NSA Mass Surveillance Exposed: No Place to Hide
The journalist Edward Snowden trusted with the NSA documents recounts how PRISM, XKeyscore, and MUSCULAR were built β with the active cooperation of America's largest tech companies β and makes the constitutional and moral case for why privacy resistance is civic duty.
Key Takeaways
- Primary source: Greenwald worked directly with Snowden's leaked NSA documents
- Full documentation of PRISM, XKeyscore, and MUSCULAR surveillance programs
- Exposes corporate-government cooperation in mass data collection
- Constitutional and legal framework for privacy as fundamental right
- Includes full reproduction of key NSA documents
The threat model for serious privacy operatives includes state-level actors β not just commercial data brokers. Greenwald documents the government surveillance layer with primary-source documents that most people still haven't read.
Essential context for anyone operating in protest, journalism, or political organizing environments where government monitoring is a plausible threat.
Glenn Greenwald is a constitutional lawyer, journalist, and co-founder of The Intercept. He was the primary journalist liaison for Edward Snowden's NSA document release, for which The Guardian won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2014.
State-level surveillance threats require physical countermeasures:
Our Mission
InvisibleWare builds and curates counter-surveillance technology for activists, journalists, and anyone who refuses to accept mass monitoring as the cost of participation. We stock adversarial AI-disruption clothing, IR-blocking gear, Faraday equipment, and the essential books that explain why this work matters.
Your privacy is not a preference β it is a prerequisite for political freedom. Your data stays yours.