Information security
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Dustin Volz National Journal
December
17, 2014
Google Says 2015 Will Be the ‘Moment’
To Reform NSA Spying
Google
is already beginning to lay the groundwork
for another push next year to rein in government spying ahead of a crucial
summer deadline to some of the National Security Agency’s
surveillance authority.
The
search behemoth this week updated its “Take Action” site with a new page that promises that 2015
“will be our moment” to reform sweeping surveillance programs, exposed last
year by fugitive leaker Edward Snowden.
“In
June of 2015, we have a huge chance to protect Americans from mass surveillance
when a key part of the USA Patriot Act is set to expire,” reads the
brief petition, which invites users to submit their contact information. “That
means we need to be ready to take action this coming year.”
Google
did not immediately respond to a request for comment regarding how many people
had signed the petition.
Core
provisions of the post-9/11 Patriot Act are due to sunset on June 1, including
the contentious Section 215, which grants the intelligence community much of
its authority to sweep up bulk U.S. phone records. But despite the
looming deadline, it remains unclear how much
momentum surveillance reform will
have in a Republican-controlled Congress next year.
The GOP killed
a reform package in the Senate last month, as the USA Freedom Act
fell two shorts votes of the 60-vote threshold needed to advance. The measure,
which would have effectively ended the government’s bulk phone metadata
collection, was unable to overcome late-stage opposition from Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell and others who warned that reining in the NSA could
help terrorists kill Americans.
Complicating
efforts is a possible
splinter that may soon
emerge among the diverse array of NSA reform backers. Many privacy
advocates argue that the best chance to curb the NSA will be to push
to let those Patriot Act provisions expire altogether. Other reformers,
however, are reticent to outright jeopardize a counterterrorism measure,
especially given continued geopolitical uncertainty in regions such as the
Middle East.
T
he
tech lobby has been a vocal and important voice in the ongoing effort to
curtail NSA authority. Several Silicon Valley giants—including
Google, Facebook, and Yahoo—formed the Reform Government Surveillance coalition
in the wake of the Snowden disclosures to advocate for limits on the NSA’s
broad spying authority and press for more transparency with customers about
government data requests.
Read
more at: http://www.defenseone.com/technology/2014/12/google-says-2015-will-be-moment-reform-nsa-spying/101517/
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