Counterpunch.png

 

 

Stupidity of the Security State

 

 

Kevin Carson, Counterpunch, USA, 12 August 2013

 

Back in 2006 Ori Brafman and Rod Beckstrom, in The Starfish and the Spider
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1591841836/counterpunchmaga> ,
contrasted the way networks and hierarchies respond to outside attacks.
Networks, when attacked, become even more decentralized and resilient. A
good example is Napster and its successors, each of which has more closely
approached an ideal peer-to-peer model, and further freed itself from
reliance on infrastructure that can be shut down by central authority, than
its predecessors. Hierarchies, on the other hand, respond to attack by
becoming even more ossified, brittle and closed. Hierarchies respond to
leaks by becoming internally opaque and closed even to themselves, so that
their information is compartmentalized and they are less able to make
effective use of the knowledge dispersed among their members.

 

We can see this in the way the national security state has responded to
leaks, first by US Army PFC Bradley Manning and now by former NSA contractor
Edward Snowden. Hugh Gusterton, in Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists ("Not
All Secrets are Alike," July 23), notes that the government is taking
measures to avoid future such leaks by "segmenting access to information so
that individual analysts cannot avail themselves of so much, and by giving
fewer security clearances, especially to employees of contractors."

 

This approach is doomed. "Segmentation of access runs counter to the whole
point of the latest intelligence strategy, which is fusion of data from
disparate sources. The more Balkanized the data, the less effective the
intelligence. And . intelligence agencies are collecting so much information
that they have to hire vast numbers of new employees, many of whom cannot be
adequately vetted."

 

Meanwhile, the internal witch hunt atmosphere in the U.S. security apparatus
is alienating the very contract-work hackers whose skills it is increasingly
dependent on. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) sticker on Snowden's
laptop wasn't a deviation the NSA's leadership failed to catch. It's typical
of the cultural pool from which the NSA, of necessity, recruits its
contractors. Such people read the news, and they aren't impressed with the
government's draconian treatment of people like Aaron Swartz, Bradley
Manning and Edward Snowden. Recruiters are running up against increased
skepticism among those with the skills it needs; the chilly reception NSA
chief Keith Alexander met with at DefCon is symbolic of this new atmosphere.

 

Further, as an anonymous former EFF intern notes, even idealistic young
people who believe in the NSA's mission find themselves paralyzed by the
increasingly adversarial atmosphere, afraid even to type code into a
terminal for fear of learning after the fact that they violated one of the
CFAA's vague, Kafkaesque provisions.

 

All this is happening even as surveillance agencies are deluged with
ever-increasing, unmanageable amounts of raw data. The ratio of hay to
needles is growing exponentially. The larger the volume of raw data to be
analyzed algorithmically, the larger the number of false positives the
system generates. The sheer volume of false positives, and the ratio of
false positives to genuine leads, is enough to paralyze government. Back in
2009, Homeland Security couldn't react in time to stop the Underwear Bomber
when his own father directly notified them he was planning to blow up a
plane.

 

The very people the security state is most interested in monitoring -
ranging from genuine terrorists to domestic dissidents like Snowden and the
occupy movement - respond to every increase in surveillance by making
themselves more opaque to the government. The Snowden scandal resulted in a
spike in adoption of measures like PGP encryption and TOR browsing. Even as
the NSA is hoovering up more and more hay, more and more needles quietly
remove themselves from the haystack.

 

The U.S. security state and its agencies, in the long run, are doomed for
the same reason that all authoritarian hierarchies are doomed: They're
stupid. And the people they're trying to control are smart.

 

.        Kevin Carson is a senior fellow of the Center for a Stateless
Society (c4ss.org <http://c4ss.org/> ) and holds the Center's Karl Hess
Chair in Social Theory.

 

 

From:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/08/12/snowden-and-the-stupidity-of-the-secu
rity-state/

 

 

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