| ® | 24 | HOW AMERICA LOST ITS SECRETS advantage of his compensation to live the high life. He gambled on financial developments by buying and selling options, which are contracts that allow speculators to bet on the directions of the mar- ket without buying the actual stocks, bonds, or commodities. He also bought a BMW sports car on which, he wrote, he disabled the speed control so he could exceed the legal limit. He described in his posts racing motorcycles in Italy and traveling around Germany with an Estonian rock star (whom he did not further identify). He also con- tinued his avatar life in Internet gaming; the alias he chose for that was Wolfking Awesomefox. He also indulged in a fantasy gun sport called Airsoft, a variation of paintball, in which participants used realistic-looking pistols to splatter each other with paint. Snowden’s good fortune came to an abrupt end in 2008. He suf- fered a massive loss in his options speculations. He wrote in a post that he had “lost $20,000 in October [2008] alone,” a sum that repre- sented almost a third of his annual salary. He blamed the U.S. finan- cial system, posting on Ars Technica that Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, was a “cockbag.” He also bet against any further © rise in the stock market index, asking a user with whom he was chat- re) ting on the Internet in December 2008 to “pray” for a collapse of stock prices. When his correspondent asked him why he wanted him to pray for a decline, Snowden responded, “Because then I'll be filthy fucking rich.” But Snowden lost this bet. Snowden lashed out at others on the Internet over these setbacks. He termed those who questioned his financial judgment “fucking retards.” As with other setbacks, he blamed them on government offi- cials in Ars Technica posts. Because the CIA was engaged in 2008 in highly sensitive operations to gather banking data in Switzerland— one of which Snowden later disclosed to The Guardian—any Inter- net discussion by a CIA employee