http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/20/fisa-court-nsa-without-warrant
Revealed: the top secret rules that allow NSA to use US data without a warrant
Fisa court submissions show broad scope of procedures governing NSA's surveillance of Americans' communication
It's a scary read, but here's the money quote, IMO:
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Revealed: the top secret rules that allow NSA to use US data without a warrant
Fisa court submissions show broad scope of procedures governing NSA's surveillance of Americans' communication
It's a scary read, but here's the money quote, IMO:
However, alongside those provisions, the Fisa court-approved policies allow the NSA to:
• Keep data that could potentially contain details of US persons for up to five years;
• Retain and make use of "inadvertently acquired" domestic communications if they contain usable intelligence, information on criminal activity, threat of harm to people or property, are encrypted, or are believed to contain any information relevant to cybersecurity;
• Preserve "foreign intelligence information" contained within attorney-client communications;
• Access the content of communications gathered from "U.S. based machine" or phone numbers in order to establish if targets are located in the US, for the purposes of ceasing further surveillance.
The broad scope of the court orders, and the nature of the procedures set out in the documents, appear to clash with assurances from President Obama and senior intelligence officials that the NSA could not access Americans' call or email information without warrants.
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Robbie Wallis BillOwen
20 June 2013 8:11pm
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This is the very scary thing that no one is confronting. This effectively means that the NSA - and unelected, unsupervised, unanswerable group of military/corporate/intelligence interests - can spy on any politician on the planet, leak scandals to discredit them, create scandals, push through their "desired" puppet, control them with the information they have on them, and basically rule the freakin' planet.
The NSA has itself become the biggest threat to democracy the world has ever seen.