Government Still Pretending That Letting Phone Companies Hold Mass Surveillance Data Would Improve Privacy
from the NSAT&T dept
You'll recall the Obama administration asked for input on what should happen to collected NSA data as part of the highly cosmetic reforms proposed back in January. Now reports have emerged that the Obama administration is being presented with four options by its lawyers in terms of phone communications data collection and storage. Anonymous sources tell the Wall Street Journal that one of the options is dismantling the program entirely, which of course won't be happening anytime soon. Another option continues to be to place data collection in the hands of the phone companies:"Obama administration officials have sought to preserve the collection of phone records in a way that raises fewer concerns about privacy. One way of doing that would have the phone companies retain the data, officials said. The NSA would then tell the companies when it needs searches of call records concerning specific phone numbers the agency believes are connected to terrorism. The companies would provide the results to the NSA."Except as we've discussed repeatedly, the line between intelligence operations and phone companies has been largely obliterated courtesy of AT&T and Verizon's patriotic enthusiasm to do whatever is asked of them -- and then much, much, more. AT&T, for example, has a proud history of not only letting the NSA tap completely into their network in real time, but they've historically even given advice on how best to bypass privacy and wiretap laws, at times even volunteering their time as intelligence analysts. Yes, letting AT&T manage the data when they're already indistinguishable from government sounds like a revolution in intelligence processing and privacy protection.
Before Snowden, when it was originally found that the telcos were illegally spying on countless Americans years back, the laws were simply changed -- which clearly worked out well for everyone involved. The biggest problem for the government making this shift to telcos playing an even bigger role in non-transparently spying on U.S. citizens? They're going to want even more legal protection and, inevitably, more taxpayer money:
"Several lawmakers have proposed legislation on Capitol Hill that would take this approach. But telecommunications companies oppose this option. Phone companies likely would demand liability protection and possibly other conditions to avoid outside demands for data—for instance, for run-of-the-mill legal cases such as divorce proceedings."Another option according to the Journal is to have the FBI hold on to that data. That's the same FBI, who with telco help has already been doing much of the NSA's spying anyway, and has its own long, proud tradition of ignoring the law whenever it suits them. While the government pretty clearly hopes the public takes these moves as a serious effort to protect privacy, effectively all we appear to be doing is shuffling a deck of dysfunction stocked with a litany of the same old rotten players.
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Filed Under: fbi, nsa, privacy, surveillance
Companies: at&t, verizon
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It seems we need another round of hard, bloody lessons on what not to do.
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If you are going to give a giant database full of information to someone that law enforcement and the military is going to use, don't you go the checks and balances way and put it in a different branch of government? Or have the ACLU hold the keys?
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Popcorn indeed. This is the natural progression of history.
Evil Nation gets overthrown by good people tired of the crap.
Good Nation gets evil over time because all the good people have died and treated the Evil people well by not calling the Evil people out.
The Good Guys trying to call out the Evil are lambasted and painted into Extremist corners by the Evil people. Apathy is widespread at this point.
Nation falls to Evil.
Evil Nation gets overthrown by good people tired of the crap...
The Cycle just keeps going.
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I wonder how many of these people we would have to try for treason as a domestic threat against the US Constitution, and how many executions would have to take place before suddenly the survivors would realize that NO MASS DATA COLLECTION is to be allowed.
Let's fine out.
I am betting it will take 3 convictions and executions.
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Same Old Same Old
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Better, huh?
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