Drowning in Information: NSA Revelations From 262 Spy Documents
Highlights from 2004 editions of the internal NSA newsletter SIDtoday also show NSA support of the FBI and OPSEC slip-ups by NSA employees.
Whistleblower Edward Snowden provided founders of The Intercept with documents from the National Security Agency and its counterparts around the world. Here are the stories we were able to publish as a result.
Highlights from 2004 editions of the internal NSA newsletter SIDtoday also show NSA support of the FBI and OPSEC slip-ups by NSA employees.
GCHQ and NSA have begun intercepting calls made using on-board cellular technology, according to Snowden documents reviewed by Le Monde in partnership with The Intercept.
The NSA has operated a top-secret surveillance program out of an iconic AT&T building in Manhattan, documents indicate.
Top-secret documents expose the controversial role of a massive NSA surveillance base in England's countryside.
A never-before-published NSA manual makes it clear that malware released by a hacker group this week came from the spy agency.
How a middle-aged pro-democracy activist was falsely accused of terrorism and placed on a top-secret NSA surveillance list.
The NSA spies on NGOs to help the U.S. dig up information on how targets respond to disease and weapons of mass destruction.
The Intercept is releasing a batch of articles from the NSA's internal news website, SIDtoday, for the second time. Here is a look at the most interesting revelations.
Hunting human targets who used Tor, redirecting internet traffic from entire countries — these were among the "ridiculously cool" projects undertaken by an NSA hacker who spoke with <em>The Intercept</em>.
A secret report warned that British spies may have put lives at risk because their surveillance systems were sweeping up more data than could be analyzed.
This is not a paywall.
By signing up, I agree to receive emails from The Intercept and to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.