Major New Anti-NSA Bill Dropping Next Week With Powerful Support
from the this-could-get-interesting dept
by Mike Masnick
Fri, Oct 25th 2013
We already knew that Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner was getting ready to release a major new anti-NSA spying bill called the USA Freedom Act, and Derek Khanna has just revealed many of the details of the bill, scheduled to be introduced in both houses of Congress this coming Tuesday.
It will be backed by Sensenbrenner in the House and Pat Leahy in the
Senate, and will have plenty of co-sponsors (already about 50 have
signed up) including some who had initially voted against the
Amash Amendment back in July. In other words, this bill has a very high
likelihood of actually passing, though I imagine that the intelligence
community, and potentially the White House, will push back on it. For
Congress, gathering up a veto-proof majority may be a more difficult task.
The bill appears to do a number of good things, focusing on limiting the NSA's ability to do dragnet collections, rather than specific and targeted data collection, while also significantly increasing transparency of the activities of the NSA as well as the FISA court when it comes to rulings that interpret the law.
The bill appears to do a number of good things, focusing on limiting the NSA's ability to do dragnet collections, rather than specific and targeted data collection, while also significantly increasing transparency of the activities of the NSA as well as the FISA court when it comes to rulings that interpret the law.
- End bulk data collection under Section 215 of the PATRIOT
Act. This is the program that collects metadata on every phone call
based on a twisted interpretation of the law and a thorough revisionist
dictionary for words like "targeted," "relevance," "search" and
"surveillance." Sensenbrenner, who crafted much of the original PATRIOT
Act insists that when he wrote it, it was intended to already ban this
kind of dragnet. The new bill will make that explicit. Similarly, it
appears that the bill will require the intelligence community to be much
more proactive in filtering out unnecessary information and deleting
information collected incidentally.
- Fixing the FISC: As many have recommended, the law would
make sure that a public advocate can be present to be an adversarial
presence, arguing in favor of protecting Americans' privacy. There will
be a special Office of the Special Advocate (OSA) created for this
role. Somewhat surprisingly, the OSA will even be allowed to appeal
decisions that the FISA court makes if it believes they stray from the
law or the Constitution. That could be a very big deal.
Separately, the DOJ will be required to declassify all FISC decisions from the past decade that involve "a significant construction or interpretation of the law." That is, no more secret law-making by the FISC.
- Greater transparency for companies on the receiving end of demands for information. This would make it so companies that get orders to hand over information can reveal numbers of requests, effectively stopping the existing gag orders which prevent us from knowing how often the NSA is demanding info from internet companies.
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