Big Tech Calls On Senate To Stop NSA's Bulk Surveillance Program
from the speak-out dept
In honor of the Reset the Net campaign, and the one-year anniversary of the first Ed Snowden revelation, a bunch of big tech companies, including Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter, Apple, DropBox, LinkedIn, Yahoo and AOL, have published an open letter to the Senate asking it to pass real surveillance reform, rather than the weak sauce that the House passed in its massively watered-down USA Freedom Act. At the same time, a lobbyist representing a group of big tech companies specifically warned the Senate that the House version was too weak and needed to be much stronger. This is a good first step, but we need to see the pressure on the Senate ramp up even more.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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Filed Under: nsa, reset the net, senate, surveillance, usa freedom act
Companies: aol, apple, dropbox, facebook, google, linkedin, microsoft, twitter, yahoo
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A good first step
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It's not government, it's some elected reps
While this tech company pressure campaign is underway, it would benefit players to put pressure on specific representatives, time for public shaming and new representation.
If the tech lobbies are sincere, I for one would expect their campaign donations to reflect the real problem and donate to those willing to be servants to the public not the same players who got us to where we are today.
Out with the bad air, the loud air, those that feel their above reproach and not of the people. Time to elect some actual leaders.
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My supposition is that the people we elected are not the stupid NSA lemmings we think they are.
My supposition is that those people have been compromised by the NSA. IOW we all have skeletons in our closets, and the NSA knows all about them. Support us or else...
These people are probably also assisted by the NSA to be re-elected.
I know, paranoid... But it actually explains some rather odd behavior.
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It's total corruption of the republic...
***
A Mrs. Powel of Philadelphia asked Benjamin Franklin, “Well, Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?” With no hesitation whatsoever, Franklin responded, “A republic, if you can keep it.”
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It's total corruption of the republic...
***
A Mrs. Powel of Philadelphia asked Benjamin Franklin, “Well, Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?” With no hesitation whatsoever, Franklin responded, “A republic, if you can keep it.”
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Two Observations Here
And while I'm happy that tech companies are joining the fight now, I'm also partially saddened by the fact that it might just take their large...financial influence to get anything done. Thus continuing the trend of how any large monied interest exerts influence rather than just the people...
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Re: It's not government, it's some elected reps
Putting pressure on the specific elected officials (in terms of getting them out of office, not of convincing them to change their minds, since there's no real chance of success at the latter) is still probably the best way of getting something done about this overall. But there's room for concern that doing that alone may well not be enough, against the entrenched and non-elected bureaucracy.
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Not to say they're all squeaky clean, but when the government has, and has shown no hesitation in using, something that can compel both 'cooperation' and silence, the appearance of not fighting back isn't always a reflection of a lack of desire to do so.
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