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Ultimately, saying that you don't care about privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different from saying you don't care about freedom of speech because you have nothing to say.Edward SnowdenPermanent Record2,016 Kindle readers highlighted thisUltimately, saying that you don't care about privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different from saying you don't care about freedom of speech because you have nothing to say.Edward SnowdenPermanent Record2,016 Kindle readers highlighted this
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To hack a system requires getting to know its rules better than the people who created it or are running it, and exploiting all the vulnerable distance between how those people had intended the system to work and how it actually works, or could be made to work. In capitalizing on these unintentional uses, hackers aren't breaking the rules as much as debunking them.Edward SnowdenPermanent Record1,449 Kindle readers highlighted thisTo hack a system requires getting to know its rules better than the people who created it or are running it, and exploiting all the vulnerable distance between how those people had intended the system to work and how it actually works, or could be made to work. In capitalizing on these unintentional uses, hackers aren't breaking the rules as much as debunking them.Edward SnowdenPermanent Record1,449 Kindle readers highlighted this
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This was the beginning of surveillance capitalism, and the end of the Internet as I knew it.Edward SnowdenPermanent Record1,222 Kindle readers highlighted thisThis was the beginning of surveillance capitalism, and the end of the Internet as I knew it.Edward SnowdenPermanent Record1,222 Kindle readers highlighted this
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Permanent Record Paperback – September 1, 2020
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Edward Snowden
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Print length352 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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Publication dateSeptember 1, 2020
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Dimensions5.54 x 0.95 x 8.25 inches
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ISBN-101250772907
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ISBN-13978-1250772909
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A riveting account... Reads like a literary thriller... Snowden pushes the reader to reflect more seriously on what every American should be asking already.”
―The New York Times
“Gripping... Snowden demonstrates a knack for explaining in lucid and compelling language the inner workings of [CIA and NSA] systems and the menace he came to believe they posed.”
―The Washington Post
“Snowden eventually decided his loyalties lay not with the agencies he was working for, but the public they were set up to protect. He felt ordinary citizens were being betrayed, and he had a duty to explain how.... His account of the experiences that led him to take momentous decisions, along with the details he gives of his family background, serve as a robust defense against accusations that he is a traitor."
―The Guardian
“Even for those of us who’ve followed the Snowden revelations closely, Permanent Record is full of surprises.... A deeply reluctant whistleblower, Snowden also emerges as a peculiarly American patriot, with roots that go back to Plymouth Rock.... As his memoir makes clear, all the techniques he exposed in 2013 remain in place.”
―The Nation
“Well-written... Snowden’s descriptions of the real impact of the various surveillance systems he disclosed―stripped of abstract concepts and technical jargon―are some of the most disturbing parts of the book.... Offers a useful reminder of the god-like omniscience that digital data can bestow on those with the power to collect it all.”
―The Economist
“Snowden’s book is straightforward, admirably so.... Having gazed through the windows of the panopticon, he experienced that rarity, a moment of vision: The world must be told these things I know. Against absurd odds, he delivered his knowledge to us.”
―Jonathan Lethem, The New York Review of Books
“An extraordinary book... A riveting blend of spycraft as Snowden painstakingly figures out how to confirm his suspicions without tipping off his bosses, and a brilliant ethical treatise as Snowden reveals the reasoning that took him from each step to the next... The best proof yet that Snowden is exactly what he appears to be: a gung-ho guy from a military family who believes deeply in service and the values embodied by the US constitution, who explored multiple avenues of squaring his oath to uphold those values with the corrupt and illegal practices he saw around him, and worked out a breathtakingly bold and ambitious plan to do what no one else had ever managed: to expose wrongdoing in a way that provoked sustained interest and sparked action.”
―Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing
About the Author
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Product details
- Publisher : Picador Paper (September 1, 2020)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1250772907
- ISBN-13 : 978-1250772909
- Item Weight : 10.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.54 x 0.95 x 8.25 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#11,064 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #5 in Politics of Privacy & Surveillance
- #26 in Political Intelligence
- #33 in Social Activist Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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I view him as a hero, a man who gave up life as he lived it to provide the American public and the world with the truth. This is a man who truly made a difference with his life.
This book, written by Snowden himself, is well written, intelligent, informative, and entertaining. It reads like you're sitting down listening to your best friend tell his life's story.
I
Top reviews from other countries
Obviously the initial pull to read the book is the NSA stuff, and the great chase which culminates in Snowden's refuge in Russia. But the book is so much more than that. His recounting of his childhood, and the joys of dial-up modems and irritating siblings, is wonderful nostalgia but always laced with his discomfort and struggle with the social structures around him.
The book's natural progression of explaining how the internet has changed in function, as he lived through those changes, unrolls as a beautifully written discussion of how we've reached the state of the Net we have today. It's easily light enough for non-techies to understand, but the insight and narration really opens up the questions of what we (society) demanded of the internet, and what it's done to us.
The book doesn't meander. There's no padding. But by the time you reach the releasing of the files and the round the world escape, it's very natural. Reading it, the chase is as engrossing to read as his thoughts on the Commodore 64. It's a great book, perhaps made all the greater if you can nod along with remembrances of life before 24/7 smartphones. Above all, it's hopeful of a better future.
(Couple of notes as a UK reader: The book is written in universal English, there's no bewildering US slang used. The book doesn't go into American politics or deep into American terms. There are a couple of pages of US history, mainly early on about Snowden's family tree, but it's not a diversion. It doesn't read like an American book, aimed at American readers, and leaving everyone else bewildered.)
Either way, there’s no doubt in my mind that Edward Snowden will one day be recognised as an American hero. He has the Constitution firmly on his side, besides.
“No Place to Hide” I read as soon as it came out, and I even caught the Oliver Stone movie on the plane, but horse’s mouth turns out to be better than both.
My first reaction when I read the Greenwald book was “omigod, a 29-year-old with no college education can look up all data on the planet; the Russians must have their pick from 10,000 underpaid Federal agents to find out anything they want” and as the CIA went on to lose all its agents in China I allowed myself to think we might come to our senses and turn the whole thing off.
I was wrong on all counts, it turns out. First of all, duh, we ain’t turning it off. But the better part of the story, the one I came to appreciate by reading “Permanent Record,” (and yes, I know, the movie made the same point, but not as well, so I did not “buy” it) is that Edward Snowden is a rather unique guy.
So yeah, it’s true he had clearance to look at all information ever created on planet Earth, and it’s true he never went to college, but somebody’s got to have the clearance and you could not want for a better candidate: leaving his undisputed technical skills to one side, he’s Mayflower stock, his parents both served in the intelligence community, he wrote to the CIA as a kid to tell them he’d hacked their website, he enlisted as a private after 9-11 and, hell, he’s a patriot.
So I’m relieved. And I was entertained. His life may not have been remarkable or exciting, but you’re invited to find out about it through the eyes of a kid that loves to examine everything and hack everything and loves to brag about how he did it (a quality he sees in others but fails to identify in himself, incidentally).
Bottom line, the book would be worth reading even if it wasn’t about the whistleblower who uncovered the biggest and most unconstitutional government secret of the past half-century.
Except it is, and that makes it a total must-read.
Come on Elizabeth Warren, pardon the man. I really hope his chances are better than he intimates on page 271!
This book is an important masterpiece. We already knew Ed was extremely brave and extremely smart. Now we also know he's an extremely good writer. The words flow on the page with conciseness and emotion, and it's hard to put the book down once started. I can only imagine how many future whistleblowers it might inspire. How many tech experts it makes stop and think, "What am I doing? And who am I doing it for?"
But maybe we shouldn't be too surprised. The type of principled stand Ed took is deeply rooted not just in love, but also a humanist background. He had his head on screwed right before society's more evil parts could corrupt his wallet and make it think for him, as it often does.
This book is currently under attack by the US government. They try to sue to get his royalties. We always worry about the Chinese credit system ranking and blocking humans (as we should), but somewhat more rarely do we worry about how the financial system itself can be used to block us. (Incidentally, Ed's credit cards have been blocked too, as he's living his life in exile.) But to give back to Ed's sacrifice, perhaps money isn't even that important. Making his sacrifice not have been in vein is.
I do wonder if technology's progress can ever be stopped, though, in a kind of "Curb the company's reach for power through laws" type of ways. And then I wonder if delving even more deeply into that progress may instead be the answer -- to have counter-technology to recreate a power balance. One the one hand, by evolving tools that better encrypt our communication (or would I just become a higher-priority target by installing Ed's suggested messenger, Signal? Ah, the Chilling Effect!). On the other hand, by perhaps increasing transparency -- surveillance? -- of the secret services themselves. Would the intelligence worker, crouching over their latest iteration of XKEYSCORE or another illegal spying program, perform the same searches if they themselves had a camera on them -- watched by millions across the globe, shining light into the darkest corners of the tech cave?
Thank you, Ed, for doing just that -- shining light. May you and your wife and friends live a happy life in exile. My own country, Germany, was too cowardly to consider a safe harbor for you. But know you have the support from many of us citizens here. Love & peace!















