EFF Says Ma Bell Broke The Law In Opening Up Data To NSA
from the broke-the-law?--they-make-the-law dept
The ACLU has already filed a lawsuit against the NSA for its wiretapping-without-warrants effort -- so the question of how legal the program is will eventually get settled in court. However, the EFF is looking at another aspect of the program: how did the NSA get access to that data? With that in mind, the group is now suing AT&T, saying it violated the first and fourth amendments by allowing the NSA open access to its databases. This could be a fascinating lawsuit to watch from the legal standpoint, though, as some are pointing out, the government is likely to step in and derail the lawsuit by claiming "state secrets" are involved.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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something must be done...
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Too many questions, too few Answers
The outcome will ENTIRELY depend on the scope of the NSA's power to demand records without warrant. I'd predict that the ACLU will lose, considering the following factors:
#1 As stated, the Government can always derail the entire case, black out any documents suppeoned, and basically claim "Executive order" on anything that could be used against them, since (correct me if I'm wrong) the NSA is a creation of the executive branch, under executive order.
Thats like trying to sue the Secret Service for punching you in the head because you came too close to a protected politician.
It just plain won't work unless it gets taken all the way to the Supreme Court, and even then, it's doubtful that it would hold up there, either, considering our last two Appointments.
Also, it would set a precedent that would undermine the ability of the NSA to operate above the law (which they basically can already do) and render it ineffective.
There's no way that the ACLU can pull this one off, IMHO.
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No Subject Given
That is, essentially, what happened.
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NSA's Credentials
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Re: No Subject Given
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Class action anyone?
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Just a thought
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Whose rights are violated?
The customers of AT&T could possibly try to sue AT&T for breach of privacy, but this has nothing to do with the first and fourth amendments.
Finally, for all of you that carry on about how your fourth amendment rights are trampled by the NSA actions, you need to learn how the amendment works. It does not protect you from searches and seizures by the government. Its purpose is to guarantee that the outcome of warrantless searches cannot be used against you; and that you have a legal remedy for recovering that which may have been seized without warrant and/or due process.
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Re: Whose rights are violated?
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Track record
Just curious.. as I can't think of one, try as I may.
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Re: Track record
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