Don't assume I support the punishment just because I disagree with Sock's argument against it.
I wasn't making an argument, I was being sarcastic. The US government collects lots of private information from foreign users (the PRISM thing). That is clearly against our privacy laws, recording phone conversations without consent or court order is a crime in Germany. So it seems hypocritical to me that they might sentence this guy to 10 years, while they basically do the same thing "to fight crime".
I think he was doing something wrong, and he should be punished. But I would have expected something like 6 months on probation, up to 10 years seems completely excessive.
I'm looking at this from two angles right now.
1. Would he be prosecuted as aggressively if he had stolen personal communications, photos, and video that didn't relate to a high-profile criminal case?
2. If all this surveillance is going on, why isn't it being employed in cases like this? It's obviously being used in plenty of other cases that have nothing to do with terrorism. It seems quite plain to me that the will simply isn't there to effectively investigate this type of crime with the same tools. Given these circumstances, is it really wrong for citizens to take private action in leveling the field of justice?
1. I wonder if they notice these things much at all outside of high-profile cases, ie security risks, economic espionage, maybe filesharing.
2. Seems like they don't have the ability to do that yet. Maybe they just collect data. Or only secret service has access to it, so it is not used in a case like this.
Vigilantism is always a two-edged sword, I understand that they don't want to encourage that, but they are going to need make use of their own surveillance, otherwise there might be more of this.