The Frontline documentary includes a clip from Zero Dark Thirty in which a CIA torturer yells at an al Qaeda prisoner, “When you lie to me, I hurt you!” A repurposing of that line would hold true for the government and the American public — when it lies to us, it hurts us.
RT @trevortimm: “Zero Dark Thirty Was Filled With CIA Lies” | @FrontlinePBS documentary tonight details how the CIA seduced Hollywood
The documentary portrays the Kathryn Bigelow movie, which purports to be a definitive account, as a skewed view that was heavily influenced by the CIA and its press office. The agency had given the filmmakers extraordinary access to classified details about the operation that they didn’t otherwise hand out to journalists. “A lot of other people who covered the beat like I did in that search for bin Laden—we didn’t get close to that kind of cooperation from the agency on telling the inside story,” veteran Washington Post intelligence reporter Greg Miller told Frontline. The documentary is short on news and revelations. But it concisely lays out the the dueling narratives between the CIA’s version of its so-called “rendition, detention, and interrogation” program, and the Senate Intelligence Commitee’s years-long investigation of the same. The committee’s findings conclude that the agency tortured detainees and failed to come up with useful intelligence about terrorist attacks. If you haven’t been following the minutiae of this now-decade-long controversy, the documentary will bring you up to speed.
Google will build a fleet of robots capable of destroying mankind
Google will build a fleet of robots capable of destroying mankind
SKYNET: Applying Advanced Cloud-based Behavior Analytics
SKYNET: Applying Advanced Cloud-based Behavior Analytics
1975 Article On Internet Spying Not Written By Time Traveler, Probably
The most significant thing about ARPANET is that it permits the instant connection of computers of different types, ranging from the huge ILLIAC IV to the commercial-class models produced by IBM and others. Complex switching techniques allowing these computers to “talk to each other” are considered a major technological break-through. The question that goes on haunting civil libertarians is whether ARPANET can be used for domestic intelligence by being hooked into CIA, FBI, military intelligence, White House, or other computer systems.
RT @jerezim: After my talk abt the Terminator @the_intercept shows Skynet Big UP @term…
RT @jerezim: After my talk abt the Terminator @the_intercept shows Skynet Big UP @term…
RT @e3i5: Disclosure of NSA SKYNET just one day after @jerezim talk on Fighting that Terminator in our Crap!
RT @e3i5: Disclosure of NSA SKYNET just one day after @jerezim talk on Fighting that Terminator in our Crap!
So, the NSA Has an Actual Skynet Program
We’ve suspected it all along—that Skynet, the massive program that brings about world destruction in the Terminator movies, was just a fictionalization of a real program in the hands of the US government. And now it’s confirmed—at least in name.
RT @Gizmodo: The NSA actually named a program “Skynet”
In the Terminator franchise, Skynet is an evil military computer system that launches war on humanity. And at some point, someone in the National Security Agency sat down and thought, “Damn, that’s a sick thing to name a secret system!” Malevolent undertones of aspirations to unchecked aggression be damned, I guess, because Skynet is real.