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her in direct contact with a TOR supporter with access to the computers of its main enemy, the
NSA.
On December 11, 2012, following Snowden’s instructions, Sandvik arrived shortly before 6
PM at the Fishcake furniture store in downtown Honolulu. She proceed to the back of the store
where there was a public space called the Box Jelly. It was used mainly for counterculture events.
Folding chairs and work tables had already been set up, Snowden was there waiting for her with
Lindsay Mills, who he introduced to Sandvik as his girlfriend. He told her that she was there to
film the event.
Mills did not mention this Crypto party in her blog. But that Snowden brought her and
introduced her to Sandvik suggests that he did not keep secret from her his activities to further
TOR.
The event started at six PM sharp. By Sandvik’s count, about twenty people gradually filled the
room. Some of them were from the local “Hi-Cap” computer club and other attendees were from
Snowden’s NSA base. Snowden began the presentation by giving reasons why Internet users
needed to defend their privacy by using both encryption and TOR software. According to one
attendee who asked not to be identified by name, Snowden, while not revealing that he worked
for the NSA, spoke with such precise knowledge about government surveillance capabilities that
he suspected Snowden worked for the government. Snowden next introduced Sandvik, who
took the podium and discussed the work of the TOR project, stressing the importance of
expanding the TOR network. Following their presentations, Snowden and Sandvik took
questions from the audience.
The Oahu crypto party, according to Sandvik, ended about 10 PM. No one objected to Mills
making a video of the meeting even though it was dedicated to the idea of protecting privacy.
The video was not posted on the Internet so presumably Snowden wanted it for his own
purposes. Afterwards, Sandvik went to a local diner called Zippy’s for a late dinner. She left
Hawaii two days later.
Even though a number of the prominent hacktavists he invited were unable to attend,
Snowden declared the Crypto party a huge success in his after-hours report. One of the people
Snowden invited under the alias Cincinnatus was Parker Higgins, who was a prime mover in the
previously-mentioned Electronic Freedom Foundation. He now lived in California where he had
founded the San Francisco Crypto Party. (Higgins would make headlines in 2013 by flying a
chartered blimp over the NSA’s secret facility in Utah and photographing it from the air).
Despite Snowden’s efforts, Higgins wrote him that he was unable to attend the December Crypto
Party because of the high price of the airfare that month between San Francisco and Honolulu.
(Higgins was hardly poor: his family home in Oahu had been rented to President Obama for two
of his vacations in Hawaii.) As a consolation, Higgins told Snowden that he would try to attend
Snowden’s next Crypto Party, which was scheduled for February 23, 2013.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020227
Extracted Information
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020227.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,030 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:40:58.421324 |