National Security Agency
The National Security Agency (NSA) is part of the US government. The agency was started in 1952, and its main office is in Maryland.
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Seal of the National Security Agency
Its stated goal is to protect the US people by
- Worldwide "earsdropping," secretly listening to what people are saying in other countries. It monitors, collects, decodes, translates and analyses information and data. That is known as signals intelligence (SIGINT).
- Protecting the US from eavesdropping and SIGINT spying by foreign governments and agencies, called "penetration and network warfare."[1][2] The agency does so by clandestine (secret) means,[3] such as bugging electronic systems,[4] and sabotaging their computer networks with viral software.[5][6]
References
- "About NSA: Mission". National Security Agency. Retrieved September 14, 2014.
- Nakashima, Ellen. January 26, 2008. Bush order expands network monitoring. The Washington Post. Retrieved February 9, 2008.
- Executive Order 13470 — 2008 Amendments to Executive Order 12333, United States Intelligence Activities, July 30, 2008 (PDF)
- Malkin, Bonnie. NSA surveillance: US bugged EU offices. The Daily Telegraph, June 30, 2013
- Ngak, Chenda. NSA leaker Snowden claimed U.S. and Israel co-wrote Stuxnet virus Archived 2013-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, CBS, July 9, 2013
- Bamford, James. The Secret War, Wired Magazine, June 12, 2013.
- Official NSA website
- NSA for kids Archived 2006-06-15 at the Wayback Machine
Further reading
- Bamford, James, The Puzzle Palace, Penguin Books, ISBN 0-14-006748-5.
- Bamford, James, The Shadow Factory, Anchor Books, 2009, ISBN 978-0-307-27939-2.
- Church Committee, Intelligence Activities and the Rights of Americans: 1976 US Senate Report on Illegal Wiretaps and Domestic Spying by the FBI, CIA and NSA, Red and Black Publishers (May 1, 2008).
- Hanyok, Robert J. (2002). Spartans in Darkness: American SIGINT and the Indochina War, 1945–1975. National Security Agency. Retrieved November 16, 2008.
- Aid, Matthew, The Secret Sentry: The Untold History of the National Security Agency, 432 pages, ISBN 978-1-59691-515-2, Bloomsbury Press (June 9, 2009).
- Shaker, Richard J. "The Agency That Came in from the Cold." (Archive, Archive #2) Notices. American Mathematical Society. May/June 1992 pp. 408–411.
- Jackson, David (June 18, 2013). "Obama: NSA surveillance programs are 'transparent'". USA Today. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
- "National Security Agency Releases History of Cold War Intelligence Activities." George Washington University. National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 260. Posted November 14, 2008.
- "The NSA Files". The Guardian. London. June 8, 2013.
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