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Would you like a receipt? http://tube8.in.net/egalastic.com egalastic.com   But the debate will almost certainly change little about the intelligence-industrial complex. The government has little choice but to continue enlisting industry cooperation in surveillance. That’s because the dispersed nature of the threat remains largely the same, and, notwithstanding the image of a Big Brother-like NSA, the agency has still not caught up in data collection. “We’re so analyst-poor in the nation in general that much of the data just sits there and nobody looks at it. There are massive gaps in our ability to actually analyze data,” a former top NSA official says. Despite the aggressive and largely successful assault on “core al-Qaida” overseas, the Boston Marathon bombings in April demonstrated that the NSA can still miss a threat next door on any given day. “The end game here is that power has concentrated in the hands of a few people because of technology, and some people can do some pretty horrific things on their own, whether explosive devices, or chemicals, or biological agents,” says the former official. “Who knows what it is? Everybody’s walking around with these devastating weapons. How are you going to stop that? In the long term, there are going to be so many of these threats out there—crazies with enormous power in their hands.”
Paige 2020-01-23 03:29:39

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