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Edward Snowden, president of the Freedom of the Press Foundation. (Matthew Busch/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Snowden leaks: 10 years later, US intelligence still collects huge amounts of information

But Edward Snowden’s revelations had lasting impact, advancing privacy protections in Europe and America and accelerating use of encryption

The author’s sister in front of a fire truck on September 12, 2001

9/11: It’s all I’ve ever known

Aaron White was six years old in New York City when the Towers fell. For the lucky ones, life just moved on

New privacy app takes a page from NSA technology

Scrambl3, a new app on the market, creates the smartphone equivalent of a virtual private network to make messages invisible on the internet.

Journalists say that the increase in the US government’s prosecution of officials in leak investigations prompted initial concern

Study shows US data sweep harms press freedom

A study has found that surveillance efforts aimed at thwarting terrorist attacks have undermined press freedom – and broader democratic rights.

Edward Snowden.

UK says spying program that may or may not exist is legal

The British government is being sued for monitoring activities exposed by Edward Snowden, but it maintains that it operates within the law.

Edward Snowden.

Brazil not considering asylum for Snowden

After Edward Snowden’s open letter, Brazil says it’s not considering granting asylum to him as the country has not received a formal request.

Trap: The operations have raised concerns about the privacy of people who immerse themselves in the virtual world.

Gamers spook world of spycraft

US and UK intelligence agents have been posing as Orcs and Elves to snare terror suspects online.

WTF, NSA? Tech giants vent spy fury

Google and Yahoo! are fuming over revelations that the agency intercepted their users’ records.

Obama knew Merkel was being spied on, report

Barack Obama was personally informed of mobile phone tapping against German Chancellor Angela Merkel, which may have begun as early as 2002.

Spy revelations poison the pond

The fallout from the Edward Snowden saga is starting to affect global trade relationships.

Spy agency used some Americans’ data to map their behaviour

The National Security Agency has mapped some Americans’ "social connections that can identify their associates".

Big Brother must be kept in his place

Being front-page news every week for months at a stretch is not ideal when your business is secrecy, writes Alistair Fairweather.

Snowden files: US spooks share secret data

The NSA shares intelligence data with Israel without first sifting it to remove information about US citizens, states a document from Edward Snowden.

President Barack Obama says that the information gathered by the National Security Agency is subject to restrictions.

How the NSA sabotaged the internet

Alistair Fairweather thinks the US government needs to condemn the NSA’s attack on one of the world’s most important resources – the internet.

UN to probe claims US spied on its meetings

The United Nations will approach the US government over a report that its intelligence spied on video conferences by top UN officials.

CRISPR technology is a relatively new and powerful tool for editing genomes. It allows researchers to easily alter DNA sequences and modify gene function. (File photo: Edgard Garrido, Reuters)

NSA surveillance covers 75% of US internet traffic

The NSA’s surveillance network can reach about 75% of US internet communications – which reports say is more than what US officials have disclosed.

The 30-year-old former US National Security Agency contractor received asylum in Russia on August 1. (AFP)

Snowden says father and lawyer do not speak for him

US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden says neither his father nor his father’s attorney speak for him "in any way".

US President Barack Obama. (Madelene Cronje, M&G)

Obama promises oversight but no change to spy programme

Barack Obama is clear: He has no intention of stopping the daily collection of Americans’ phone records and blames leaks for creating distrust.

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin was the winner of the meeting in Alaska with US President Donald Trump. Photo: File

Snowden will leave Russia soon as he can, says Putin

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin says Edward Snowden, who has been stuck in a Moscow airport for weeks, will leave Russia as soon as he is able to.

Spying far worse in South Africa than the US

In terms of both ­legislation and practical reality, South Africans have faced far closer scrutiny of their private communication than US citizens.