A Whimpering Ending for the NSA's Illegal Dragnet Spying Program

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Dima007

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Apr 24, 2013
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The National Security Agency’s controversial bulk phone data collection program is winding down with a weird whimper following an especially bilious round of legislative squabbling.

The NSA began the multi-day process to shut down its dragnet phone collection after Congress didn’t reauthorize the Patriot Act, which was used as legal justification for the mass surveillance program. “That process has begun,” an administration official told the Los Angeles Times
on Saturday.

And one of the people directly responsible for closing down the program is one of its biggest supporters.

Members of Congress debated the merits of the USA Freedom Act, which prohibited the NSA’s specific data collection program but renewed the Patriot Act. One of that bill’s biggest opponents was Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky) who tried to block the USA Freedom Act because he thought it didn’t go far enough to preserve the Patriot Act.

McConnell hoped that Congress would be cornered into creating a temporary authorization of the Patriot Act if the bill didn’t pass, but his big gamble didn’t pay off. Even though he successfully helped kill the USA Freedom Act, all of the temporary Patriot Act authorizations were also blocked by Congress. That means McConnell helped bring about exactly what some of the NSA’s most strident critics had hoped for: An expired, or “sunsetted” Patriot Act.

This may not be the end for the Patriot Act. On May 31, Congress will reconvene to try and hammer out a last-ditch save. But the NSA is already starting to shut things down, and by the time Congress returns from its Memorial Day vacation next Sunday, it’ll be too late to ask for the 90-day extension needed to keep collecting phone records in bulk.

This isn’t an example of dismantling the surveillance state so much as an example of how Congressional infighting can distract Capitol Hill from getting stuff done.

To add an extra layer of chaos to these proceedings, a court recently ruled that the Patriot Act was not a legal justification for the NSA’s surveillance program, which renders this whole battle mostly pointless.

It’s absurd that the NSA is finally winding down its much-loathed program based on something else getting shut down that really never gave it any legal standing to begin with, but unless a legislative miracle happens, starting at 5 pm on June 1, the NSA will lose its incredibly flimsy legal justification for the program.
 

comfortablynumb15

Level 7
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May 11, 2015
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"Shutting down" simply means they are likely not sending over the data for analyzing to the firms charged with doing so. The programs themselves, the splitters copying the data and any other hardware and software is still running. They wouldn't truly shut anything down until June 1st, and all of it can be restarted easily. There's no real dismantling to do. Everything they are using can still be used for other programs and collecting. Besides, mark my words, before 12am June 1st they will save it. The NSA is not going to give up that kind of capability, regardless of effectiveness, without being dragged away scratching and clawing. The President can also jump in and make an executive order, he doesn't necessarily need Congress..he's done that several times during his tenure in other matters. It also bears repeating yet again that this phone collection mess is just one part of the Act. But for some reason everyone is honing in on that one thing.

I'm not trying to rain on any parades, but this is far more complicated and deeper than a lot of people are making it out to be. There is still a hell of a lot of work left to do before we as citizens can start to feel comfortable. Patriot Act or not, web and phone spying is here to stay in some form. It's the price of technology and the times. Don't pop any bottles yet.
 
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comfortablynumb15

Level 7
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May 11, 2015
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Well, we dodged a hail mary at the last minute and this thing is expired. I'm glad I was wrong, but, a new session was scheduled for Monday. Which means as I type this, we might have but a few short hours of it being gone. Either way it isn't going to go away. With the head of the CIA coming out with a new scaremongering speech and a few of the Congressmen who have tons of clout and want this to stay intact, they will debate and stall and threaten until they get it passed again.
 
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