Surprise: NSA Stops Collecting Americans' Emails 'About' Foreign Targets (original) (raw)
from the this-is-big dept
There aren’t many details yet, but Charlie Savage at the NY Times has a major scoop: apparently, the NSA has halted “about” email collections. This is important. As we’ve discussed in the past, under Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act, the NSA can collect info on approved “foreign targets.” But here’s where it got sketchy: they could collect the communications “to” them or “from” them — which most people would expect — but also they could collect any communications “about” them. In other words, did you joke about Osama bin Laden in an email? It’s possible that under Section 702, the NSA could collect that email without a warrant. That was massively concerning because the “about” emails from Americans could contain lots of other info, and once sucked up into the NSA’s system and made available to the FBI for “backdoor” incidental collection searches, could expose people to lots and lots of trouble. There have been pushes over the past few years to limit the collection to no longer include “about” communications, but those had been (as far as we knew!) unsuccessful.
And, for an unclear reason, the NSA has stopped doing that. Trevor Timm speculates that perhaps the FISA court ruled that collection illegal, which is possible (also we just noted that there were no new 702 approvals by the FISA Court last year), so perhaps the FISC is finally taking its job a bit more seriously. We’ve also pointed out that there have been legal fights over the fact that the DOJ lied to the Supreme Court about the nature of these “about” collections, which may have created more pressure to stop them from happening.
I’m sure that we’ll find out more about what happened in the near future, but this will certainly play a large role in the upcoming debate about renewing Section 702.
Filed Under: about searches, backdoor searches, doj, fisa court, fisc, mass surveillance, nsa, section 702, surveillance