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Related: About this forumObama must finally end NSA phone record collection, says privacy board
Source: The Guardian
Obama must finally end NSA phone record collection, says privacy board
Spencer Ackerman in New York
Thursday 29 January 2015 20.44 GMT
The US governments privacy board is calling out President Barack Obama for continuing to collect Americans phone data in bulk, a year after it urged an end to the controversial National Security Agency program.
The Obama administration could cease the mass acquisition of US phone records at any time, the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) said in an assessment it issued on Thursday.
The PCLOBs assessment comes amid uncertainty over the fate of legislation to cease that collection. An effort intended to stop it, known as the USA Freedom Act, failed in the Senate in November. While the administration said after its defeat that Obama would push for a new bill, it has yet to do so in the new Congress, and the president has thus far pledged in his State of the Union address only to update the public on how the bulk-surveillance program now works in practice.
David Medine, the PCLOB chairman, said on Thursday that the administration was acting in good faith and had agreed in principle to most of the 22 reform recommendations the board had offered in its two 2014 reports into bulk NSA surveillance. The boards report found that the administration had in many cases not implemented recommendations it agreed to in principle, such as assessing whether the NSA is successfully filtering out purely domestic communications when it siphons data directly from the backbone of the internet.
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Spencer Ackerman in New York
Thursday 29 January 2015 20.44 GMT
The US governments privacy board is calling out President Barack Obama for continuing to collect Americans phone data in bulk, a year after it urged an end to the controversial National Security Agency program.
The Obama administration could cease the mass acquisition of US phone records at any time, the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) said in an assessment it issued on Thursday.
The PCLOBs assessment comes amid uncertainty over the fate of legislation to cease that collection. An effort intended to stop it, known as the USA Freedom Act, failed in the Senate in November. While the administration said after its defeat that Obama would push for a new bill, it has yet to do so in the new Congress, and the president has thus far pledged in his State of the Union address only to update the public on how the bulk-surveillance program now works in practice.
David Medine, the PCLOB chairman, said on Thursday that the administration was acting in good faith and had agreed in principle to most of the 22 reform recommendations the board had offered in its two 2014 reports into bulk NSA surveillance. The boards report found that the administration had in many cases not implemented recommendations it agreed to in principle, such as assessing whether the NSA is successfully filtering out purely domestic communications when it siphons data directly from the backbone of the internet.
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Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jan/29/obama-end-nsa-phone-records-collection-privacy-board
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Obama must finally end NSA phone record collection, says privacy board (Original Post)
Eugene
Jan 2015
OP
libodem
(19,288 posts)1. That's what I'm talkin' about
Then he could give Gitmo back to the Cubans.
The CIA can still hire out the torture there.
woo me with science
(32,139 posts)2. Good article.
Testing some images here.
..........
Smarmie Doofus
(14,498 posts)3. Like the "Surveillance" image a lot. Gotta link? n/t
prayin4rain
(2,065 posts)4. ugh, so true. n/t