in fact..." Read more

"...The 1st half of this book is a riveting read, with great tension...." Read more

"Written like a thriller...." Read more

83 customers mention "Journalistic quality"83 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's journalism. They find it well-documented, unbiased, and honest. Readers praise the author's fearlessness and veracity. Overall, they describe the book as well-done and packed with information.

"...engaging, with the concision of a master journalist and the bombast of a master pundit...." Read more

"...After reading this book, you will see the purity of his actions and the bravery to execute it...." Read more

"...I've long admired Glenn Greenwald, whom I view as a terrific writer and a fearless journalist...." Read more

"...Unbiased account of an intriguing time in US history. Appears to be prescient when compared to the activities of today." Read more

55 customers mention "Look"55 positive0 negative

Customers find the book enlightening and eye-opening. They appreciate the thoughtful presentation of the thoughts and feelings of the major players. The book paints vivid images for readers, portraying excitement, fears, sadness, and courage. It provides a good look into the inner workings of the government and courts.

"...black-and-white reproductions of secret NSA documents are replete with handy NSA graphics...." Read more

"...He paints a very vivid image for the reader: excitement, fears, sadness, And courage...." Read more

"...The second is as a movie, an elegant and intelligent contribution to the flourishing genre of dystopian allegory. And his conclusion: ...." Read more

"...goes through a large amount of the leaked documents and goes into great detail about what they contain and why they are so important...." Read more

44 customers mention "Scariness level"23 positive21 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's scariness level. Some find it terrifying, disturbing, and informative. Others describe it as scary, infuriating, and dangerous.

"...First, the book review. It was well written, somewhat suspenseful and extremely interesting to learn how the whole Snowden caper played out...." Read more

"Frightenly worrisome...." Read more

"...unveiling of the NSA's vast data collection program, chilling details of the program itself, the dangers posed by a world without privacy, as well..." Read more

"...is easy to do, but it is a shocking read. To understand what road ahead it is paving, provoking...." Read more

40 customers mention "Pacing"20 positive20 negative

Customers have different views on the book's pacing. Some find the first few chapters insightful and engaging, hard to put down. Others mention that the book starts off great but gets boring after a while, seems repetitive and tedious in places, and is somewhat depressing.

"...He paints a very vivid image for the reader: excitement, fears, sadness, And courage...." Read more

"...I must admit that the latter chapters of the book were somewhat depressing, but I recognize they were mostly the opinion of Mr. Greenwald, however..." Read more

"...There are five chapters in the book; the first three are mostly devoted to describing the Snowden files, complete with the actual documents...." Read more

"...The reason I am giving it a bad review is that this book made me very angry...." Read more

No protection for the book
2 out of 5 stars
No protection for the book
The book itself is really good but it came with no plastic cover , it's dirty and beat up and scratched on the outside but good on the inside , it just came in the box . Looks even worse in person the image doesn't capture it well but you can see clear damage and being dirty
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2014
    Deacon Solomon
    Reviewer

    Today I saw an article on the website of Investigative Reporters and Editors. The headline asks: Should law enforcement tell the public about new surveillance tech?

    I didn't bother to read the article because my journalist's education makes the content plain enough. Other Americans may remember a time (as I do) when the proper response to such a question was "What the hell kind of a question is that? Are you stupid or just plain crazy?"

    Too bad: many Americans no longer think that way. Our vaunted 'Land of the Free' is presently peopled by a lot of paranoid wimps who depend on government to protect them from any person, any thing, and any idea that might possibly scare them for any conceivable reason.

    Government, naturally, gives them what they ask for (We live in a democracy, right?) while it dreams up more 'scary' things from which to protect them. In short, many Americans think blanket surveillance is a Good Thing - until comes the day (soon, I hope) when they find themselves strapped down on a waterboard because secret police saw them speaking with or reading a book written by someone Big Sam doesn't like.

    Luckily, there are still some Americans who don't believe blanket surveillance is a Good Thing. They don't believe government has any right to listen to our phone calls, record our emails, snoop in our medicine chests, send murder squads into our homes, or poke its nose into our body cavities at airports.

    Noting some disparity between those who like and those who don't like surveillance, an enterprising journalist named Glenn Greenwald has written a book he calls 'No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the U.S. Surveillance State'. Greenwald's book could reunite Americans - those who like being watched and those who don't - because it will scare the livin' crap out of everybody who reads it.

    Mr. Greenwald is what I call a good writer, by which I mean that 'No Place to Hide' is well-organized, and the author's prose is an easy read for being both coherent and lively.

    Greenwald's 'Introduction' tells how he got interested in surveillance: He once made a career of civil rights and constitutional law. He took up journalism (political blogging) in the first few years of this century, when, as a lawyer, he grew more and more aware that our country was being run by a lot of dangerous cranks. Shortly after Greenwald took up blogging, the 'New York Times' reported that President Bush II secretly ordered warrantless, blanket surveillance of Americans' electronic communications.

    That's how and why, for the next few years, Mr. Greenwald got a living reporting dirt on the Bushmen. As Heaven and the world both now know, the Bushmen had no dearth of dirt on which to report. Of course, Greenwald's criticism of government and especially the Bushmen put him in the way of counterattacks by government, by the Bushmen, and by the many human and institutional actors within journalism who defended the Bushmen and their vicious, idiotic policy initiatives.

    Greenwald knew he was making enemies. But little did he realize that his treatment of government-by-perfidious cranks and his disdain of mainstream journalism would bring him a reward - a scoop - as big or bigger than any journalist probably ever hoped for or thought possible.

    Speaking now of 'No Place to Hide' (NPTH), Chapter 1 is titled 'Contact.' There, Greenwald tells how he was first contacted by Edward Snowden, a person of whom neither Greenwald nor anybody else had heard at the time.

    Snowden acted anonymously when first approaching Greenwald. He assumed the (to me) laughably melodramatic moniker, 'Cincinnatus.' Too bad: Greenwald had never heard of 'Cincinnatus,' either.

    When Greenwald found the first 'Cincinnatus' message in his email inbox, he ignored it. Over the next few weeks he ignored several more, believing they came from some kind of a nut. So it was through a third party - journalist and documentary filmmaker Laura Poitrus - that Greenwald and Snowden finally started 'talking' via encrypted email. The rest of the chapter tells how the three of them finally found their way onto the same page and agreed to meet in Hong Kong, there to deal in smoking-hot, national-security documents.

    Chapter 2, 'Ten Days in Hong Kong,' tells Greenwad's version of what went on in Hong Kong, tells of how well and how carefully Snowden had organized and stored and closely kept the many tens of thousands of electronic documents.

    No sooner did they get the documents (all on thumb drives) from Snowden than Greenwald used them to write two stories for 'The Guardian,' the newspaper that had paid for Greenwald's Hong Kong 'vacation.' The stories splashed around and over Washington, D.C. for the next couple of weeks and predictably left those embarrassed by them howling 'Murder! Treason! Kill the Swine!' and screaming for investigations.

    How the documents changed hands is told. How they were divided up, for obvious reasons, is not made plain. Surely no one person carried the whole trove back to the States - or to Rio - or wherever they were taken. If one mule got arrested, everything would be lost.

    My own surmise is that the world will never know any of those who might have taken part in that escapade beyond the few Greenwald named in the book. Regardless, he and his did the deal with Snowden and filed two stories, and then beat it the hell out of there.

    Snowden was spirited away by some Chinese hoteliers and eventually ended - as the world knows - in Russia. The chapter ends with Greenwald in a television studio at an undisclosed location sweating under a nasty, on-camera grilling by noxious 'journalists' who host noxious, daytime TV 'news' shows called 'Morning Joe' and 'Today.'

    Chapter 3, titled 'Collect It All,' fingers the NSA for precisely what it is and all it hopes to be in the future. Nothing in Chapter 3 is pretty except Greenwald's own prose and his take-down of the sneaking, treasonous creeps that establishment journalism calls 'our leaders.' Beautiful, black-and-white reproductions of secret NSA documents are replete with handy NSA graphics. The documents and the graphics amply support every last accusations that lawyer Greenwald hurls at the agency. And yes: there are lots of accusations.

    Chapter 3 is NOT an indictment; it is a nuclear 'smart-bomb' and it hits the target squarely. Of the 5 chapters in NPTH, 'Collect It All' is the meatiest and most laborious read because it does the bulk of the heavy lifting.

    Chapter 4 discusses 'The Harm of Surveillance'. Author Greenwald's essay explains for readers the numerous ways that a surveillance state does damage to us as individuals, to democracy in America, and to the nation at large. If you're one of those who cannot understand why people such as Greenwald and this writer preach that government surveillance will yet be the ruin of us and of our country, Chapter 4 is for you. Folks who read History and other sentient beings already know such stuff.

    Finally, Chapter 5 is dubbed 'The Fourth Estate,' because that's where Greenwald takes his lawyer's rhetorical ax to the likes of David Gregory and Michael Kinsley, and other yahoo 'journalists' who in this, that, or the other mainstream venue do their cussed, pathetic best to tar-and-feather Greenwald's credibility. The author disposes of their arguments in ways that look easy because, when their arguments are cut wide open (as good lawyers like Greenwald can do) readers see there's nothing but a few cubic feet of hot ventosity in the heads of David Gregory, Michael Kinsley, and the rest.

    Considering the entire Greenwald-Snowden-NSA surveillance scandal, this review will now make a long, complex story as short as possible: Edward Snowden gave Glenn Greenwald a huge cache of top-secret documents, the sum of which prove beyond any doubt that if you use the telephone, the Internet, or any other electronic communication device for any purpose whatsoever, the NSA hears every word you say and sees every message you send.

    Summing up, every American had best depend on this one thing: every word you say on the telephone and every message you post on the Internet can and will be used against you if ever for any reason something you've said or done or borrowed from the library makes Big Sam or some of his friends sore at you. It's there; it's real; it's really there, and there it is.

    Americans are privileged (and encouraged by government) to stick their heads in the sand at any time they choose. Americans are also privileged to rue the day, the hour, the minute, the second they chose to do so.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2014
    No Place to Hide tackles a few things. Glenn Greenwald was one of the two people Edward Snowden (the NSA consultant who leaked the magnitude of governmental surveillance to the public) contacted when he decided he wanted to make his knowledge public. The magnitude of the leak will be remembered for a long time and the contents of the leak will probably be remembered for longer. No Place to Hide starts out with the story of how the author was contacted by Greenwald and their subsequent interaction, he tries to portray the character and intent of Snowden through his experiences with the man. We should all remember most people talking about Snowden have no personal experience with him and are purely self interested conjecture, so this insight is valuable. The author then moves onto the very large topic of government reach and the accountability of government and as well the way journalism was attacked and the freedom to report (in particular the author's experiences due to his involvement in the reporting) and the deep dangers of believing in a benevolent state and thus the excuses for the need for surveillance.

    The author begins by telling the story of how Snowden contacted him and how he didn't give it much of a second thought. The prerequisites for further engagement by the person contacting Greenwald was to install security software and being slightly less computer savvy, the author didn't end up doing as Snowden asked (at this point neither the identity, nor the information known by Snowden was known to the author). Greenwald then goes into how he got the Guardian on board, the magnitude of government espionage on basically everyone, how things progressed in HK and the legal challenges that the papers were concerned about when it came to actually publishing. It was fascinating and engaging and it is remarkable it is all true. The author then went into detailing from his access to all of Snowden's files what it is the government was spying on. Effectively it was everything; the author includes the presentation materials that were used within the NSA to describe the various programs that they were employing. The collaboration with various other governments was detailed as well as acts of US espionage on both countries and corporations. The author then moves into the ethics and politics of the whole situation. He argues strongly for the need of the "fourth state", which is effectively an independent press to keep the abuse of power by the state in check. He argues that the experience with Snowden and how he was attacked by both officials as well as other journalists with talk of litigation is incredibly worrisome as it is strong evidence that we are closer to a police state. He argues that even though the invasive nature of surveillance might not immediately concern people because they aren't doing anything wrong and thus aren't the supposed target of surveillance, the jurisdictional creep is worrisome and knowing that people are watching psychologically impacts freedom. The author argues strongly against passivity and that though there are imaginable benefits there are also direct costs to freedom.

    No Place to Hide serves several purposes with different levels of success. The authors auto biographical sections about his dealings with Snowden, his colleagues and other journalists is all really engaging and gives a great picture of how things unfolded in what was a landmark event. The authors discussion of the contents of the NSA programs and his outrage at some of their targeting and methods resonates less well. There are times when you are reading and getting upset along with the author only to then look and read the section that outrages him only to realize that its not nearly as aggregious as was first described. This happens numerous times. The authors discussion of why ever growing surveillance is a problem is definitely well thought out and argued. There is no question that even if surveillance can be portrayed as benign and in the interest of citizens it is an infringement on freedom and has been a step in the wrong direction for a decade. The surveillance that is being used is not preventing terrorism but authorities constantly use emotionally charged narratives to justify their position. There needs to be better oversight of government and its creep; the author does well to make the case for the need for accountability. I think this is interesting and good to read my only criticism is the author is not as even handed as he claims to be. The author does recognize that there are limits to the freedom of press (for example leaking the names and whereabouts of undercover agents) and yet he spends no time on what he perceives the appropriate boundaries to be for responsible reporting. All in all though this is a worthwhile read.
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • ANON
    5.0 out of 5 stars Extremely important revelations
    Reviewed in France on December 12, 2024
    À real life thriller, a roller-coaster ride on the biggest outing of uncle Sam's surveillance apparatus. A timeless work of heroism.
  • sam scott
    5.0 out of 5 stars 10/10
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 18, 2024
    Amazing read and very insightful
  • José Macaya
    5.0 out of 5 stars Información que hay que conocer.
    Reviewed in Spain on August 31, 2024
    Historia muy bien contada. Se lee con gusto. Atrapante. El capítulo 3 y parte del 4 son algo más densos, pero igual interesantes. Pero el 1, 2 y 5 son imperdibles. Información que hay que conocer.
  • Daniel Landin
    5.0 out of 5 stars Revelador y muy detallado en narrativa
    Reviewed in Mexico on February 4, 2019
    Si te interesa el tema de Snowden y sus filtraciones sobre el espionaje a todos los ciudadanos del mundo, este es el libro que debes comprar.
    El autor hace un detallado relato de cómo lo contacto Snowden, qué información le dio, en dónde y los problemas que enfrentaron para publicar los artículos, no ahonda tanto en los miles de archivos recibidos, pero si hace un resumen de ellos. Básicamente "no hay lugar donde esconderse" como dice el título.
  • Sachin Hatikankar
    5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it!
    Reviewed in India on March 26, 2018
    Clearly this book tells about why the ubiquitous surveillance is dangerous with the help of various analogies and examples which are clear and will definitely be able to change the opinion of novice people who don't know how dangerous mass surveillance is. Also , this book keeps you engaged and thrills you enough as if you were present with the characters in the book.