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Visible Limits. NSA Mass Surveillance Snowden Documents Revealing Scope of Global Spying Operations

Par : Tabitha Blackmere
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  • Nombre de pages210
  • FormatePub
  • ISBN978-3-565-45567-6
  • EAN9783565455676
  • Date de parution23/05/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Taille2 Mo
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House

Résumé

This book examines how visible limits emerge when secret surveillance operations are exposed, using the NSA mass surveillance revelations from the Snowden documents to explore how global spying reshaped perceptions of state oversight, digital privacy, and institutional accountability. The first mechanism involves the architecture of information flow, where intelligence agencies collected metadata and communication content through systems such as PRISM and fiber-optic interception programs, relying on legal authority and cooperation from telecommunications and technology providers.
This structure transformed private communications into analyzable data, revealing how legal frameworks and corporate data-sharing practices expanded surveillance capabilities. The second mechanism concerns decision-making hierarchies, where surveillance activities operated through layered systems of authorization involving intelligence courts, executive directives, and congressional oversight committees.
These structures determined which data streams were collected, retained, analyzed, and distributed, shaping both operational reach and the perceived legitimacy of surveillance programs. The third mechanism examines incentive structures surrounding secrecy and disclosure. Intelligence agencies pursued expanded capabilities in response to evolving threats, corporations balanced compliance with market trust, and whistleblowers such as Edward Snowden released classified material to provoke public debate about privacy and state power.
These competing incentives transformed oversight mechanisms into both constraints on surveillance and catalysts for reform. Together, these dynamics reveal how exposure of hidden surveillance systems forced governments, corporations, and citizens to reconsider the balance between security, transparency, and personal privacy in the digital age.