1eyedjack, on 2013-October-30, 02:49, said:
I have no doubt that the Europe is spying on the USA every bit as much as the reverse.
Probably they are not tapping Obama's phone, but whether that is dure to restraint or lack of the technical ability to do so may be open to question.
I believe ins science, technology, progress, all that stuff, and it happens and will continue to happen whether I believe in it or not. Whether we are speaking of atomic weaponry, genetic engineering, or cybertechnology there are opportunities and there dangers. We need to formulate some principles.While I realize that security and economics are niter-linked, it would appeal to me to try to de-link them for the purposes of cyber-spying. It's going to be tough.
My guess is that the next 9-11 will not be planes into buildings, it will be some sort of very substantial cyber attack. I gather that we already have done something along these lines in disrupting Iran's nuclear program. What goes around... Anyway, it's the world we live in and we have to live in it.
Listening in on Angela Merkel's cell phone is over the top. But how did we even get in that neighborhood? In my youth, 1984 was in the distant future, not the past. I see that the NSA's Alexander asserts that some of the intelligence gathering that caused such a flap a while back was actually a NATO operation or operations by individual NATO countries and shared with us. (I don't think he claims it was NATO bugging Merkel though.) Exact details are vague, but it would be naive to think that we are the only ones engaged in electronic surveillance at a very advanced and extensive level.
For starters, it's always good to acknowledge reality. Reality is that we have lots and lots of electronic eavesdropping, and, I believe, some very substantial electronic dangers. How to handle this is not clear, but simply accepting "Trust us, we're the good guys" probably isn't enough.
Henry Stimson, back in the 1930s, supposedly said that gentlemen don't read other gentlemen's mail. That could be the definition of wishful thinking. But we are just getting too damn good at it, and we have to bring it under some sort of control.