Imagine that you watched a police officer in your neighborhood stop ten completely ordinary people every day just to take a look inside their vehicle or backpack. Now imagine that nine of those people are never even accused of a crime. They just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Even the most law-abiding person would eventually protest this treatment. In factāthey have.1
Now replace police officers with the NSA. The scenario above is what the NSA is doing with our communications, under cover of itsĀ twisted interpretationĀ of Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act. The Washington Post hasĀ revealedĀ that “Nine of 10 account holders found in a large cache of intercepted conversations, which former NSA contractor Edward Snowden provided in full to The Post, were not the intended surveillance targets.” Additionally, ā[n]early half of the surveillance files, a strikingly high proportion, contained names, e-mail addresses or other details that the NSA marked as belonging to U.S. citizens or residents.ā
The thousands of pages of documents that provide that basis for the article are not raw content. Rather, as Barton Gellman, one of the authors of the article states in aĀ follow uppublished several days later states: āEverything in the sample we analyzed had been evaluated by NSA analysts in Hawaii, pulled from the agencyās central repositories and minimized by hand after automated efforts to screen out U.S. identities.ā
What that means is that if youāre on the Internet, youāre in the NSAās neighborhoodāwhether you are in the U.S. or not. And like those who protest unjust policies like stop and frisk in their cities, you should be protesting this treatment.
This revelation is significant because it proves the point privacy and civil liberties advocates have been making for years: NSA surveillance is not narrowly targeted. EFFās legal fight against the NSAās warrantless mass surveillance program has been ongoingĀ since 2006, but the Washington Postās statistics about 160,000 intercepts they have analyzed from the Snowden files indicate that even what the NSA calls ātargetedā surveillance is far from narrow in scope.Ā In fact, it is so bloated that we should all be questioning its necessity and efficacy at this point. Taken hand in hand withĀ The Interceptās articleĀ outlining the targeting of five civil rights and political leaders from the Muslim-American community, our outrage should be palpable.
Whatās more, the report comes on the heels of a debate specifically about Section 702 that has been brewing in Congress for months, as civil liberties champions like Sen. Ron Wyden and Rep. Zoe LofgrenĀ questionĀ andĀ work to addressĀ how the NSA uses this authority. This revelation should make it clear to the Senate when it considers the USA FREEDOM Act: Section 702 needs to be reformed.Ā Cosmetic changesĀ to NSA spying, or even substantive changes to Section 215 bulk telephone records collection, are insufficient. Unbridled, unconstitutional collection of the contents of communications needs to end.
The Washington Post article is based on a comprehensive review of thousands of pages of documents. In fact, as the article points out: “No government oversight body, including the Justice Department, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, intelligence committees in Congress or the presidentās Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, has delved into a comparably large sample of what the NSA actually collects.” Whatās more, these are documents that government officials have repeatedly insisted Edward Snowden would never have been able to access.
Regardless of the governmentās denials, Snowden did have these documents, and now we know at least some of what they contained. So does Congress. So thereās no excuse anymore for the type ofĀ maneuveringĀ that led to the gutting of USA FREEDOM in the House.Ā More importantly, thereās no excuse for the Senate to ignore Section 702 when it considers USA FREEDOM.
Real NSA reform from Congress will, among other things, shut the backdoor that allows the NSA to access Americanās communications. It will also end collection of communications āaboutā a target.
Of course, none of this solves the problem of how NSA surveillance affects non-U.S. persons. One of the shocking things about the Washington Postās article is its description of the communications intercepted:
Scores of pictures show infants and toddlers in bathtubs, on swings, sprawled on their backs and kissed by their mothers. In some photos, men show off their physiques. In others, women model lingerie, leaning suggestively into a webcam or striking risque poses in shorts and bikini tops.
We are no longer talking about statistics. We are talking about real people going about their daily lives. It is not surprising to learn that in the course of its investigations, the NSA gathers up a considerable number of communications that prove to be insignificant, irrelevant, or (as is the case with communications between US persons) outside the scope of their work. What is shocking is that the NSA keeps this enormous trove of personal data about people it should not be watching in the first place. It appears that the unspoken coda to General Alexanderās ācollect it allā motto is āand never throw it away.ā
The bottom line is this: The Internet is a global neighborhood. We shouldnāt feel unsafe there. But the NSA doesnāt seem to care.
The good news is, we can do something. Take action now. Go tohttps://www.standagainstspying.orgĀ and see how your elected representative stacks up when it comes to reforming the NSA, tweet at them, and send a letter to President Obama urging him to use his executive authority to reform the NSA now. You can also take action by contacting lawmakersĀ here. If you are overseas, you canĀ sign the letterĀ to President Obama. You can also endorseĀ the Necessary and Proportionate principles. Take back the Internet.
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