cartesiano spook
Estes não vão abrir a boca, ou se abram não sai nada nem entra mosca. Há ali muito filtro à entrada antes de algo à entrada, e nada dali passa nem nada dali sai.
Então são espioões para quê? Para andatr por aí a tocar o sino!
Mas podem apanhar entalões caso não tenham cuidado as frestas das portas. Por vezes até ficam lá entalinhos como os ratinhos nas ratoeiras. São os perigos da profissão.
Não vamos agora aqui revelar mais porque estas coisas são secretas e você nem sequer vê o que anda à supercície. E sobre as profundidades, isso são outras dimensões, e nem sequer pense nisso!
Keep safe and sound
7 November 2013 Last updated at 11:36
Concerns arose over "snooping" by the state after data-gathering centre GCHQ was cited in leaks
UK intelligence chiefs to be quizzed by MPs

The heads of the UK's spying agencies are to face an unprecedented televised grilling by MPs and peers.
GCHQ director Sir Iain Lobban, MI5 director general Andrew Parker and MI6 chief Sir John Sawers will be quizzed by the Intelligence and Security Committeein public at 14:00 GMT.
Intelligence chiefs have given evidence in private for many years.
The questioning follows leaks by ex-US security contractor Edward Snowden which raised concerns about spying.
Documents leaked to the Guardian newspaper by Mr Snowden - who is currently in Moscow where he has sought sanctuary from the US - revealed that agencies are able to tap into the internet communications of millions of ordinary citizens through GCHQ's Tempora programme.
Leaks also suggested its American counterpart, the National Security Agency, had bugged the phone calls of several world leaders.
'Mass spying'
The Intelligence and Security Committee - chaired by former Foreign Secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind - has already carried out a limited investigation into claims that GCHQ used the American National Security Agency's vast Prism programme, which gathers information from internet companies, to circumvent UK laws.
Although the committee cleared the agency of any wrongdoing in the 197 specific intelligence reports it looked at, it is now undertaking a wider inquiry into whether the laws governing surveillance are adequate for the internet age.
Sir Tim Berners-Lee, who created the world wide web,has said encryption cracking by UK and US spy agencies is "appalling and foolish".
Intelligence chiefs are expected to be asked about Mr Snowden, as well as subjects including terrorist threats and cybersecurity. Subjects off limits will include details of intelligence techniques and ongoing operations.
Journalist Glenn Greenwald, who worked with Mr Snowden on stories for the Guardian about spying by the National Security Agency and GCHQ, said the Parliamentary system had, so far, failed to hold Britain's intelligence agencies to account.
"There was a huge suspicion-less system of mass spying that the British people and the American people had no idea had been built in their name and with their money," he said.
But he added: "I believe that that system can bring about real accountability if there's the political will."
Lord Butler, a member of the committee, said its powers had been beefed up and it was now "in the ring of secrecy", with full access to the work of the three agencies, but although they would be steering clear of that in the session, it still represented a step towards greater accountability,
"We won't be inviting them to give away secrets today but there is a lot that needn't be secret and indeed in recent years has become, come out into the open, about the way in which the agencies work, their priorities, the way they spend public money."
Sir David Omand, former head of GCHQ, said the committee should not ask the agency chiefs questions about national security "to which they cannot reply" but should focus instead on issues such as the training of agents and the threat posed by terrorists.
He said: "They [the committee] are on show this afternoon every bit as much as the three heads of agency. They have to demonstrate they can satisfy the need for oversight and satisfy Parliament that they are doing a job that in other areas of government can be done by much more open means."
Sir David also defended the closeness of Britain's intelligence relationship with the US, telling BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We have the brains. They have the money. It's a collaboration that's worked very well."
Asked why there had been such a fierce debate about the Communications Data Bill, dubbed the "snooper's charter" by critics, when GCHQ was already gathering large quantities of data covertly, he said the agency was "primarily a foreign intelligence agency" and the proposed legislation concerned British data.
He added: "You shouldn't be looking to GCHQ to provide what can very much more cheaply and easily provided by the internet service providers. That requires legislation and Parliament got itself in a bit of a tangle over the details of that legislation."
Sir David also dismissed Sir Tim Berners-Lee's criticisms, telling BBC Breakfast he thought the scientist was "probably exaggerating for effect, in order to get his point across and fire a shot across the bows of the intelligence agencies".
Mr Parker took over as head of MI5 earlier this year. MI6 is charged with gathering intelligence and GCHQ with monitoring communications.
The session is expected to last an hour and a half, and will be televised. The BBC News Channel and the BBC News website will be covering it, with a short time delay to prevent anything being broadcast that might endanger national security or the safety of those working for the agencies.
The Intelligence and Security Committee, made up of senior MPs and peers, said the meeting would "give an insight into the world of intelligence and the work the agencies do on behalf of the UK".
The committee said the move was "a very significant step forward in terms of the openness and transparency of the agencies".
Here are the MPs and peers on the intelligence and security committee:
- Chairman Sir Malcolm Rifkind - Conservative MP, barrister and foreign and defence secretary in John Major's government
- Hazel Blears - Labour MP who quit as communities and local government secretary in 2009 over Gordon Brown's leadership
- Lord Butler of Brockwell - Former top civil servant who led 2004 inquiry into Iraq war intelligence
- Sir Menzies Campbell - Lawyer and former Olympic sprinter who led the Liberal Democrats between 2006 and 2007
- Mark Field - Conservative MP for Cities of London and Westminster. Expert on China and Russia
- Paul Goggins - Labour MP and former minister of state in Northern Ireland Office
- George Howarth - Labour MP and former junior minister at Home Office and Northern Ireland office
- Julian Lewis - Conservative MP, former shadow defence minister and military planning expert
- Lord Lothian - Better known as Michael Ancram, former Conservative Party chairman
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