The film is an adjunct to The Intercept article and is a joint project between The Intercept and Field Of Vision, a documentary film concern. The text read in the film is actually taken from NSA official 'travel guides' which are linked in The Intercept's article; you can find links to the documents in about the 12th or 13th paragraph, depending on how you count paragraphs. So on The Intercept site, the documentation you seem to question is available for perusal. Two things should be noted:
1) The bulk of the Intercept's document releases are from the Snowden leaks, and the NSA, and other agencies, have not denied the authenticity or accuracy of the releases; in fact, there is a somewhat symbiotic relationship between the NSA and Intercept; the NSA appears to have conceded the data will be released in some manner, possibly by other than Intercept, and, in a move to mitigate any damage, have entered into an arrangement to where the NSA can ask to redact certain data and Intercept appears to be agreeing with most, if not all, of the NSA's concerns;
2) It is of Interest that Intercept is the site that on Monday, 6/5/2017, released the NSA report on Russian military intel entities' efforts to actively attempt to compromise the voter registration systems, and, possibly, election software and hardware in the days leading up to the 2016 Presidential election; again, the NSA has not denied the authenticity or content of the internal report;
The fact none of the agencies affected by the Intercept's releases have either denied the authorship, content or accuracy of the site's releases, and, in fact, are 'cooperating', albeit under duress over organizational concerns, with Intercept to mitigate serious harm, is a very strong indicator the data on the AT&T building is not X-Files science fiction, but, rather, disturbing fact...
Just something to think about...
<O>
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