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#yasha levine
alanshemper · 6 months
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lolli-says-stuff · 1 year
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familyabolisher · 8 months
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August 2023 reading
Books:
Langston Hughes, Selected Poems
T. H. White, The Sword In The Stone
T. H. White, The Witch In The Woods
T. H. White, The Ill-Made Knight
T. H. White, The Candle In The Wind
Articles:
Lisa Borst, Ari M. Brostoff, Cecilia Corrigan, Jon Dieringer, A. S. Hamrah, Arielle Isack, Mark Krotov, Jasmine Sanders, Christine Smallwood, Who Was Barbie?
Lev Grossman, The gay Nabokov
Yasha Levine, Immigrants as a Weapon: Global Nationalism and American Power
Sophie Lewis, Cthulhu plays no role for me
Gail Omvedt, The doubly marginalised
John Semley, Oppenheimer and the Dharma of Death
Bassam Sidiki, Severances: Memory as Disability in Late Capitalism
towardrecomp, Fidelidad En La Tormenta: Part 1
Eyal Weizman, The Art of War: Deleuze, Guattari, Debord and the Israeli Defense Force
Short stories:
Tamsyn Muir, Chew
Tamsyn Muir, The Unwanted Guest
Rebecca Fraimow, Further Arguments In Support Of Yudah Cohen's Proposal To Bluma Zilberman
Rebecca Fraimow, Gitl Schneiderman Learns To Live With Her In-Laws
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chaosmenu · 4 months
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does anybody know if yasha levine is continuing his memoir … it looks really interesting so far but there havent been any updates since june 2023
#op
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lastlymatt · 1 year
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1 for the Alex Rider mini ask game?
1. Which Yassen do you prefer - blond/book Yassen, ginger/movie Yassen, or brunet/tv show Yassen (or perhaps some other Yassen of your imagination) - and why/what is your ranking?
Well, my first exposure to Yassen was tv Yassen so he holds a special place in my heart and the fact that he's played by Thomas Levin is a major bonus.
For a younger Yassen or Yasha, I can only imagine a blond more book-accurate version of him. This is very confusing for me because I prefer the TV version for adult Yassen.
I have only watched a few clips of the movie and listened to the Kill James Bond episode on it, and I don't plan to watch any more of that, so I don't think of movie Yassen at all.
My ranking:
TV Yassen
Book Yassen
Movie Yassen
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whatisonthemoon · 1 year
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Internet Privacy, Funded By Spies Mar 03, 2016 By Yasha Levine Originally published on Pando.com on March 1, 2015.
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For the past few months I've been covering U.S. government funding of popular Internet privacy tools like Tor, CryptoCat and Open Whisper Systems. During my reporting, one agency in particular keeps popping up: An agency with one of those really bland names that masks its wild, bizarre history: the Broadcasting Board of Governors, or BBG.
The BBG was formed in 1999 and runs on a $721 million annual budget. It reports directly to Secretary of State John Kerry and operates like a holding company for a host of Cold War-era CIA spinoffs and old school "psychological warfare" projects: Radio Free Europe, Radio Free Asia, Radio Martí, Voice of America, Radio Liberation from Bolshevism (since renamed "Radio Liberty”) and a dozen other government-funded radio stations and media outlets pumping out pro-American propaganda across the globe.
Today, the Congressionally-funded federal agency is also one of the biggest backers of grassroots and open-source Internet privacy technology. These investments started in 2012, when the BBG launched the “Open Technology Fund” (OTF) — an initiative housed within and run by Radio Free Asia (RFA), a premier BBG property that broadcasts into communist countries like North Korea, Vietnam, Laos, China and Myanmar. The BBG endowed Radio Free Asia's Open Technology Fund with a multimillion dollar budget and a single task: “to fulfill the U.S. Congressional global mandate for Internet freedom.”
It's already a mouthful of proverbial Washington alphabet soup  — Congress funds BBG to fund RFA to fund OTF — but, regardless of which sub-group ultimately writes the check, the important thing to understand is that all this federal government money flows, directly or indirectly, from the Broadcasting Board of Governors.
Between 2012 and 2014, Radio Free Asia's Open Technology Fund poured more than $10 million into Internet privacy projects big and small: open-source encrypted communication apps, next-generation secure email initiatives, anti-censorship mesh networking platforms, encryption security audits, secure cloud hosting, a network of “high-capacity” Tor exit nodes and even an anonymous Tor-based tool for leakers and whistleblowers that competed with Wikileaks.
Though many of the apps and tech backed by Radio Free Asia's OTF are unknown to the general public, they are highly respected and extremely popular among the anti-surveillance Internet activist crowd. OTF-funded apps have been recommended by Edward Snowden, covered favorably by ProPublica and The New York Times' technology reporters, and repeatedly promoted by the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Everyone seems to agree that OTF-funded privacy apps offer some of the best protection from government surveillance you can get. In fact, just about all the featured open-source apps on EFF’s recent “Secure Messaging Scorecard” were funded by OTF.
Here’s a small sample of what the Broadcasting Board of Governors funded (through Radio Free Asia and then through the Open Technology Fund) between 2012 and 2014:
Open Whisper Systems, maker of free encrypted text and voice mobile apps like TextSecure and Signal/RedPhone, got a generous $1.35-million infusion. (Facebook recently started using Open Whisper Systems to secure its WhatsApp messages.)
CryptoCat, an encrypted chat app made by Nadim Kobeissi and promoted by EFF, received $184,000.
LEAP, an email encryption startup, got just over $1 million. LEAP is currently being used to run secure VPN services at RiseUp.net, the radical anarchist communication collective.
A Wikileaks alternative called GlobaLeaks (which was endorsed by the folks at Tor, including Jacob Appelbaum) received just under $350,000.
The Guardian Project — which makes an encrypted chat app called ChatSecure, as well a mobile version of Tor called Orbot — got $388,500.
The Tor Project received over $1 million from OTF to pay for security audits, traffic analysis tools and set up fast Tor exit nodes in the Middle East and South East Asia.
In 2014, Congress massively upped the BBG's "Internet freedom" budget to $25 million, with
half of that money
flowing through RFA and into the Open Technology Fund. This $12.75 million represented a
three-fold increase
in OTF's budget from 2013 — a considerable expansion for an outfit that was just a few years old. Clearly, it's doing something that the government likes. A lot.
With those resources, the Open Technology Fund's mother-agency, Radio Free Asia, plans to create a vertically integrated incubator for budding privacy technologists around the globe — providing everything from training and mentorship, to offering them a secure global cloud hosting environment to run their apps, to legal assistance.
Radio Free Asia's OTF operates its own “secure cloud” infrastructure, which grantees can use to safely deploy their anti-surveillance apps — with server nodes in Turkey, Cambodia, Hong Kong, South Korea, Amsterdam and Washington, D.C. It also runs a “legal lab” which provides free legal services to projects with OTF funding. The Open Technology Fund even runs a “Rapid Response Fund” providing “emergency support” (including funding and technical help) to privacy projects, protecting privacy services against DDoS attacks and other malicious assaults by hackers and hostile governments.
And then there are the many academic programs underwritten by the Open Technology Fund, including six month fellowships that pay a $4,000 stipend at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society, and the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab.
Silicon Valley has opened its doors to the Open Technology Fund. In 2014, OTF launched a coordinated project with Dropbox and Google to make free, easy-to-use privacy tools, and Facebook announced it was incorporating the underlying encryption technology of one of OTF's flagship projects — OpenWhisper Systems — into its WhatsApp text messaging service.
Equally important is the cultural affinity: Radio Free Asia and OTF seemed to really get the hacktivists and the open-source crypto community. Its day-to-day operations are run by Dan Meredith, a young guy who used to work at Al-Jazeera in Qatar as a "technologist" and who is an alumnus of academic and think-tank privacy-activist circles. Meredith isn't your typical stuffy State Department suit, he's a departure from the picture in most people's heads of the sort of person who'd lead a US government project with major foreign policy implications. He's fluent in the crypto/open-source techie lingo that those in the grassroots community can identify with. Under Meredith's watch, the Open Technology Fund passes itself off as a grassroots outfit with a lo-fi look and feel. Its homepage even features a cute 8-bit YouTube video outlining its do-gooder mission of using "public funds to support Internet freedom projects" which promote "human rights and open societies."
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Readers might find it odd that a US government agency established as a way to launder the image of various shady propaganda outfits (more on that soon) is now keen to fund technologies designed to protect us from the US government. Moreover, it might seem curious that its money would be so warmly welcomed by some of the Internet's fiercest antigovernment activists.
But, as folks in the open-source privacy community will tell you, funding for open-source encryption/anti-surveillance tech has been hard to come by. So they've welcomed money from Radio Free Asia's Open Technology Fund with open pockets. Developers and groups submitted their projects for funding, while libertarians and anti-government/anti-surveillance activists enthusiastically joined OTF's advisory council, sitting alongside representatives from Google and the US State Department, tech lobbyists, and military consultants.
But why is a federally-funded CIA spinoff with decades of experience in "psychological warfare" suddenly blowing tens of millions in government funds on privacy tools meant to protect people from being surveilled by another arm of the very same government? To answer that question, we have to pull the camera back and examine how all of those Cold War propaganda outlets begat the Broadcasting Board of Governors begat Radio Free Asia begat the Open Technology Fund. The story begins in the late 1940's.
The origins of the Broadcasting Board of Governors
The Broadcasting Board of Governors traces its beginnings to the early Cold War years, as a covert propaganda project of the newly-created Central Intelligence Agency to wage "psychological warfare" against Communist regimes and others deemed a threat to US interests.
George Kennan — the key architect of post-WWII foreign policy — pushed for expanding the role of covert peacetime programs. And so, in 1948, National Security Council Directive 10/2 officially authorized the CIA to engage in “covert operations” against the Communist Menace. Clause 5 of the directive defined “covert operations” as “propaganda, economic warfare; preventive direct action, including sabotage, anti-sabotage, demolition and evacuation measures; subversion against hostile states, including assistance to underground resistance movements, guerrillas and refugee liberation groups, and support of indigenous anti-communist elements in threatened countries of the free world.”
Propaganda quickly became one of the key weapons in the CIA's covert operations arsenal. The agency established and funded radio stations, newspapers, magazines, historical societies, emigre “research institutes,” and cultural programs all over Europe. In many cases, it funneled money to outfits run and staffed by known World War II war criminals and Nazi collaborators, both in Europe and here in the United States.
Christopher Simpson, author of “Blowback: America's Recruitment of Nazis and Its Destructive Impact on Our Domestic and Foreign Policy”, details the extent of these “psychological warfare projects”:
CIA-funded psychological warfare projects employing Eastern European émigrés became major operations during the 1950s, consuming tens and even hundreds of millions of dollars. . . .This included underwriting most of the French Paix et Liberté movement, paying the bills of the German League for Struggle Against Inhumanity , and financing a half dozen free jurists associations, a variety of European federalist groups, the Congress for Cultural Freedom, magazines, news services, book publishers, and much more. These were very broad programs designed to influence world public opinion at virtually every level, from illiterate peasants in the fields to the most sophisticated scholars in prestigious universities. They drew on a wide range of resources: labor unions, advertising agencies, college professors, journalists, and student leaders, to name a few. [emphasis added]
In Europe, the CIA set up “Radio Free Europe” and “Radio Liberation From Bolshevism” (later renamed "Radio Liberty"), which beamed propaganda in several languages into the Soviet Union and Soviet satellite states of Eastern Europe. The CIA later expanded its radio propaganda operations into Asia, targeting communist China, North Korea and Vietnam. The spy agency also funded several radio projects aimed at subverting leftist governments in Central and South America, including Radio Free Cuba and Radio Swan — which was run by the CIA and employed some of the same Cuban exiles that took part in the failed Bay of Pigs invasion. Even today, the CIA boasts that these early "psychological warfare" projects “would become one of the longest running and successful covert action campaigns ever mounted by the United States.”
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Officially, the CIA’s direct role in this global "psychological warfare" project diminished in the 1970s, after the spy agency's ties to Cold War propaganda arms like Radio Free Europe were exposed. Congress agreed to take over funding of these projects from the CIA, and eventually Washington expanded them into a massive federally-funded propaganda apparatus.
The names of the various CIA spinoffs and nonprofits changed over the years, culminating in a 1999 reorganization under President Bill Clinton which created the Broadcasting Board of Governors, a parent holding company to group new broadcasting operations around the world together with Cold War-era propaganda outfits with spooky pasts—including Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Voice of America and Radio Free Asia.
Today, the BBG has a $721 million budget provided by Congress, reports to the Secretary of State and is managed by a revolving crew of neocons and military think-tank experts. Among them: Kenneth Weinstein, head of the Hudson Institute, the arch-conservative Cold War-era military think tank; and Ryan C. Crocker, former ambassador to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria.
Although today's BBG is no longer covertly funded via the CIA’s black budget, its role as a soft power "psychological warfare" operation hasn’t really changed since its inception. The BBG and its subsidiaries still engage in propaganda warfare, subversion and soft-power projection against countries and foreign political movements deemed hostile to US interests. And it is still deeply intertwined with the same military and CIA-connected intelligence organizations — from USAID to DARPA to the National Endowment for Democracy.
Today, the Broadcasting Board of Governors runs a propaganda network that blankets the globe: Radio Martí (aimed at Cuba), Radio Farda (aimed at Iran), Radio Sawa (which broadcasts in Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, and Sudan), Radio Azadi (targeting Afghanistan), Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (which has tailored broadcasts in over a dozen languages into Russia, Ukraine, Serbia, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, and Armenia), and Radio Free Asia (which targets China, North Korea, Laos, and Vietnam).
The BBG is also involved in the technology of post-Cold War, Internet-era propaganda. It has bankrolled satellite Internet access in Iran and continues to fund an SMS-based social network in Cuba called Piramideo — which is different from the failed covert Twitter clone funded by USAID that tried to spark a Cuban Spring revolution. It has contracted with an anonymity Internet proxy called SafeWeb, which had been funded by the CIA’s venture capital firm In-Q-Tel. It worked with tech outfits run by practitioners of the controversial Chinese right-wing cult, Falun Gong — whose leader believes that humans are being corrupted by invading aliens from other planets/dimensions. These companies — Dynaweb and Ultrareach — provide anti-censorship tools to Chinese Internet users. As of 2012, the BBG continued to fund them to the tune of $1.5 million a year.
As the BBG proudly outlined in a 2013 fact sheet for its "Internet Anti-Censorship" unit:
The BBG collaborates with other Internet freedom projects and organizations, including RFA's Open Technology Fund, the State Department, USAID, and DARPAs SAFER Warfighter Communications Program. IAC is also reaching out to other groups interested in Internet freedom such as Google, Freedom House and the National Endowment for Democracy's Center for International Media Assistance.
BBG is also one of the Tor Project's biggest funders, paying out about $3.5 million from 2008 through 2013. BBG's latest publicly-known Tor contract was finalized in mid-2012. The BBG gave Tor at least $1.2 million to improve security and drastically boost the bandwidth of the Tor network by funding over a hundred Tor nodes across the world — all part of the US government's effort to find an effective soft-power weapon that can undermine Internet censorship and control in countries hostile to US interests. (We only know about the BBG's lucrative funding of Tor thanks to the dogged efforts of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, which had to sue to get its FOIA requests fulfilled.)
As mentioned, last year Congress decided the BBG was doing such a good job advancing America's interests abroad that it boosted the agency's "Internet freedom" annual budget from just $1.6 million in 2011 to a whopping $25 million this year. The BBG funneled half of this taxpayer money through its Radio Free Asia subsidiary, into the "Open Technology Fund" — the "nonprofit" responsible for bankrolling many of today's popular open-source privacy and encryption apps.
Which brings me to the next starring agency in this recovered history of Washington DC's privacy technology investments: Radio Free Asia.
Radio Free Asia
The CIA launched Radio Free Asia (RFA) in 1951 as an extension of its global anti-Communist propaganda radio network. RFA beamed its signal into mainland China from a transmitter in Manila, and its operations were based on the earlier Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberation From Bolshevism model.
The CIA quickly discovered that their plan to foment political unrest in China had one major flaw: the Chinese were too poor to own radios.
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Here’s a bit from a fantastic three-page spread published by The New York Times in 1977, investigating the CIA’s role in global propaganda efforts, including Radio Free Asia:
The Asia Foundation was headed for years by the late Robert Blum, who, several sources said, resigned from the C.I.A. to take it over. The foundation provided cover for at least one C.I.A. operative and carried out a variety of media-related ventures, including a program, begun in 1955, of selecting and paying the expenses of Asian journalists for a year of study in Harvard's prestigious Neiman Fellowship program….
It was only after Radio Free Asia's transmitters were operating, according to sources familiar with the case, that the C.I.A. realized that there were almost no radio receivers in private hands in mainland China. An emergency plan was drawn up.
Balloons, holding small radios tuned to Radio Free Asia's frequency, were lofted toward the mainland from the island of Taiwan, where the Chinese Nationalists had fled after the Communist takeover of the mainland in 1949. The plan was abandoned when the balloons were blown back to Taiwan across the Formosa Strait.
The CIA supposedly shuttered Radio Free Asia in the mid-1950s, but another Radio Free Asia reappeared a decade later, this time funded through a CIA-Moonie outfit called the Korean Culture and Freedom Foundation (KCFF) — a group based in Washington, D.C. that was run by a top figure in South Korea's state intelligence agency, Colonel Bo Hi Pak, who also served as the “principle evangelist” of cult leader Rev. Sun-Myung Moon of the Unification Church.
This new Moonie iteration of Radio Free Asia was controlled by the South Korean government, including the country’s own CIA, the "KCIA." It enjoyed high-level support from within the first Nixon Administration and even featured then-Congressman Gerald Ford on its board. According to an FBI file on Rev. Moon, Radio Free Asia “at the height of the Vietnam war produced anti-communist programs in Washington and beamed them into China, North Korea and North Vietnam.”
Radio Free Asia got busted in a widespread corruption scandal in the late 1970s, when the South Korean government was investigated for using the Moonie cult to influence US public opinion in order to keep the US military engaged against North Korea. Back in the 1970s, the Moonies were the most notorious cult in the United States, accused of abducting and "brainwashing" countless American youths. How it was that the CIA's Radio Free Asia was handed off to the Moonies was never quite explained, but given laws banning the CIA (or the KCIA) from engaging in psychological warfare in the US, the obvious thing to do was to bury Radio Free Asia long enough for everyone to forget about it.
No sooner had Radio Free Asia vanished amid scandal than it reappeared again, Terminator-like, in the 1990s — this time as a legit “independent” nonprofit wholly controlled by the BBG and funded by Congress.
Although this latest version of Radio Free Asia was supposed to be a completely new organization and was no longer as covert and B-movie spooky, its objectives and tactics remained exactly the same: To this day it beams propaganda into the same Communist countries, including North Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, China, and Burma, and fiddles around in the same sorts of spooky adventures.
For instance: In 2011, The New York Times revealed that Radio Free Asia, along with the State Department, was involved in burying cellphones inside North Korea on its border with China, so that North Koreans could use the RFA cellphones to report to the West on conditions inside their country. That same year, following the death of Kim Jong Il, Radio Free Asia “kicked into 24/7 emergency mode” to beam non-stop coverage of the death into North Korea in the hopes of triggering a mass uprising. BBG officials clung to the hope that, bit by bit, Radio Free Asia’s stream of anti-Communist propaganda would bring democracy and freedom to North Korea. They like to cite a study showing that “elite” defectors from North Korea were increasingly listening to Radio Free Asia, as proof that their efforts are working.
Radio Free Asia and Anti-government Hacktivists
Which brings us up to the present, when the Broadcasting Board of Governors, Radio Free Asia and its offshoot, the Open Technology Fund, find themselves in bed with many of the very same privacy activist figures whom the public regards as the primary adversaries of outfits like Radio Free Asia and the BBG. And it's technology that brings together these supposed adversaries — the US National Security State on the one hand, and "hacktivist", "anti-government" libertarian privacy activists on the other:
“I’m proud to be a volunteer OTF advisor,” declared Cory Doctorow, editor of BoingBoing and a well-known libertarian anti-surveillance activist/author.
"Happy to have joined the Open Technology Fund's new advisory council,” tweeted Jillian York, the Director for International Freedom of Expression at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. (York recently admitted that the OTF's "Internet freedom" agenda is, at its core, about regime change, but bizarrely argued that it didn't matter.)
In 2012, just a few months after Radio Free Asia's 24/7 propaganda blitz into North Korea failed to trigger regime change, RFA sent folks from the Tor Project — including core developer Jacob Appelbaum (pictured above) —  into Burma, just as the military dictatorship was finally agreeing to hand political power over to US-backed pro-democracy politicians. The stated purpose of Appelbaum's RFA-funded expedition was to probe Burma’s Internet system from within and collect information on its telecommunications infrastructure — which was then used to compile a report for Western politicians and “international investors” interested in penetrating Burma’s recently opened markets. Here you can see Appelbaum’s visa — published in the report as evidence of what you needed to do to buy a SIM card in Burma.
Burma is a curious place for American anti-surveillance activists funded by Radio Free Asia to travel to, considering that it has long been a target of US regime-change campaigns. In fact, the guru of pro-Western "color revolutions," Gene Sharp, wrote his famous guide to non-violent revolutions, “From Dictatorship to Democracy”, initially as a guide for Burma’s opposition movement, in order to help it overthrow the military junta in the late 1980s. Sharp had crossed into Burma illegally to train opposition activists there — all under the protection and sponsorship of the US government and one Col. Robert Helvey, a military intelligence officer.
Jacob Appelbaum's willingness to work directly for an old CIA cutout like Radio Free Asia in a nation long targeted for regime-change is certainly odd, to say the least. Particularly since Appelbaum made a big public show recently claiming that, though it pains him that Tor takes so much money from the US military, he would never take money from something as evil as the CIA.
Ignorance is bliss.
Appelbaum's financial relationships with various CIA spinoffs like Radio Free Asia and the BBG go further. From 2012 through 2013, Radio Free Asia transferred about $1.1 million to Tor in the form of grants and contracts. This million dollars comes on top of another $3.4 million Tor received from Radio Free Asia's parent agency, the BBG, starting from 2007.
But Tor and Appelbaum are not the only ones happy to take money from the BBG/RFA.
Take computer researcher/privacy activist Harry Halpin, for example. Back in November of 2014, Halpin smeared me as a conspiracy theorist, and then falsely accused me and Pando of being funded by the CIA — simply because I reported on Tor’s government funding. Turns out that Halpin's next-generation secure communications outfit, called LEAP, took more than $1 million from Radio Free Asia’s Open Technology Fund. Somewhat ironically, LEAP's technology powers the VPN services of RiseUp.Net, the radical anarchist tech collective that provides activists with email and secure communications tools (and forces you to sign a thinly veiled anti-Communist pledge before giving you an account).
Then there's the ACLU’s Christopher Soghoian. A few months ago, he had viciously attacked me and Pando for reporting on Tor's US government funding. But just the other day, Soghoian went on Democracy Now, and in the middle of a segment criticizing the U.S. government's runaway hacking and surveillance programs, recommended that people use a suite of encrypted text and voice apps funded by the very same intelligence-connected U.S. government apparatus he was denouncing. Specifically, Soghoian recommended apps made by Open Whisper Systems, which got $1.35 million from Radio Free Asia's Open Technology Fund from 2013 through 2014.
He told Amy Goodman:
"These are best-of-breed free applications made by top security researchers, and actually subsidized by the State Department and by the U.S. taxpayer. You can download these tools today. You can make encrypted telephone calls. You can send encrypted text messages. You can really up your game and protect your communications.”
When Goodman wondered why the U.S. government would fund privacy apps, he acknowledged that this technology is a soft-power weapon of U.S. empire but then gave a very muddled and naive answer:
AMY GOODMAN: But maybe the U.S. government has a way to break in.
CHRISTOPHER SOGHOIAN: Well, you know, it’s possible that they’ve discovered flaws, but, you know, they have—the U.S. government hasn’t been writing the software. They’ve been giving grants to highly respected research teams, security researchers and academics, and these tools are about the best that we have. You know, I agree. I think it’s a little bit odd that, you know, the State Department’s funding this, but these tools aren’t getting a lot of funding from other places. And so, as long as the State Department is willing to write them checks, I’m happy that the Tor Project and Whisper Systems and these other organizations are cashing them. They are creating great tools and great technology that can really improve our security. And I hope that they’ll get more money in the future.
It's convenient and nice to believe that one hand of the U.S. National Security State doesn't know what the other hand is doing — especially when the livelihoods of you and your colleagues depends on it. But as the long and dark covert intelligence history of the Broadcasters Board of Governors and Radio Free Asia so clearly shows, this thinking is naive and wrong. It also shows just how effectively the U.S. National Security State brought its opposition into the fold.
You'd think that anti-surveillance activists like Chris Soghoian, Jacob Appelbaum, Cory Doctorow and Jillian York would be staunchly against outfits like BBG and Radio Free Asia, and the role they have played — and continue to play — in working with defense and corporate interests to project and impose U.S. power abroad. Instead, these radical activists have knowingly joined the club, and in doing so, have become willing pitchmen for a wing of the very same U.S. National Security State they so adamantly oppose.
Related articles below
Rev. Moon Aide Concedes KCIA Sent Him $3,000 (1978)
On the KCIA Connection
United States Congressional investigation of UC
Inside Moon’s Washington (1989)
President Park Said to Direct Lobbying (1978)
Worldwide Propaganda Network Built by the C.I.A.
Korean Bribe Figure Tied to Bank Inquiry (1977) OPCW leaks expose ‘criminal’ Syria cover-up — and US media is silent
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bobabestie49 · 1 year
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All of these link to either one of my posts on twitter or a thread I made on twitter or tumblr, also my twitter is private so if you don't follow me you won't be able to access any of them, sorry.
Made this post so that I won't have to scroll for 5 minutes on my pinned post thread of threads to find what I'm looking for, and for people (who I narcissistically believe exist) that actually want to access these thoughts of mine.
Collection of threads where I annotate books/articles I'm reading
In-Progress books
"Compromised Campus: The Collaboration of Universities with the Intelligence Community, 1945-1955" by Sigmund Diamond
Hinterland: America’s New Landscape of Class and Conflict by Phil A. Neel (2018)
"The Wretched of the Earth" by Frantz Fanon
"Jesus: A Life in Class Conflict" by James Crossley and Robert J. Myles
"The New Spirit of Capitalism" (New Edition) by Boltanski and Chiapello
"Elite Capture: How the Powerful Took Over Identity Politics (And Everything Else)" by Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
"An Antonio Gramsci Reader: Selected Writings, 1916-1935", Edited by David Forgacs
"Sex Among Allies" by Katherine Moon
"The Chinese in America : A Narrative History" by Iris Chang
"Caliban And The Witch" by Silvia Federicci
"Riding the Wave: Sweden's Integration into the Imperialist World System" by Torkil Lauesen (anti-sw*den aktion)
"Sinologism: An alternative to Orientalism and postcolonialism" by Ming Dong Gu (Don't agree at ALL with the author's assessment that China has not been colonized. Not sure when I'll pick this book back up.)
"Neocolonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism" by Kwame Nkrumah (No offense but this is kind of dry but I do intend to finish it)
"The Roots of American Individualism: Political Myth in the Age of Jackson" by Alex Zakaras (Do look forward to digging into this one whenever my interest in the topic peaks)
"Model-Minority Imperialism" by Victor Bascara (not really liking so far but I just started)
"Atrocity Fabrication and Its Consequences: "How Fake news Shapes World Order" by A.B. Abrams
Completed books/articles/films
On Zionist Literature by Ghassan Kanafani [COMPLETED]
Zionist Colonialism in Palestine by Dr. Fayez Sayegh [COMPLETED] (short and sweet only 72 pages you should read it)
How to Blow Up a Pipeline by Andreas Malm [COMPLETED]
The Jakarta Method by Vincent Bevins [COMPLETED]
The Women Outside [COMPLETED]
"Why Not Genocide? Anti-Chinese Violence in Aceh, 1965-1966" by Jess Melvin [COMPLETED]
"American Exception: Empire and the Deep State" by Aaron Good [COMPLETED]
"The Case of The Gang of Four" by Chi Hsin [COMPLETED]
"Surveillance Valley: the Secret Military History of the Internet" by Yasha Levine [COMPLETED]
"The Apprentice's Sorcerer: Liberal Tradition and Fascism" by Ishay Landa [COMPLETED]
"Maoism: A Critique From The Left", edited by Prasenjit Bose [COMPLETED]
“They Looked Askance”: American Indians and Chinese in the Nineteenth Century U.S. West [COMPLETED]
"Inventing Reality" by Michael Parenti [COMPLETED]
Collection of threads/posts of hot takes
Specifically China-related
Thread on the roots of sinophobia
Thread on the Chinese coolie slave trade
Displacement of yellow peril tropes onto China
"Han Supremacy" vs. White Supremacy
Anti-China sentiment in the Soviet Union
Snobbish/arrogant Chinese
Why are westerners so obsessed with the governance of China?!?!?
(This happens for most Asians but this thread is specifically for China) The need to make China and Chinese people into a monolith
General Racism/Orientalism
Deep Racism
Fetishism of colonial frailty
Scholarship and imperialism
Orientalist Realism
Observation: propagandists act like paparazzi
On the destruction of the orient
Similarly, on the shielding of genocidal hatred of the orient
Orientalist fascination
Potential psychological roots of orientalist/sinophobic realism
Demonizing Asian leaders to the point where they aren't seen as human beings that live in space and time
I later call this "orientalist unreality"
Miscellaneous
Imperfect mothers
Collection of threads on the devaluation of artists
Another thread on the devaluation of artists
Yet another thread on the devaluation of artists
THREE threads on the western urge to consume snuff films of Chinese workers, color coded links to help you decipher between the different links: thread 1, comparison with lynching postcards and murderabilia from Abu Ghraib; thread 2; thread 3 on how this is a form of catharsis for the insecure white westerner.
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endquire · 10 months
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Watch "Russia's Coup With Mark Ames & Yasha Levine, The War On Free Speech With Omali Yeshitela" on YouTube
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alanshemper · 7 months
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What is interesting to me about the flag is the corollary question: Why has mainstream Ukrainian society adopted this symbol for patriotism? Why the flag of a genocidal paramilitary group and not something else?
All this got me thinking…
…and as far I can tell, the answer is pretty simple: Because there is nothing else.
The end of Soviet Ukraine and the collapse of Soviet ideology created an identity vacuum. The only alternative identity that was organized enough and developed enough to offer a solution in the midst of post-Soviet identity confusion and crisis was one that was was developed by Ukrainian nationalists. They had fashioned it for themselves and “their” country while in exile in the U.S. and Canada and Europe. It was a national mythology that celebrated and honored all the old fascist heroes and movements and and parties and symbols, but erased everything unpleasant or off-putting about them.
The Nazi collaboration, the genocidal history, the murder of Poles and Jews, the Ukrainian fuhrer stuff — everything that was off-putting and offensive in their new post-WWII environment in Canada and U.S. — got spliced out. It was replaced by things that were in high demand: ideas about democracy, liberation from communism, self-determination, anti-authoritarianism.
In this rewritten history, Ukrainian nationalists hadn’t run on a Hiterlite sense of the nation, nor had they gunned for a racially pure Ukraine just as Hitler was trying to doing in Germany. No, they were just anti-communist patriots killing Russians and doing whatever they needed to do to liberate their country from Bolshevik oppression. And anything bad that might have happened to some Jews or Poles? Well that was just a Bolshevik smear. The killings were work of sneaky communist false flag operations designed to make Ukrainians look bad.
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canchewread · 5 years
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Editor’s note: I have spent the better part of the past five days in bed with some sort of terrible flu; I’m cold, most of my body aches in some way or another and I don’t want to eat or drink anything that isn’t piping hot and at least semi-liquid. This is obviously *not* how I wanted to start my New Year; I didn’t even get to drink on NYE. I frankly shouldn’t be writing so if this post sucks, y’all are going to have to bear with me. Finally, I’d like to set Griftopia aside for a few days until I feel better because I was going somewhere with all of those posts collectively and I’m way too burnt out to finish that in this state.
Today’s passage comes from the conclusion of one of my favorite books released this past year, Yasha Levine’s “Surveillance Valley: The Secret Military History of the Internet.” Please note that this quotation is somewhat truncated (as identified by the ellipsis) because there’s only so much writing you can fit into a 1K pixel info-graphic - you can find the full quotation on pages 268-269 of the hardcover, 1st edition of “Surveillance Valley” from Public Affairs.
Although the book was mostly ignored, or even panned by some in the (astoundingly sycophantic and inbred) mainstream Tech media for failing to provide a “smoking gun”, the reality is that Levine’s central arguments about the history of the internet and modern private surveillance are undeniably true and when the author veers off into theory, his ideas are supported just about as well as an independent journalist who doesn’t have Pentagon clearances could possibly have done. If anything, where Levine gets himself into trouble is when the limits of his technical knowledge cause him to very occasionally overstate his otherwise completely compelling case.
The book itself is effectively divided into two parts, with the first part looking at the history and true surveillance role of the internet and the second part focusing one what that means for our modern privacy rights. Spoiler: the conclusions are indeed, very grim.
Levine’s central thesis is that the internet itself has always been a military surveillance tool developed for, and funded by, a public-private partnership between the Pentagon, academic research labs and (now giant) private tech companies; companies who are themselves irrevocably intertwined with western intel agencies through their (often under reported but unarguably ongoing) role as military-intelligence contractors. Taken in this context, Levine essentially argues that corporate-backed harvesting, sorting and sale of massive quantities of your personal data fundamentally represents a highly lucrative self-funding mechanism for this now-gargantuan public-private surveillance partnership.
While this idea will probably keep most readers up at night, Levine’s careful tracing of both the history of network technology development and the deviation that development took from the quasi-libertarian “freedom” mythology used to market the internet, does a remarkable job of supporting that thesis. From the jungles of Vietnam and ARPANET through to the Snowden NSA leaks and Wikileaks “Vault 7″ disclosures, the author’s argument seems sufficiently borne out by both the historical record and the end result we find in an internet-powered world today. At this point, does it really even matter if these intertwined relationships between tech companies and intelligence that have produced our modern surveillance state are what the military-intelligence complex desired from the very beginning, or if it was merely a happy accident as the common mythology goes?
There are of course those who argue that Levine’s revelations in the first portion of Surveillance Valley are “old news” but for someone (such as myself) familiar with some, but not all of the history involved here, even this portion of the book was extremely eye opening. Furthermore, I can say with absolute certainty that a casual look at the way the internet is marketed to the vast majority of people in society will quickly reveal that tech companies are eager to keep the surveillance aspects of their business and the military history of the internet, as quiet as possible. Throughout the book, the author’s breezy writing style and refusal to get bogged down in a world of military acronyms and technical jargon make Surveillance Valley a surprisingly accessible work, even for a relative neophyte observer of internet surveillance.
It is however in the final portion of the book where Levine turns the world of online privacy on its head by examining the relationships between the famous online privacy advocates, tech corporations and western governments who have come together to promote the “Internet Freedom” movement.
Although some (even on the left) have taken this as a critique of Tor, Signal, Edward Snowden and the movement as a whole, a careful reading of Levine’s work reveals a far more nuanced discussion.
What the author is really criticizing is a general privacy culture that largely operates with a false sense of security because it asks too little and trusts too much. A culture in which it is somehow inappropriate to question why massive tech companies whose business model is *literally* corporate surveillance would funnel so much money into an emerging internet privacy movement and free tools to fight online surveillance. A culture which sells the idea that anyone, even the computer-illiterate, can obtain privacy by using a program funded by one branch of the government, at the exact same time as other, more sinister branches are devoted to obliterating that privacy. Indeed, the fact that these questions are so frequently framed as accusations by the very activists who genuinely want to fight internet surveillance, would seemingly to justify Levine’s attempts to ask them in their own right.
In the end, it’s far less important whether or not the corruption of this online privacy movement has already happened, than it is to understand just how easily it could happen without our knowledge - especially in a world where privacy activists, tech companies and intelligence services are intertwined like so much digital chicken-wire. And on that account, Levine’s work is unquestionably on target.
- nina illingworth
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sataniccapitalist · 6 years
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a-letheia2020 · 3 years
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Yasha Levine - “Surveillance valley”
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kaijulady · 5 years
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From the article:
“According to journalist Yasha Levine, who researched eBay’s formation for his book Surveillance Valley, the company began assembling an internal police and intelligence agency comprised of former FBI agents in 1999 to spy on eBay users and track down fraud. Levine told MintPress:
‘By the mid-2000s, when Google was still a small company and Facebook barely existed, eBay had built this global private division into a behemoth: 2,000 employees and more than a thousand private investigators, who worked closely with intelligence and law enforcement agencies in every country where it operated — including the United States, Canada, Brazil, Mexico, Malaysia, India, Russia, Czech Republic and Poland. EBay was proud of its close relationship with law enforcement, touting efforts to arrest 1,000 people a year and boasting that it had handed over user data to the NSA and FBI without requiring subpoenas or court orders.’
By 2015, eBay was a corporate behemoth worth nearly $69 billion. Omidyar leveraged his wealth and reputation as one of Silicon Valley’s premier innovators to forge close ties with President Barack Obama, visiting him more times in the White House than did tech-giant rivals like Google CEO Eric Schmidt.”
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whatisonthemoon · 1 year
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Radio Free Asia (and Radio of Free Asia)
Excerpted from Internet Privacy, Funded By Spies by Yasha Levine (March 3, 2016)
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The CIA launched Radio Free Asia (RFA) in 1951 as an extension of its global anti-Communist propaganda radio network. RFA beamed its signal into mainland China from a transmitter in Manila, and its operations were based on the earlier Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberation From Bolshevism model.
The CIA quickly discovered that their plan to foment political unrest in China had one major flaw: the Chinese were too poor to own radios.
Here’s a bit from a fantastic three-page spread published by The New York Times in 1977, investigating the CIA’s role in global propaganda efforts, including Radio Free Asia:
The Asia Foundation was headed for years by the late Robert Blum, who, several sources said, resigned from the C.I.A. to take it over. The foundation provided cover for at least one C.I.A. operative and carried out a variety of media-related ventures, including a program, begun in 1955, of selecting and paying the expenses of Asian journalists for a year of study in Harvard's prestigious Neiman Fellowship program….
It was only after Radio Free Asia's transmitters were operating, according to sources familiar with the case, that the C.I.A. realized that there were almost no radio receivers in private hands in mainland China. An emergency plan was drawn up.
Balloons, holding small radios tuned to Radio Free Asia's frequency, were lofted toward the mainland from the island of Taiwan, where the Chinese Nationalists had fled after the Communist takeover of the mainland in 1949. The plan was abandoned when the balloons were blown back to Taiwan across the Formosa Strait.
The CIA supposedly shuttered Radio Free Asia in the mid-1950s, but another Radio Free Asia reappeared a decade later, this time funded through a CIA-Moonie outfit called the Korean Culture and Freedom Foundation (KCFF) — a group based in Washington, D.C. that was run by a top figure in South Korea's state intelligence agency, Colonel Bo Hi Pak, who also served as the “principle evangelist” of cult leader Rev. Sun-Myung Moon of the Unification Church.
This new Moonie iteration of Radio Free Asia was controlled by the South Korean government, including the country’s own CIA, the "KCIA." It enjoyed high-level support from within the first Nixon Administration and even featured then-Congressman Gerald Ford on its board. According to an FBI file on Rev. Moon, Radio Free Asia “at the height of the Vietnam war produced anti-communist programs in Washington and beamed them into China, North Korea and North Vietnam.”
Radio Free Asia got busted in a widespread corruption scandal in the late 1970s, when the South Korean government was investigated for using the Moonie cult to influence US public opinion in order to keep the US military engaged against North Korea. Back in the 1970s, the Moonies were the most notorious cult in the United States, accused of abducting and "brainwashing" countless American youths. How it was that the CIA's Radio Free Asia was handed off to the Moonies was never quite explained, but given laws banning the CIA (or the KCIA) from engaging in psychological warfare in the US, the obvious thing to do was to bury Radio Free Asia long enough for everyone to forget about it.
No sooner had Radio Free Asia vanished amid scandal than it reappeared again, Terminator-like, in the 1990s — this time as a legit “independent” nonprofit wholly controlled by the BBG and funded by Congress.
Although this latest version of Radio Free Asia was supposed to be a completely new organization and was no longer as covert and B-movie spooky, its objectives and tactics remained exactly the same: To this day it beams propaganda into the same Communist countries, including North Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, China, and Burma, and fiddles around in the same sorts of spooky adventures.
For instance: In 2011, The New York Times revealed that Radio Free Asia, along with the State Department, was involved in burying cellphones inside North Korea on its border with China, so that North Koreans could use the RFA cellphones to report to the West on conditions inside their country. That same year, following the death of Kim Jong Il, Radio Free Asia “kicked into 24/7 emergency mode” to beam non-stop coverage of the death into North Korea in the hopes of triggering a mass uprising. BBG officials clung to the hope that, bit by bit, Radio Free Asia’s stream of anti-Communist propaganda would bring democracy and freedom to North Korea. They like to cite a study showing that “elite” defectors from North Korea were increasingly listening to Radio Free Asia, as proof that their efforts are working.
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