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Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s New NSA Bill Will
Codify and Extend Mass Surveillance of
Americans
By Trevor Timm and "Information Clearing House - "EFF"
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-- Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and one of the NSA’s biggest defenders, released what she calls an NSA “reform” bill today.
Don’t
be fooled:
the bill codifies some of the NSA’s
worst practices, would be a huge setback for
everyone’s privacy, and it would permanently
entrench the NSA’s collection of every phone
record held by U.S. telecoms.
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We urge members of Congress to oppose it.
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We urge members of Congress to oppose it.
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We
learned for
the first time in June that the NSA
secretly twisted and re-interpreted Section
215 of the Patriot Act six years ago to
allow them to vacuum up every phone record
in America—continuing an unconstitutional
program that began in 2001. The new leaks
about this mass surveillance program four
months ago
have led to a sea change in how
Americans view privacy, and
poll after
poll has shown the public wants it to
stop.
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But
instead of listening to her constituents,
Sen. Feinstein put forth a bill designed to
allow the NSA to monitor their calls. Sen.
Feinstein wants the NSA to continue to
collect the metadata of every phone call in
the United States—that’s who you call, who
calls you, the time and length of the
conversation, and under the government’s
interpretation, potentially your
location—and store it for five years.
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This is not an NSA reform bill, it’s an NSA entrenchment bill.
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This is not an NSA reform bill, it’s an NSA entrenchment bill.
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Other
parts of the bill claim to bring a modicum
of transparency to small parts of the NSA,
but requiring some modest reporting
requirements, like how many times NSA
searches this database and audit trails for
who does the searching.
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But
its real goal seems to be to just paint a
veneer of transparency over still deeply
secret programs. It does nothing to stop NSA
from weakening entire encryption systems, it
does nothing to stop them from hacking into
the communications links of Google and
Yahoo’s data centers, and it does nothing to
reform the PRISM Internet surveillance
program.
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Ironically, a bill that claims to bring
transparency to the NSA was debated,
discussed and modified by the
Intelligence Committee today in secret.
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The
bill does make minor improvements in other
areas, by explicitly allowing the FISA court
to accept amicus briefs in certain
circumstances (though it has already done so
with existing authority), and authorizing a
report to Congress will summarize
significant FISA court opinions. Summarize,
but not release.
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Make
no mistake: this is not an NSA reform bill
at all. Instead it codifies one of
the NSA’s most controversial surveillance
programs. We urge you to call your Senator
to oppose Sen. Feinstein’s disingenuous
bill.
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EFF is
leading the fight against the NSA's illegal mass surveillance
program. Learn more
about what the program is, how it works and what you can do.