In 2010, while working for a National Security Agency contractor, Edward J. Snowden learned to be a hacker, Christopher Drew and Scott Shane report in The New York Times.
He took a course that trains security professionals to think like hackers and understand their techniques, all with the intent of turning out âcertified ethical hackersâ who can better defend their employersâ networks. But the certification, listed on a résumé that Mr. Snowden later prepared, would also have given him some of the skills he needed to rummage undetected through N.S.A. computer systems and gather the highly classified surveillance documents that he leaked last month, security experts say.
Mr. Snowdenâs résumé, which has not been made public and was described by people who have seen it, provides a new picture of how his skills and responsibilities expanded while he worked as an intelligence contractor. Although federal officials offered only a vague description of him as a âsystems administrator,â the résumé suggests that he had transformed himself into the kind of cybersecurity expert the N.S.A. was desperate to recruit, making his decision to release the documents even more embarrassing to the agency.
âIf heâs looking inside U.S. government networks for foreign intrusions, he might have very broad access,â said James A. Lewis, a computer security expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. âThe hacker got into the storeroom.â
Mr. Snowden prepared the résumé shortly before applying for that job, while he was working in Hawaii for the N.S.A. with Dell, the computer maker, which has intelligence contracts. Little has been reported about his four years with Dell, but his résumé, as described, says that he rose from supervising computer system upgrades for the spy agency in Tokyo to working as a âcyberstrategistâ and an âexpert in cyber counterintelligenceâ at several locations in the United States.