How free is our freedom of the press? | Trevor Timm

119,683 views ・ 2016-06-14

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So this is James Risen.
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You may know him as the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter
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for The New York Times.
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Long before anybody knew Edward Snowden's name,
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Risen wrote a book in which he famously exposed
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that the NSA was illegally wiretapping the phone calls of Americans.
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But it's another chapter in that book
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that may have an even more lasting impact.
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In it, he describes a catastrophic US intelligence operation
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in which the CIA quite literally handed over blueprints
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of a nuclear bomb to Iran.
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If that sounds crazy, go read it.
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It's an incredible story.
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But you know who didn't like that chapter?
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The US government.
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For nearly a decade afterwards,
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Risen was the subject of a US government investigation
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in which prosecutors demanded that he testify
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against one of his alleged sources.
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And along the way, he became the face for the US government's recent pattern
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of prosecuting whistleblowers and spying on journalists.
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You see, under the First Amendment,
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the press has the right to publish secret information in the public interest.
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But it's impossible to exercise that right if the media can't also gather that news
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and protect the identities of the brave men and women
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who get it to them.
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So when the government came knocking,
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Risen did what many brave reporters have done before him:
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he refused
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and said he'd rather go to jail.
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So from 2007 to 2015,
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Risen lived under the specter of going to federal prison.
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That is, until just days before the trial, when a curious thing happened.
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Suddenly, after years of claiming it was vital to their case,
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the government dropped their demands to Risen altogether.
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It turns out, in the age of electronic surveillance,
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there are very few places reporters and sources can hide.
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And instead of trying and failing to have Risen testify,
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they could have his digital trail testify against him instead.
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So completely in secret and without his consent,
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prosecutors got Risen's phone records.
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They got his email records, his financial and banking information,
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his credit reports,
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even travel records with a list of flights he had taken.
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And it was among this information that they used to convict Jeffrey Sterling,
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Risen's alleged source and CIA whistleblower.
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Sadly, this is only one case of many.
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President Obama ran on a promise to protect whistleblowers,
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and instead, his Justice Department has prosecuted more
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than all other administrations combined.
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Now, you can see how this could be a problem,
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especially because the government considers so much of what it does secret.
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Since 9/11, virtually every important story about national security
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has been the result of a whistleblower coming to a journalist.
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So we risk seeing the press unable to do their job
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that the First Amendment is supposed to protect
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because of the government's expanded ability to spy on everyone.
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But just as technology has allowed the government
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to circumvent reporters' rights,
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the press can also use technology
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to protect their sources even better than before.
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And they can start from the moment they begin speaking with them,
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rather than on the witness stand after the fact.
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Communications software now exists
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that wasn't available when Risen was writing his book,
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and is much more surveillance-resistant than regular emails or phone calls.
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For example, one such tool is SecureDrop,
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an open-source whistleblower submission system
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that was originally created by the late Internet luminary Aaron Swartz,
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and is now developed at the non-profit where I work,
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Freedom of the Press Foundation.
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Instead of sending an email,
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you go to a news organization's website,
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like this one here on The Washington Post.
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From there, you can upload a document or send information
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much like you would on any other contact form.
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It'll then be encrypted and stored on a server
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that only the news organization has access to.
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So the government can no longer secretly demand the information,
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and much of the information they would demand
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wouldn't be available in the first place.
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SecureDrop, though, is really only a small part of the puzzle
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for protecting press freedom in the 21st century.
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Unfortunately, governments all over the world
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are constantly developing new spying techniques
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that put us all at risk.
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And it's up to us going forward to make sure
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that it's not just the tech-savvy whistleblowers,
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like Edward Snowden, who have an avenue for exposing wrongdoing.
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It's just as vital that we protect the next veteran's health care whistleblower
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alerting us to overcrowded hospitals,
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or the next environmental worker
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sounding the alarm about Flint's dirty water,
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or a Wall Street insider
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warning us of the next financial crisis.
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After all, these tools weren't just built to help the brave men and women
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who expose crimes,
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but are meant to protect all of our rights under the Constitution.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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