Marc Andreessen Thinks Snowden, Administration Are To Blame For Backlash Against US Tech Industry
from the but-not-the-NSA,-for-some-reason dept
Marc Andreessen, venture capitalist, has weighed in on the Snowden leaks, putting forth what even he terms to be an "unpopular" view. On CNBC's Squawk Box, he lead with this statement:
Obviously, he's a traitor. Like, if you look up in the encyclopedia, traitor, there's a picture of Edward Snowden. He's a textbook traitor. I'm in the distinct minority out here. I think most people in Silicon Valley would pick the other designation.Being a traitor and committing treason falls under a very distinct definition. In Andreessen's dictionary (the one with Snowden's picture), this definition runs as follows:
Because he stole national security secrets and gave them to everybody on the planet.Whereas the Constitution clearly defines treason as this:
Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort.Giving documents to "everybody on the planet" is not specifically "aiding or comforting" enemies of the United States. While it may have given some of them guidance on how to avoid surveillance, there's been no evidence presented that the leaks have done any specific harm to the US. There's been a lot of handwringing about the implications of the leaks, but the most specific claims released to date by the US government deal with Defense Dept. docs supposedly in Snowden's possession which, even if they exist (the NSA still doesn't know what Snowden took), haven't been released to anybody.
But Andreessen's most spectacular statement is also his most self-serving. He decries the damage done to US tech companies by the leaks, but rather than hold the NSA responsible, he shoots the messenger -- and wings the President.
[A]merican technology companies get a huge amount of revenue from outside the US. In fact, some of these companies get up to 70% of revenue outside the US and there's a big open question right now, how successful our companies will be when they go to sell products overseas. And there are a lot of foreign countries that are very envious of Silicon Valley and America's domination of tech and wish they could implement protection policies and will use this whole affair as a reason to do that…Andreessen's responses don't find anything necessarily wrong with the NSA's actions. The problem, as he sees it, lies with the "traitor" who exposed the NSA's subversion of tech company hardware and software. The administration is also partly to blame for not having done enough to shelter the tech world from the fallout of the NSA leaks. Andreessen also (via Twitter) blames both Americans for misunderstanding the NSA's programs and the media for misrepresenting the 702 program, implying that tech companies were working with the NSA to collect American communications.
The administration is just letting -- they're letting the American tech industry out to dry. I haven't met anybody who feels like the White House has a plan, It's just happening.
But as far as he can see it, the agency itself is nearly blameless. He's "not surprised" the agency was spying. After all, it has thousands of employees and billions in funding (actual budget numbers exposed by another leak). What else were we Americans to believe it was doing with all that manpower and money?
Well, I'm fairly sure we weren't expecting to find it was grabbing bulk metadata on Americans' phone calls or sweeping up tons of "incidental" communications via its many surveillance programs. We weren't expecting it to have partnered with other nations to help them surveil their own citizens. And we certainly weren't expecting it to hand off unminimized data to other nations' intelligence agencies.
This is a very close-minded and self-centered view of the situation. That tech companies were damaged is unfortunate, but the blame lies with the agency that aims to "collect it all," rather than the person who exposed the egregious excesses done in the name of "security." And if the administration is to blame for anything, it's for not reining the NSA in over the years, rather than for not sheltering the industry from fallout.
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Filed Under: ed snowden, marc andreessen, nsa, surveillance, traitor
Reader Comments
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Well imagine that...
Who woulda thunk. Well actually, pretty much EVERYONE could have predicted this outcome once it was known what was going on. Any tech company that knowingly went along with the U.S. government's spying programs deserves what is coming to them now.
I feel bad for the employees, consumers, and shareholders who had no clue what was going on - these guys will never get any justice, as nobody who deserves to will ever go to jail for this.
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"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act."
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Hasn't had an original thought since 1993
DTM.
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When in doubt
When in doubt, vilify your offenders.
Vilify anyone supporting them. Don't think logically, destroy your opponent through baseless rhetoric until nothing is left. The idea that someone is a traitor gives it power and the Public Relations campaign must continue even in the face of truth.
Edward Bernays would be proud.
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Re: When in doubt
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gaslighting video
Let's say I am evil regime. Pretend I have psychiatrists who want bonus's for mental ward lockups and drug sales.
In the interview, I punch you in the mouth, and ask how your feeling, you say angry, and I diagnose you with, "ODD" angry with possibility to do violent harm to self or others, and press the secret button under the desk. -- Now with all these bonus's from lockin up returning vets, and gun owners, and people who talk about the constitution and oath, just like "the Wolf Of Wall Street", I can go buy that Lamborghini and a few lines and hookers.
This is the logic going on.
Yeah, people don't want to buy hardware with backdoors... DUH.. Your not crazy!
Want an example?
Admin Official Suggests Bergdahl Squadmates are ‘Psychopaths’
There's your gaslighting.
The DSM -5 isn't SCIENCE!!! psychiatrists were not even doctors until recently, and SSRI's don't heal mental problems they create violent people. Exiting this insane system, and getting support by family and friends is the cure. If you go to a psychiatrist, you will be put on SSRI's!
Take care not to allow the .gov secrecy trolls to GASLIGHT this issue. They broke their oaths. And now they desire provide the solution by makin it the new normal, when they should all be doing LIFE IN FT. LEAVENWORTH.
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Re: gaslighting video
Admin Official Suggests Bergdahl Squadmates are ‘Psychopaths’
There's your gaslighting.
I forgot, Here's the answer back to this...
A psychopath has a missing part of the brain.
Let's Look at their brains.
BUT... if your going to claim to be able to say people are psychopaths, then YOU TOO GET TO GET TESTED. Starting with
POTUS, Senate, House, and all Law Enforcement and SPY Agencies. If that part of the brain is missing your career is DONE. TOAST.
give them a taste of their own medicine.
submit to a test you lying, murdering psychopaths!
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Re: Re: gaslighting video
I should know, I've been tested for both of them.
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Re: gaslighting video
Signed,
-Anyone with actual experience with them.
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Re: Re: gaslighting video
Thinking I missed my serving of whatever kool-aid he was given...
*yikes*
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Re: Re: Re: gaslighting video
Not as near as I can tell.
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Re: gaslighting video
psychiatrists are neurologists, and very much have ALWAYS been doctors.
You *may possibly* be thinking of psychologist, and I use the term *thinking* very broadly in your case...
however, psychologists don't prescribe medications. Only psychiatrists, who, again, are NEUROLOGISTS... who are and always HAVE been physicians...
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I'm confused
If it is oblivious what was going on, then no secrets were exposed. So how can Snowden be a traitor for telling us what we should have already known?
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Re: I'm confused
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Re: I'm confused
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Maturity of a five year old...
'I'm not the one to blame, if anyone's at fault it's you! After all, the only reason you knew I was eating the cookies is you exposed my actions, so clearly the blame for them rests upon your shoulders!'
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This just goes to show that Marc Andreessen is a textbook idiot...
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Re:
It's just that people disagree about whether that also means he's a traitor to the government, or to the American people, or indeed to America itself.
Under the Constitution, you can't charge someone with treason unless their acts satisfy the criteria quoted in this article - and Snowden's do not. However, the colloquial sense of "traitor" - which may well be defined in some textbooks - does not rely on, or even particularly relate to, the word "treason".
The colloquial sense of "traitor" is, for practical purposes, merely a more extreme and more loaded version of "betrayer". You see that all the time, as for example when one friend reveals something embarrassing about another to a third, and the second calls the first a traitor.
I suspect that much of the discourse about Snowden involving the word "traitor" is using, and relying on, that colloquial sense. Where that becomes dangerous is when people allow that to color their opinions on what is applicable in legal terms, and on whether Snowden meets the legal definition of a traitor.
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The real blame here lays not with Snowden but the entire government mentality that thinks all this spying is a good thing and only needs to be hidden.
Snowden is a whistle blower who could no more do the right thing through offical channels than any of the whistle blowers before him. He had tons of examples of where that leads when you push it. Still he gave it a shot.
When the profits start getting real slim for those same global corporations, let us see how well they support those in office who don't want any change to the present operations. When you threaten the politician's job, either by supporting his rival or by denying him his campaign war chest contributions, they suddenly get religion on the topic. This is what it is going to take and we have two years for this to work on those corporate bottom lines.
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keeping secrets
Some are too stubourn to be corrupted. These good honest people become disenchanted by the organization, they go back to those things that are foundations of their identity like, the constitution, church, academic life, hobbies, etc.
The ones that run back to the constitution are the problem, they relise the organization is doing illegal stuff, and their honesty kicks in.
If it wasn't Snowden and his sense of outrage, at the NSA illegal actions, it would have been some other tom, dick or harriette.
The NSA should have known better than tring to keep such a big secret. If more than 1 person knows, then the secret will leak. mean time to leak = k x 1/(number who know)
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Re:
Also I have been connecting to Gmail via TLS for a very long time, I actually thought they always enforced this policy?
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How would he feel
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hes right and wrong
However, he's wrong to blame him for the problems of US business as a result. Those problems are there because US businesses seemed to be very lax when it came to securing customer data on their networks. They have nobody else to blame except themselves. Quite simply, Google and many others should have been more careful, and they would have not been contributors to the problem.
Then again, it appears that some of them may have been willing contributors. That's a different issue.
Andreessen needs to aim his comments a little better.
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Re: hes right and wrong
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. This is one of them, and it's been made by quite a few people. The problem is that there is no evidence to support it.
The United States is not the only country that's funding a huge complex of governmental/commercial espionage, intelligence and data gathering. Everyone else who can is doing the same thing(s). Some of them are very good at it. And just as memos written in Moscow and Beijing are read in Washington, reports from DC are read in those capitals as well. Of course they are. It's what spies do.
The thing is that countries with effective intelligence operations do not make a practice of revealing just how effective they are. They don't show their cards unless either (a) the information becomes public or (b) the situation demands it -- which doesn't happen often.
In other words, nothing Snowden has disclosed was probably news to anybody who cares. The Chinese already knew. The Russians knew. The British knew. It's just that NOW they can admit that they know and pretend that they know because of Snowden...when in fact this is all really old news to them.
The accusations of "traitor" that are being thrown are bogus UNLESS someone can show that his disclosures are in fact the source for an adversary's knowledge AND that the knowledge damages the US in some significant way. Nobody is even remotely close to clearing that bar. So let's just stuff the naive, clueless, ignorant talk of "traitor" until someone puts proof on the table.
(Which is unlikely because the cowards and weaklings will use their favorite excuse -- "national security" -- to claim that such proof exists but will refuse to show it to the American people. All such claims should be treated as exactly what they are: bald-faced lies.)
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Re: hes right and wrong
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This cannot be a new idea...
I cannot seem to recall off-hand, so I will ask what may be a stupid question: are there any companies who have taken legal action—requesting, say, a declaratory judgment from a court—against the NSA?
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Clueless is, as clueless does...
I think we're beyond that now. Despite the fact that most US tech is still built/assembled in Asia or Europe. I won't buy network communications tech from US firms anymore (i.e. switches, routers, etc). I build my own enterprise servers from non-US parts. It's a real shame I can't trust US tech anymore. Damn the nsa. They SUCK on so many levels. Snowden is a hero of the people, for alerting the world to the police state actions of the nsa. Nuff said.
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So much delusion here.
Israel and SKorea are alredy taking over this "dominance", but they been doin that before snowden.
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This guy is a shill or a twit
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I have a simple rule I live by nowadays.
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Re: I have a simple rule I live by nowadays.
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Re: Re: I have a simple rule I live by nowadays.
Where Marc Andreessen gets it wrong, is just where the blame should go...
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Andreessen is incapable of logical thought!
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Re: Andreessen is incapable of logical thought!
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I wonder WHOSE picture we'll find there
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