How Mark Klein told the EFF about Room 641A [book excerpt]

(mitpress.mit.edu)

171 points | by the-mitr 2 hours ago

9 comments

  • rdevilla 26 minutes ago
    Entire generations of people who were never alive to remember a world where their every movement and utterance was not being tracked by the advertising/surveillance industrial complex.

    It's just considered normal now. The west is very sick.

    • railgunmerlin 22 minutes ago
      Are we pretending this isn't a global phenomenon?
      • rdevilla 15 minutes ago
        Overseas, cash is king. In Canada, and also in San Francisco, you can only tap your credit card because cash carries COVID [0].

        [0] https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/cash-coronavirus-questions-an...

        • mcsniff 10 minutes ago
          If a shop won't accept cash, I just leave.
          • rdevilla 10 minutes ago
            You weren't transacting at all in Toronto during COVID then.

            This is the endgame of surveillance capitalism: submission, or opting out. Few can, or care enough to, do the latter.

  • rsingel 32 minutes ago
    This is a great behind-the-scenes look at the NSA-Hepting case.

    Can't wait to read Cohn's book.

    Also RIP Mark Klein. A true American hero who never tried to turn his whistle-blowing into becoming a celebrity.

  • jperoutek 27 minutes ago
    Didn't see it in the actual text of the article, but as a caption of one of the images. The actual book this is excerpted from is Privacy's Defender by Cindy Cohn https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262051248/privacys-defender/
  • tedd4u 1 hour ago
    This is literally old news - contemporaneous with Snowden, Prism, etc. in early 2000s. Go read about the current Section 702 / FISA authorization renewal battle about which Senator Wyden recently said:

        “I strongly believe that this matter can and should be declassified and that Congress needs to debate it openly before Section 702 is reauthorized,” Wyden said in a Senate floor speech last month. “In fact, when it is eventually declassified, the American people will be stunned that it took so long and that Congress has been debating this authority with insufficient information.”
    
    
    Some articles:

    https://time.com/article/2026/04/27/fisa-fbi-spying-surveill...

    https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/04/trump-congress-...

  • throwworhtthrow 1 hour ago
    Beware, this is a book excerpt rather than a standalone blog post, so it ends on a cliffhanger. Still a fun read.
    • onei 1 hour ago
      There's more info about the outcome in [1]. Long story short, the US government passed a law (whilst this case was being litigated) that let AT&T off the hook.

      [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hepting_v._AT%26T

    • dang 35 minutes ago
      I've put that detail in the title above - perhaps it will help nudge the thread more ontopicward.
  • GeekyBear 34 minutes ago
    The problem is that modern Americans politicize everything.

    There was a short period at the end of the Bush years when this was a big deal, but as soon as the gaslighting was coming from both political teams, it became a non-issue politically.

    > President Obama defended the U.S. government's surveillance programs, telling NBC's Jay Leno on Tuesday that: "There is no spying on Americans."

    "We don't have a domestic spying program," Obama said on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. "What we do have is some mechanisms that can track a phone number or an email address that is connected to a terrorist attack. ... That information is useful."

    https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2013/08/06/209692380...

    • krunck 28 minutes ago
      That's the what's required to make propaganda and manipulation work the best.
    • Spooky23 19 minutes ago
      Ironically from the perspective of 2026, the actual "conservative" conservatives were the key opponents. The "total information awareness" and national ID efforts were really killed by the conservatives in congress. The "neocons" and moderate/conservative democrats were mostly fine with both.
  • firebot 46 minutes ago
    Kevin Mitnick also discovered this.. ages ago.
  • mannanj 1 hour ago
    So, this is an uncomfortable read and comes from my personal experience. I'm posting this here as I haven't yet found great outlets and support for what I experienced, and this thread seems like a good spot. Open to outreach and support and ideas from people.

    In 2021-2022 I was vocal about the CIA being a terrorist organization (I bet many people adjacently believe similar things and are silent) and this got me attention from them. I posted several things I learned from documentaries and on the web, and from my personal background I think it was enough to trigger something in their system. From that time onwards, people I could best describe as Agents w/behavior that matches what professional interrogators would do kept showing up at public events I was a part of and in the most terrifying scenario also infiltrated my public commune.

    There's an odd history with the FBI and possibly CIA and communes such as Osho the Bagawan (see, Netflix documentary) and I witnessed firsthand how deceptive, harmful and insidious this was. In some cases I believe substances were put in my food and drink, and in the cases matching that my body would later have adverse reactions with the agent's closely observing my behavior and consistently trying to elicit Black Web conversations. I had to flee and colocate to the familiarity of family and friends since, and only recently 3-years later have I been socializing my experience and writing to my congress and house representatives. That said, that was a month ago and they have yet to provide any substantive relief or support - I asked for assistance and guidance with investigating the intelligence community for misconduct as when they're doing this to Americans without any accountability, it undermines the integrity of our Country and I believe our national security. It brings into question who they are really serving. I'm no terrorist, even if I call you one and my skin color is brown and matches what the media-funded-by-the-CIA tells you to believe. I want this story documented and heard, believe what you will, though I leave you with the story that "We know our intelligence community does unethical things, its part of what we've given them the responsibility to do so we ourselves don't have to, and now when that unethical thing has happened to you or someone you know what do you do? What do you do when everyone you turn to for help gaslights you and tells you that surely did not happen? Find proof that the organization whose job it is to go undetected, did indeed do that thing to you." I ask for some empathy and understanding, please.

    • 2ndorderthought 57 minutes ago
      Woah. First of all I hope you are aware there are multiple mental illnesses that can manifest with feelings of paranoia etc. like text book.

      Secondly. I doubt any agency is going to hurt or drug you over that. Investigate you? Maybe. But its not worth the money.

      Just keep in mind all the dangerous people who these groups investigated that they did nothing about that went on to do bad stuff. Although I'm sure these groups do take threats seriously, I don't think you are a threat.

      I'm worried about your mental health is all. I'm not saying that in a way like "you sound suicidal" because you don't at all. You just sound paranoid. Wishing you the best brother

      • bladegash 24 minutes ago
        Yep, my thoughts as well. And I say this as someone who not only has a chronic mental health disorder that sometimes manifests as paranoia, but someone who used to work in the IC for 10 years (it has been a while since then).

        Is it possible? Sure. But it is very unlikely that much resources and effort would be devoted to someone that made a few critical comments.

        • 2ndorderthought 17 minutes ago
          Yea I mean there are hundreds of thousands of ex punk rockers with "F [insert 3 letter agency here]" on their leather jackets and whatever. I don't think these types of people are that soft skinned they'd chase down everyone who said screw them.

          I post on here all the time reminding people that tech companies are defense companies. Because I think it's important people remember what that implies.

          No one is chasing me around or anything. At least I don't think so. I'm not saying put yourself in danger for your views. But I am saying, the world isn't as scary as anyone's brain can make it be.

          These are tough times. Managing stress and mental health is hard.

          Pretty cool of you to share your experiences bladegash. I always thought they wouldn't let people with mental health conditions into those environments. Shows what I know.

          • bladegash 9 minutes ago
            > Pretty cool of you to share your experiences bladegash. I always thought they wouldn't let people with mental health conditions into those environments. Shows what I know.

            Some mental health conditions, like mine, don’t really show up until later in life and it is at least part of the reason I no longer work in that field :).

            However, things are well managed now and I have a good career in the private sector!

      • DubiousPusher 25 minutes ago
        I would caution outright categorizing this as paranoia stemming from a mental illness. The problem with delusional paranoia and justifiable paranoia is that clinically they can present the same.

        > Just keep in mind all the dangerous people who these groups investigated that they did nothing about that went on to do bad stuff.

        There are numerous people that America's intelligence agencies have intimidated, harassed and yes drugged for similar reasons.

        OP, I hope you have been seen by a mental healthcare professional. They can help you determine the nature of these experiences. I hope you have extensively documented these experiences. Sharing that documentation with your family or others who you know to be sober in judgement is probably the only mechanism you have to distinguish if your experiences are based in reality.

        • 2ndorderthought 15 minutes ago
          That's fair. I like the way you phrased this. It's a roadmap to staying and feeling safe but also possibly getting some help if it makes sense. Everyone needs a little help once in a while, and society right now is very isolating.
      • cindyllm 54 minutes ago
        [dead]
    • mannanj 1 hour ago
      2nd post here. When I share posts matching particular phrases and labels, on HN, I've noticed them get downvoted as though by an algorithm. Would anyone be surprised if the agencies are themselves running bots, algorithms and accounts to affect visibility of discourse on threads like these?
      • beedeebeedee 1 hour ago
        That could be, but you should also be aware that many people will have the knee jerk reaction to reject statements like yours as being paranoid and delusional. Assuredly sometimes that is an appropriate response, but the drive to immediately reject narratives like yours is to protect ourselves from the doubt that validating your story would elicit. We do not want to believe those things are happening to those around us (even if we accept that they might be in general), and that is a fact that these organizations take advantage of. I wish you luck either way. Stay calm and suspend belief. We are human, and not only do we not know most things, the most important things we cannot know. You can build a composure that allows for many things to be true and not fully know which and still proceed. Otherwise you might be racked with doubt about who and how things appear and have trouble moving forward from this.
      • rkomorn 1 hour ago
        > as though by an algorithm

        How can you tell the difference between an algorithm and topics genuinely being consistently unpopular, though?

        > Would anyone be surprised if the agencies are themselves running bots, algorithms and accounts to affect visibility of discourse on threads like these?

        On HN specifically? Yeah.

        On actually popular platforms? No.

        • direwolf20 47 minutes ago
          I run a HN voting algorithm and opinion manipulation system across a few hundred accounts - only a few on any individual post. I use residential proxies to prevent correlation. The account I'm using right now to confess this to you is one that's already been burned.

          Downvoting this comment is funny, because it's a burned account anyway, so not hurting me, and you want less people to know this fact about HN?

          • alwa 41 minutes ago
            Do you represent an agency?
            • Karrot_Kream 0 minutes ago
              Try it, it's really not that hard. I feel bad saying this and I don't do anything like this anymore but I did make a few accounts behind residential IPs that posted HN popular sentiments on topics that were actually factually incorrect and got a lot of upvotes pretty quickly. I stopped because I felt icky with how corrosive the whole thing could end up being. This was a while ago so not sure if new user sign up has become more difficult.

              It turns out that open web forums are mostly emotional places and often the most inflammatory or in group opinions rise to the top. With that knowledge, manipulation isn't that tough.

          • rkomorn 45 minutes ago
            Not sure what your point is?
  • flordiaman2026 1 hour ago
    Same stuff different day. The United State's laws do not allow for direct domestic spying or something to that effect so they use Five Eyes anglosphere intelligence alliance marketplace as a loop hole. Since Reed Elsevier plc aka "RELX" has purchased LexisNexis who had purchased Seisint, Inc and the technology for Flordia's Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange Program "MATRIX", which was shut down due to privacy concerns by congress, it is only logical that the data aggregation technology is being used in full force now. There seems to be no other way but to allow 100% technology and communication introspection by the government to stop terrorism.