HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019543.jpg

1.66 MB

Extraction Summary

3
People
4
Organizations
6
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book manuscript page / investigative evidence
File Size: 1.66 MB
Summary

This document appears to be page 55 of a book manuscript (likely 'Epstein: Dead Men Tell No Tales' based on the ISBN in the footer) produced during a House Oversight investigation. The text details Edward Snowden's activities in late 2012, specifically his 'moonlighting' to promote the Tor Project and his organization of a 'CryptoParty' in Honolulu while employed by Dell at the NSA. It highlights his communications with Runa Sandvik and Asher Wolf regarding encryption advocacy.

People (3)

Name Role Context
Snowden NSA Employee/Contractor
Subject of the text; organized CryptoParty while working for Dell/NSA; used alias Cincinnatus.
Sandvik Tor Project Contact
Contacted by Snowden; lived in Washington D.C.; invited to co-host party.
Asher Wolf Hacktivist/Anarchist
Founder of the CryptoParty movement; corresponded with Snowden.

Organizations (4)

Name Type Context
NSA
National Security Agency; Snowden's employer.
Tor Project
Organization providing anonymity software; Snowden promoted their software.
Dell
Company Snowden worked for while at the NSA.
House Oversight Committee
Government body indicated by the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.

Timeline (2 events)

2012-11-18
Snowden began organizing the 'Oahu CryptoParty' while working for Dell.
Hawaii
2012-12-11
Scheduled date for the Oahu CryptoParty.
Honolulu, Hawaii
Snowden NSA workers locals

Locations (6)

Location Context
Snowden's residence and location of the Oahu CryptoParty.
Specific city in Hawaii where the party was scheduled.
Location where Snowden later went public.
Location from which Snowden later communicated with Sandvik.
Residence of Asher Wolf.
Residence of Sandvik.

Relationships (2)

Snowden Collaborators Sandvik
Snowden contacted Sandvik for Tor materials and asked her to co-host an event.
Snowden Organizer/Founder Asher Wolf
Snowden organized a party under Wolf's movement; they corresponded regarding the event.

Key Quotes (4)

"something the NSA might not have been too happy about."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019543.jpg
Quote #1
"keep it simple."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019543.jpg
Quote #2
"moonlighting"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019543.jpg
Quote #3
"swag"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019543.jpg
Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,468 characters)

Hacktivist | 55
cyber signatures of foreign parties suspected of hacking into U.S. government systems.
He also made efforts to directly contact Sandvik. She recalls first hearing from Snowden in November 2012. He first wrote to her under the alias Cincinnatus but later supplied his real name and mailing address in Hawaii because he wanted her to mail him authentic computer stickers from the Tor Project that he could use as “swag,” as he wrote her, to attract further interest in Tor software in Hawaii. As a result, she knew his identity seven months before he went public in Hong Kong. He would later tell Sandvik from Moscow that he had been “moonlighting” by working to advance the Tor Project. He added, with some understatement, that his moonlighting was “something the NSA might not have been too happy about.”
On November 18, 2012, while still working for Dell at the NSA, his dual role led him to begin organizing a “CryptoParty” aimed at finding new recruits for Tor. The CryptoParty movement had been started in 2012 by Asher Wolf, a radical hacktivist and anarchist living in Melbourne, Australia. She promoted the get-togethers not unlike the Tupperware parties of the 1950s. The party organizer, usually with a representative of the Tor Project, advertised the party on the Internet. Attendees were encouraged to bring their own laptops so they could install Tor as well as encryption software in them. The attendees would then be instructed on how to use it. Finally, those converted to Tor software would be told to proselytize about its virtues by holding their own CryptoParty. Wolf’s idea was to use these gatherings to expand the realm of Tor.
Snowden called his fete the Oahu CryptoParty. It had its own web page. He told Wolf that it would be the first CryptoParty in Honolulu. She wrote back advising him to “keep it simple.” (Wolf later said she did not know he was working at the NSA.)
Snowden apparently had no inhibitions in staging a party that the leadership of the NSA might consider subversive of its battle against Tor. He even invited fellow NSA workers in Hawaii, as well as others in the local computer culture. He asked Sandvik, who was living in Washington, D.C., at the time, to participate, proposing that she co-host the party with him. He scheduled it for December 11, 2012, in Honolulu. According to Sandvik’s account, Snowden informed her
Epst_9780451494566_2p_all_r1.z.indd 55 9/29/16 5:51 PM
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019543

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