All of the NSA files stolen by Edward Snowden will be released soon, Glen announced Greenwald, founder of Intercept.
Greenwald is one of the first journalists to interview Snowden when he decided to reveal the secrets businesses of the NSA.
The data provided by Edward Snowden to Greenwald and other journalists was so much that even today, years later, the journalist and his associates from Intercept have not been able to analyze them as a whole, let alone publish them on the Internet .
Greenwald's original plan was to keep the data that they leaked privately, to be analyzed before releasing them to the general public via the Intercept.
Twenty-six months after the launch of the Intercept website, Greenwald and colleagues continue to publish stories from Snowden's data. But as the reporter says he does not plan to keep doing forever.
Following the massive leak of documents by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) online last week (Panama Papers) Greenwald decided it was time to do the same.
The reporter announced today through Intercept that it will publish a large portion of Snowden's SIDtoday records and are internal newsletters of the NSA. SID stands for Information Address Signals or Signals Intelligence Directorate.
"The first release of SIDtoday contains 166 articles, and includes all articles published between March 31, 2003, when SIDtoday was launched, and June 30, 2003"
Interested users can get the data through GitHub. Greenwald has announced that this is only the first batch and that it will release more of Snowden's records in the upcoming future.