Google Asks Users To Demand Congress Pass Real Surveillance Reform
from the more-companies-need-to-speak-out dept
As we've mentioned, the USA Freedom Act -- which had been the "good" bill to reform some of the NSA's domestic spying activities -- was completely watered down right before it passed the House. Basically the entire civil liberties community pulled their support for the bill at the last minute once they saw the changes that the White House demanded (even after the bill had already been watered down). What got a little less attention was that many in the tech industry had also dropped their support for the bill, despite earlier supporting it.With the fight to fix the bill now moving to the Senate, Google has apparently decided to ramp up its activism on getting a much better bill out there. Google's main Twitter account announced that it wants real reform and linked people to a "take action" page that trashes the bill that passed the House and asks people to sign on to support real reform in the Senate:
It's been a year since Edward Snowden shocked the world with his deeply troubling revelations about the extent of U.S. government surveillance.If the Senate is actually going to resist the White House's demands for a watered down bill, we're going to need a lot more partnerships like this: companies and individuals together speaking out about how bulk surveillance by the NSA is simply unacceptable. The NSA has already managed to poison the well for tech companies overseas by basically telling the world that their data is simply not secure. These companies and their customers and users need to let the government know that this needs to stop now. Hoping, quietly, that these issues will go away isn't going to do the trick. Hopefully more companies will speak up as well.
The House of Representatives just passed a bill called the USA FREEDOM Act. That bill was designed to prevent the bulk collection of Internet data (e.g., who you email and who emails you) by the U.S. Government. This kind of surveillance — where data may be collected for no specific intelligence purpose and without effective judicial oversight — runs counter to our democratic principles.
Unfortunately, as the bill made its way through Congress, the text was watered down so badly that it will not prevent bulk Internet data collection. For example, as the bill stands today it could still permit the collection of email records from everyone who uses a particular email service. As the legislation moves over to the Senate, it is critical that this loophole be closed. We need real surveillance reform urgently.
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Filed Under: activism, congress, reform, surveillance, usa freedom act
Companies: google
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GOOGLE?! F-ING PLEASE!!!
https://www.google.com/intl/en/takeaction/past-actions/
I was ready to sign up! Then I learned the 'Past Actions' menu item did not include freedom from having your silly past actions from childhood reposted and indexed by google for the rest of your life. Yet another crappy ill defined user interface, care of the idiot savants at Google.
Does google support my freedom from some company intrusively collecting and then dispersing my information into an electronic diaspora?
Probably not. Until then, google can go shove it.
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Re: GOOGLE?! F-ING PLEASE!!!
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Re: Re: GOOGLE?! F-ING PLEASE!!!
It wants restrictions on government doing what it does every day. Hypocrite much?
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Re: Re: Re: GOOGLE?! F-ING PLEASE!!!
No, you did not. Linking to publicly available documents is not "spying" and nobody is asking for restrictions on government doing that.
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Re: Re: Re: GOOGLE?! F-ING PLEASE!!!
The only thing Google, Facebook and the likes did was provide a much broader and faster channel for things to spread around. Your aunt can still tell your friend who can tell to friends of friends of friends. You can't erase your past. Live with it. What could be done and should be done is that people spreading false information about you should get their time in the courts. The starting ones not those reproducing the thing and then those that started should be forced to issue apologies and retract themselves very, very publicly. But I'd think defamation laws already work for those cases.
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Re: GOOGLE?! F-ING PLEASE!!!
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Re: GOOGLE?! F-ING PLEASE!!!
I don't know, but seriously, what do you expect Google to do about this? Google is not the internet and does not exert control over the actions of other websites and companies.
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They sound like Netflix now.
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How can that be regarded as "freedom"? Maybe a right, the right to not be ashamed because of your silly past actions from chilhood. It looks like a silly right to me but anyway.
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Re:
Now fuck off you Google traitor. I can smell you from a mile away!
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Re: Re:
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Re: Re:
Will refrain from drunk posting in future.
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Irony alert
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The hell?
I remember back when Google was really starting out that there were services everywhere that spied on me and sold the data to data brokers. But Google didn't do that and still doesn't. While I am uncomfortable that Google has so much info on me, at least I can be comfortable in the fact that they aren't feeding my data to companies like LexisNexis. Y'know, one of the companies that sells very detailed profiles on you to anyone who pays them. Google on the other hand just sells the promise of relevant eyeballs to companies.
Also - if the NSA makes a mistake, you could be put on a list that would make your life a living hell. If Google makes a mistake, you're shown an irrelevant advertisement.
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Re: The hell?
In fairness, that's because Google is a company like LexisNexis. They wouldn't feed data to their competition.
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Re: Re: The hell?
No, no they are not. LexisNexis will actually sell your personal data to a bunch of different companies. Google will not. Google sells the promise of your eyeballs to companies wanting to advertise to you. It does not sell your actual data.
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"Prevent bulk collection of Internet data"? You first, Google.
Yes, the new USA FREEDOM Act is worse than the old. Yes, it would be nice to have a better law to curb the surveillance state problem (if we could trust the government to abide by it, which experience shows we cannot). But any law which will actually solve the problem must necessarily hit Google where it hurts, because the only way to stop personal data from becoming problematic later on is not to store it.
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Dear Google.
It's time to make this archive disappear, lest it be used against people by an evil government that obeys no laws.
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Clueless
And those of you complaining about Google not standing up to the like of abusive companies or organizations are also fucking clueless. You need to get out more. Google has a history of fighting every subpoena it receives for personal information that it can legally fight, You cant blame them for situations involving the FBI and NSL's or other situations where they have been ordered by a secret court to give information.
And in the post Snowden world, google has been going to great lengths to both advocate for and protect personal and private information.
People, please get a clue about what whats going on around you.
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Re: Clueless
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Re: Clueless
They've been helping them out thoroughly while publicly claiming they were not.
“Google Idea's director Jared Cohen was tasked with getting Afghan telcos to move towers to US bases when at DoS,”
Hypocrite much?
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Re: Clueless
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dreamflyer
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ferguson
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Google Do The Right Thing
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Re: Google Do The Right Thing
That's probably been made illegal by Executive Order.
We just don'y know it yet because nobody has done it yet.
After all, only Terrorists would need a secure system of communications, right.
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Re: Google Do The Right Thing
If only there was an EBT card for technology...
Why not go learn and develop it yourself instead of being just a worthless taker?
You can kickstart the phucker if you don't have the money.
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