Tech Company Officials Meet With Obama Officially About Healthcare.gov, But Focus On NSA Surveillance Instead
from the good-to-see dept
It came out yesterday that President Obama was scheduled to meet privately with a group of "tech" execs officially about the status of the healthcare.gov website. However, as some expected, it appeared that the meeting focused much more on the NSA's overreach and the need for reforms. While somewhat disappointing that the meeting was held privately, it looks like the execs made it clear that the NSA surveillance efforts were doing a lot more harm than good and something needed to change.Schmidt, of Google, opened the meeting and laid out industry officials' concerns. Obama seemed sympathetic to the idea of allowing more disclosure of government surveillance requests by technology companies, according to a tech industry official who was briefed on the meeting. The official asked to remain anonymous because the meeting was private.We've been saying since the Snowden leaks first came out that the tech industry needed to be a lot more vocal about how bad the NSA's actions are for pretty much everyone, so it's good to see at least some effort to continue to push that story. Of course, the list of attendees also includes AT&T's Randall Stephenson -- and AT&T has been one of the companies most complicit in the NSA's activities, something the company refuses to talk about, and unlike the actual tech companies, seems completely unwilling to address.
Mayer, the Yahoo! executive, brought up concerns about the potentially negative impact that could be caused if countries, such as Brazil, move forward with legislation that would require service providers to ensure that data belonging to a citizen of a certain country remain in the country it originates, the official said.
That would require technology companies to build data centers in each country — a costly problem for American Internet companies, the official said. The White House noted in a statement after the meeting that the group discussed the "economic impacts of unauthorized intelligence disclosures."
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Filed Under: barack obama, eric schmidt, healthcare.gov, marissa mayer, nsa, nsa surveillance, randall stephenson, surveillance
Companies: at&t, google, yahoo
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I hope this official realises that the NSA already knows who he is. All they need is location data from the mobile phones of both all the people who were in the meeting with Obama and US Today's journalists, and see which one was in close proximity with the journo.
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"economic impacts of unauthorized intelligence disclosures."
Super glad to know that the problem is that people know about it, not that it's being done.
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This administration is utterly beyond redemption at this point, they are so reflexively and inherently dishonest. Each time they open their collective mouths, the sewage spills forth in a torrent.
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"it looks like" like SHEER PR, utterly unverifiable.
To which Schmidt (dressed in SS uniform) replied: "World domination, Barky, just like every other day."
But wherever Google is, Mike sees only good and is eager to push the propaganda line, when he doesn't KNOW any more than I do! -- By the way, notice that Mike largely only re-writes after endorsed by the "official" organs: NYTimes, Washington Post, NPR here?
Masnicking: daily spurts of short and trivial traffic-generating items.
12:48:04[n-305-4]
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What representation
Boy do my interests feel represented by these CEOs. Glad we're all on the same page,
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Re: What representation
Now your senator however, they *should* be representing your interests ...
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Executives who's companies depend on revenue from the international marketplace, and don't hold a near total monopoly over an entire domestic market. Such as AT&T, Verison, Sprint, T-Mobile and... well that's about 95% of the US's mobile phone carrier market.
Everyone else in that room, on the other hand, actually have to compete against more than one or two competitors in the marketplace.
These mobile phone carriers know they have Americans by the balls. There's nowhere else for customers to turn to for mobile phone service.
All the major telcos have been granted "retroactive immunity" from the 4th Amendment, and they're now cashing in our personal information for more profits. Until we strip the unconstitutional "retroactive immunity" clause pass in 2008 for telcos, their behavior will never change.
The telcos will continue to cash-in on our personal information, and continue flipping us the silent middle-finger because they know if people want cellphones, they have very few mobile carriers to choose from.
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That is not exactly what the public's issues are. Their issues are that it is occurring at all.
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Private Meeting ..5 Minutes of Press
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They were off topic, so let's stay off
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Alignment
I recently heard that Obama was going to talk about NSA and such in January, and conveniently scheduled the State of the Union speech for late in that month.
I smell spin. I smell a half solution. I smell a really bent State of the Union address where Obama apologies and allows half remedies.
This is not over, not by a long shot. Maybe there is enough here to wake up the sleeping populace, however, I have my doubts.
Hell, from this group, if I were Edward Snowden, I would not trust a full presidential pardon, along with a resolution from congress, next to sworn statements from each and every federal law enforcement individual, including but not limited to every janitor at the Justice Department, and a cashiers check for $10 million.
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Re: Alignment
The demand for conditional amnesty is his full co-operation along with ALL THE DATA which the news outlets now have. He can't guarantee that. I suspect what that has to do with is removing the dead man switch which is what they are actually worried about.
Once it is gone, he's a dead man walking.
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Re: Re: Alignment
It goes as follows:
1) Offer a 'generous' but impossible to meet condition to the other person in exchange for something(in this case 'limited amnesty').
2) When the other person naturally refuses, either from an unwillingness to meet your condition, or an inability to do so, claim that this merely shows that they are unwilling to work with you, refusing to budge on their position.
This allows you to both paint them in a negative light as someone 'unwilling to compromise', and make yourself look better as the one who so 'generously' made the offer in the first place.
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Wrong term...
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All of the initial reports I saw said that Healthcare.gov was the main purpose of the meeting. It was quickly noted that the tech companies wanted to talk about surveillance, but it was setup as a meeting about the ACA.
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The meeting was 2 hours and 45 minutes long. The first 45 minutes did not include Biden and Obama but was indeed about the website and it's problems dealing with ACA. However, the next 2 hours was about the NSA. Biden and Obama wanted to talk ACA website, no one else in the room was interested in ACA but rather they wanted to talk about Obama dropping the boom on the NSA because it was affecting their bottom lines. That is all but AT&T CEO which didn't have anything to say about that.
At the end, Obama wanted to paint it as a meeting dealing with the website of the ACA with one small mention of security matters being brought up, rather than the total meeting while he was present dealt with that errrr.... "security issue".
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