Edward
Snowden is rocking the world
Ex-CIA
official to address government-wary hackers
A
former CIA official and a retired Air Force general will address next
week's Def Con hacking convention, which for the first time asked
federal officials to steer clear because of anger over alleged
government spying.
26
January, 2013
Joseph
DeTrani, a long-time CIA official who served as a U.S. envoy in talks
with North Korea regarding its nuclear activities, will open the
hackers' conference on August 2 with a speech about weapons of mass
destruction and cyber technology. Former Air Force General Robert
Elder, who created one of the U.S. military's first cyber units, will
speak the following day.
Def
Con founder Jeff Moss said the two had been invited long before his
July 11 request that federal officials stay away from the convention
to defuse tensions over the U.S. mass surveillance programs leaked by
former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
Moss
said that having former U.S. officials at the conference could be
useful to the hacking community because they are uniquely placed to
help explain the government's position on the surveillance programs.
"Being
former, not current, they might be able to speak more freely and
offer a more nuanced perspective," said Moss, who is known in
hacking circles as The Dark Tangent.
"They
would probably offer more credible perspective that people are not
going to just dismiss out of hand and say ‘Of course you are going
to say that. That's your job,'" he said in an interview.
Def
Con - short for Defense Condition, in military speak - has since 1992
been bringing together people with a common interest in software,
computer architecture, and any high-tech system that can be hacked.
It typically attracts a small contingent of officials from the CIA,
NSA, FBI, and military among hackers, researchers, security workers,
activists and others. The conference this year is expected to draw
15,000 people.
DeTrani
told Reuters that after his speech he will address surveillance
programs, if asked.
"Everything
I've heard about these programs is that they were authorized with
oversight. From what I know Americans were not spied upon," he
said. "Hopefully nobody throws marshmallows at me and says ‘You
wacko, go back to North Korea.'"
DeTrani
stepped down as a senior advisor to the Director of National
Intelligence in May 2012, ending more than three decades in
government, the bulk of the time at the CIA.
His
speech will be followed by several panels led by critics of
government surveillance. The American Civil Liberties Union is
holding a Friday afternoon session on "NSA surveillance and
more." Representatives of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
group that has filed lawsuits against the NSA over surveillance
programs, will review "the year in digital civil liberties."
Elder,
who is currently an engineering professor at George Mason University,
plans to talk about applying lessons from military operations to
protecting computer networks.
He
said that while he knows nothing more about the Snowden case than
what he has read in the paper, he expects the issue will come up. "I
expect there to be some tension," he said.
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