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NSA Official Disputes Chief's Claim That Agency Doesn't Collect American Data

NSA Director Gen. Keith Alexander was playing a "word game" when he said the agency does not collect files on Americans according to William Binney, a former technical director at the NSA. Binney says the NSA does indeed collect e-mails, Twitter writings, internet searches and other data belonging to Americans and indexing it. "Unfortunately, once the software takes in data, it will build profiles on everyone in that data," he said. "You can simply call it up by the attributes of anyone you want and it's in place for people to look at."

30 of 214 comments (clear)

  1. Google... by Razgorov+Prikazka · · Score: 3, Funny

    would never do that :-)

    --
    rm -rf --no-preserve-root / ...and let /dev/null sort them out...
    1. Re:Google... by durrr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The worst thing Google will deliver is laser-guided advertisements.
      The worst thing NSA will deliver is laser-guided bombs.

    2. Re:Google... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The NSA does not drop bombs or make bombs or have anything to do with bombs. Sorry, chief.

    3. Re:Google... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The Government does not want Google to be run by the U.S. government. Keeping Google as a private corporation complicit to the whims of the Government allows the government of the USA to avoid the entanglements and restrictions of the Constitution.

    4. Re:Google... by MRe_nl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The Stasi doesn't man the wall or shoot at people trying to cross the wall. Sorry chief.

      The Gestapo doesn't run concentration camps or has anything to do with concentration camps. Sorry chief.

      The NSA doesn't do rendition or has anything to do with rendition. Sorry chief.

      --
      "Kill 'em all and let Root sort 'em out"
    5. Re:Google... by Jawnn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This. A hundred times this. Now y'all go and look up the definition of the word "fascism" and ask yourself if this is a trend you want to see continue.

    6. Re:Google... by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Whether there's a real distinction depends on whether Google is sharing its data with the NSA. If Google collects data and voluntarily turns it over to the NSA without a warrant, no law is broken, because Google is allowed to do whatever it wants with its data. And that results in the same practical effect as would've been the case if the NSA collected the data itself.

      If you want to keep the two distinct, we need laws limiting what companies like Google are allowed to do with their data, such as when they're allowed to share it with the government.

    7. Re:Google... by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually its better for the government that way as its not bound by the constitution and thus makes it easy for them to get data without any of those "pesky" rights getting in the way. We've seen for years that FISA is a "rubber stamp" court and by simply using someone like Google to collect the data they aren't subject to freedom of information requests.

      Frankly if groups like the NSA aren't so chummy with Google they have a "Google liaison" just to keep it nice and friendly I'd be amazed. Just the amount of data they gather on an average day would make J. Edgar green with envy, no way in hell the government just lets that amount of data slide without getting a peek, no way.

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      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    8. Re:Google... by Phrogman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And keep in mind - without intending to Godwin this discussion - that IBM had dealings with the Nazis in Germany before the war helping them gather information on their citizens. Not saying anything like that about the US Gov't-Google relationship, just that companies gathering or processing government information on their citizens can go horribly wrong :P

      --
      "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
    9. Re:Google... by MRe_nl · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yo, thanks for the tip.
      If you like Wikipedia I can strongly recommend looking up "Ich habe es nicht gewusst", "Befehl ist befehl" and the Nuremberg trials while you're at it.

      --
      "Kill 'em all and let Root sort 'em out"
  2. That's a crime. by jcr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Collecting e-mail without a warrant violates the fourth amendment. Any government official who does this or orders it done is violating the civil rights of both the sender and the addressee under color of authority. If we had a justice system in this country, they'd end up behind bars for that.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  3. Allegations that defy reality by daveschroeder · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The ridiculousness here is that anyone believes that NSA actually has a "dossier" on all Americans — or even cares about Americans at all, given that its sole purpose for existence is foreign signals intelligence as exponentially increasing amounts of foreign traffic travel through networks, systems, and infrastructure on US soil. All of those foreign linguists must be for illegally spying on Americans!

    Basically what you're saying is, you'd prefer to believe, without proof, allegations that the NSA is illegally dragnet-spying on ALL Americans, and has been doing so for more than a decade, which would involve at the very LEAST hundreds, and more likely thousands, of civilian and military NSA employees, all of whom don't mind that they're directly violating the Constitution, but only one guy who hasn't been at NSA in over a decade is telling you "the truth"? That really seems plausible to you?

    When the Terrorist Surveillance Program was revealed by the New York Times in 2005, it only touched on numbers of Americans in the hundreds, who had direct communications with individuals tied to terrorism, was authorized by the President under Article II under the AUMF, and was renewed and briefed to Congress every 45 days — and this was four years AFTER Binney claimed NSA was already dragnet-wiretapping ALL Americans.

    Never mind that restrictions on US Persons are constantly drilled into civilian and military intelligence professionals every day. Never mind the complex procedures the IC maintains specifically to NOT target or collect on Americans. Never mind that the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 is stricter than previous law.

    What we have done is shifted the notion of who is or isn't a US Person from the a place to a person.

    Before 9/11, we assumed anyone — or any traffic — inside the US was a US Person, and that anyone outside the US was fair game. After 9/11, and with the increasing levels of foreign traffic traveling over the internet instead of walkie-talkies in foreign countries, the IC, and NSA in particular, was in the difficult position of needing to target traffic within the US. A series of secret orders and stopgap legislation (like the temporary Protect America Act) supported this.

    The FISA Amendments Act of 2008 completely changes the pre-9/11 paradigm. Now an individual warrant is required to target a US Person anywhere on the globe, while foreign targets — even within the US — explicitly do NOT require a warrant. Foreign targets outside the US have never required a warrant, and shouldn't just because they or their traffic enter the US.

    For anyone who claims to care about this topic at all, I urge you to read "REMARKS BY GENERAL MICHAEL V. HAYDEN", which is former NSA and CIA directory General Michael Hayden's remarks before the National Press Club in 2006. This was still pre-FISA Amendments Act of 2008, but it gives a (very) clear picture of what the landscape and our challenges was, and still are. Also, if you care at all about what NSA does, this excellent and very recent National Geographic documentary is as close as you're going to get in an unclassified context.

    A key excerpt from General Hayden's speech is included below, but again, if you purport to care about this issue at all, I urge you to read the entire speech and the Q&A, and reflect on the fact that it's not possible given the secrecy of intelligence work for NSA to "prove" that it *isn't* doing something. Oversight of the IC comes from the executive (the President), legislative (Intelligence Committees of both houses of Congress and FISA legislation), and judicial (FISC) branches. That's how oversight of the Intelligence Community has always occurred.

    The trouble is the mistaken and misguided belief that if there has ever been an example of abuse, or a mistake, then ALL activity MUST be abuse. If you choose to believe that the United S

    1. Re:Allegations that defy reality by Johann+Lau · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What gets me every single time is how Americans seem to have no problem with the whole "foreigners are fair game" stuff.

      I beg your fucking pardon? If you breed and keep institutions with that sort of double standard, don't be surprised when that double standard gets turned on you, is what I'm thinking.

    2. Re:Allegations that defy reality by daveschroeder · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's fine to take issue with it, but that's how it's always been — this isn't a new construct in foreign intelligence. For as long as the US Intelligence Community has existed, foreign targets have NEVER required a warrant, because foreign targets are not seen by the law or the courts to have Fourth Amendment protections under the Constitution.

      I repeat: this is not new and this is not "post-9/11". Make no mistake, foreign targets are still TARGETED. The US doesn't just eavesdrop on foreign targets for the hell of it — a target is picked after analysis of intelligence, which may identify more targets, which feed into the next "loop" of the intelligence process. It's not some kind of dragnet.

      However, to pick out communications from anywhere in real time, which is the ideal state that even NSA admits it is trying to reach, you must necessarily have the ability to, well, pick out communications from anywhere in real time. To quote former DIRNSA Michael Hayden: "NSA needed the power to pick out the one, and the discipline to leave the others alone."

      Furthermore, it's not a double standard — if the Constitution applied, in a practical sense, to everyone on the globe, what is the purpose for national borders? Why should a US court decide whether the Intelligence Community can target a Chinese military communications hub, or an al Qaeda satellite phone? Moreover, even if a warrant WAS required, the capability and infrastructure to capture the communications must still exist!

      Every single capability that government or law enforcement has, or has ever had, can be abused. History tells us as much. Every single one of them can be turned against innocents. Every. Single. One. What stops that? Oversight and the law. We do not have direct oversight of intelligence, only institutional oversight by proxy. But that's not new, either. We constantly strive for the right level of government power vs. checks on that power.

    3. Re:Allegations that defy reality by sFurbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      if the Constitution applied, in a practical sense, to everyone on the globe, what is the purpose for national borders?

      To delineate who gets the postive rights secured by the rest of the US laws, as opposed to the negative rights from the constitution. To keep people not wanted in the US out of the US. To delineate who has to pay US tax. There are plenty of other uses for national borders than to delineate who gets a certain set of rights.

      Why should a US court decide whether the Intelligence Community can target a Chinese military communications hub, or an al Qaeda satellite phone?

      Because the intelligence community in question operates on US soil, and is thus held accountable to the US courts. Or do you think they should have the right to arbitrarily kill foreigners in the US as well? Because the intelligence community in question is part of the US government, and is thus bound by the statutes limiting what the US government can do, including the constitution.

    4. Re:Allegations that defy reality by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Basically what you're saying is, you'd prefer to believe, without proof, allegations that the NSA is illegally dragnet-spying on ALL Americans,

      As a technical matter, how does the wiretap apparatus distinguish American packets from foreign packets without reading the American packets?

      Claiming that you can listen to foreigners without also listening to Americans is so technically implausible it's ludicrous on its face.

      And we exist in a political culture that distrusts two things most of all: power and secrecy.

      That you can even claim this with a straight face is proof that you are completely disingenouous. We have the most powerful, and most secretive government the United States has ever had. And there is ZERO political momentum in the other direction.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    5. Re:Allegations that defy reality by drerwk · · Score: 3, Informative

      ...The constitution mentions god-given, inalienable rights. Those are by definition held by everybody, or nobody. You play "yes, but" games with it, you loose the whole thing...

      Can you point to where the Constitution mentions God? I'm not recalling the mention. The Constitution: The first sentence of the constitution begins with "We the people of the United States...establish this Constitution for the United States of America.". The fourth amendment says, "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects...". In both cases it is the same people being referred to; the citizens of the United States. I don't think that the Constitution says much of anything about foreign people or non-citizens, but I'm happy to hear your counter argument.

      The Declaration of Independence of the Thirteen Colonies:... We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed...

      The Constitution of the United Sates and The Declaration of Independence of the Thirteen Colonies are not the same document.

    6. Re:Allegations that defy reality by s.petry · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Okay, lets work with your assumption that NSA are just a bunch of "Good guys". We have the DOJ and ATF which sell guns illegally to drug gangs in Mexico, costing at least hundreds of innocent lives. We have the GSA, FEMA, and CIA framing people in the US that question the current establishment or bring up issues with accountability. Then we have the DOD which is authorizing and committing assassinations at the Presidents request. We have the DEA and ATF raiding legal establishments(CA Medical Marijuana, Organic Produce/Farms), and ignoring real crimes. We have a Fed that refuses to close borders and allows illegal entry in to the country, and usurps the States right to defend itself. We have the CIA and DOD facilitating revolts in the Middle East, and openly advocating that they are. We have CIA puppet companies creating propaganda (Kony 2012). We have laws being passed with clearly harmful passages (HB 1540) that deny the Constitution. Hell I could do this all day..

      Then we have a Media that reports nothing. Then we have private companies that commit illegal acts and receive no punishment. We have a Supreme court that stated that "Corporations are People" and "News is not News, it's Entertainment" so there is no need to tell people the truth, States have no rights, and refuses to hear a case on "Idea Patents".

      Do you see how even if this one little thing about the NSA being "good guys" is true, the point is moot? The whole system is currently fucking haywire. Even if they are "good guys" their work is being used by the "bad guys" that currently have the US tilted nearly upside down.

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      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  4. When? by Eightbitgnosis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    9/11/2001

  5. Where's my T-Shirt? by o_ferguson · · Score: 5, Funny

    I spotted the fed!

    --
    - In Soviet Korea, only old people loose all their bases to Natalie Portman's petrified hot grits overlords.
  6. Indeed it is a crime. by daveschroeder · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yes, you're 100% correct. The FISA Amendments Act of 2008 is stricter than previous law. It is expressly prohibited to target, collect, store, analyze, or disseminate the communications content of US Persons without a warrant.

    Your mistake is, apparently, believing that it's happening without any sort of proof.

    What we have done is shifted the notion of who is or isn't a US Person from the a place to a person.

    Before 9/11, we assumed anyone — or any traffic — inside the US was a US Person, and that anyone outside the US was fair game. After 9/11, and with the increasing levels of foreign traffic traveling over the internet instead of walkie-talkies in foreign countries, the IC, and NSA in particular, was in the difficult position of needing to target traffic within the US. A series of secret orders and stopgap legislation (like the temporary Protect America Act) supported this.

    The FISA Amendments Act of 2008 completely changes the pre-9/11 paradigm. Now an individual warrant is required to target a US Person anywhere on the globe, while foreign targets — even within the US — explicitly do NOT require a warrant. Foreign targets outside the US have never required a warrant, and shouldn't just because they or their traffic enter the US.

    Right now, this very second, government and law enforcement have all sorts of powers they can abuse, and they have since the founding of our nation. At the same time, intelligence operations require secrecy in order to be successful. Sun Tzu said this millennia ago, long before any construct of the US, much less the West, ever existed. Yet, instead of actually becoming informed about the purpose and function of our foreign intelligence activities, people choose to believe that our government is on a singular mission to spy on Americans illegally.

    If anyone claims to care about this topic at all:

    1. Read my other comment on this story
    2. Read former NSA and CIA director General Michael Hayden's 2006 remarks on this topic at the National Press Club (if you do nothing else, just read this)
    3. Watch this months-old National Geographic Documentary on NSA
    4. Ask yourself if it really makes sense that hundreds, if not thousands, of professional civilian and military members of our government have so little regard for their fellow citizens that they are systematically violating both the letter and spirit of law and the Constitution, not just once or twice or a handful of times, but every single day, with respect to every single American — when NSA's primary purpose and reason for being is FOREIGN signals intelligence — while utterly ignoring the legitimate complexity and challenges of targeting foreign traffic, in real time, on equipment and networks within the United States.

  7. Illegal Shmegal by FriendlyLurker · · Score: 5, Informative

    Technicalities like you are pointing out are certainly little more than a poor cover for breaking our own laws. As I just pointed out in this thread, these people (as in NSA, financial and political elites, MIC etc) are no longer held accountable to the law of the land. The dont care that they are violating the fourth amendment, technicality or not... there are no repercussions for their illegal actions (other than some wining in some online forums and twitter - with no political consequences even for that).

    The past decade has witnessed the most severe crimes imaginable by political and financial elites: the construction of a worldwide torture regime, domestic spying perpetrated jointly by the government and the telecom industry without the warrants required by the criminal law, an aggressive war waged on another country that killed hundreds of thousands of people, massive financial fraud that came close to collapsing the world economy and which destroyed the economic security of tens of millions, and systematic foreclosure fraud that, by design, bombarded courts with fraudulent documents in order to seize homes without legal entitlement. These are not bad policies or mere immoral acts. They are plainly criminal, and yet – due to the precepts of elite immunity which were first explicitly embraced during Ford’s pardon of Nixon — none of those crimes has produced legal punishments.

    By very stark contrast, ordinary Americans are imprisoned more easily, for longer periods of time, and in greater numbers than any nation on earth. New legal classes of non-persons with no rights have been created over the last decade as well. Thus, over the same four decades that elite immunity has taken hold, the nation — namely,the same elite class that has aggressively vested itself with the right to act with impunity — has resorted to ever more merciless punishment schemes for ordinary Americans and others who are marginalized who, for multiple reasons, have very few defenses when the state targets them for punishment. While being rich and powerful has always been an advantage in the judicial system (and in all other aspects of American life), our political culture has now explicitly renounced the concept of equality of law, and it is thus now unabashedly clear that who you are is far more important than what you do.

    1. Re:Illegal Shmegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Nice try NSA

  8. Re:Am I screwed? (not a US citizen) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    I don't know about your criticism of the TSA or healthcare, but speaking out against Apple is a serious offense.

  9. Trust? No I don't trust the NSA by sjbe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ask yourself if it really makes sense that hundreds, if not thousands, of professional civilian and military members of our government have so little regard for their fellow citizens that they are systematically violating both the letter and spirit of law and the Constitution

    It very much makes sense. We have fairly severe restrictions on our police forces and they regularly try and often succeed in circumventing them. The FBI has a decades long record of abusing the civil rights of US citizens. Every law enforcement and intelligence agency regularly chaffs against the restrictions placed on their power. Those same "professionals" you cite did nothing while our government condoned torture in clear violation of the spirit and letter of our laws. Why should I believe the NSA is any different? Those restrictions are inconvenient, expensive and it's not as if regular citizens can check their work to ensure they aren't breaking the rules. I believe they have power without sufficient accountability and that is almost certain to result in abuse of that power.

    Trust the NSA? No I don't trust the NSA, it's employees or any other branch of our government and that is the way it should bet. We have checks and balances because we KNOW we cannot trust them. Unchecked power absolutely will be abused. The real question is do we have sufficient oversight from congress or the judiciary? It's not clear that we do.

  10. Re:Trust? No I don't trust the NSA by daveschroeder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is a good comment. No, I don't think anyone is asking you to blindly trust NSA or any other element of government. But as government is ultimately here to serve the people, you can't exclusively have distrust of every single action government takes. Be cautious, be vigilant. But as I have said before, the mistake is believing that because there are some examples of abuse or mistakes — and there are plenty — that EVERY activity is intentional, systematic government abuse.

    The real question is do we have sufficient oversight from congress or the judiciary? It's not clear that we do.

    This is an excellent question, and one that has always been relevant to the Intelligence Community. Oversight of the IC has always been institutional oversight, not direct oversight by the public. But intelligence operations require secrecy to be effective — and that secrecy, especially in an open society, invites confusion, suspicion, misunderstanding, and distrust. So don't blindly "trust" NSA, but have the fortitude to thoroughly examine its purpose, missions, and history, and the challenges associated with executing its missions.

  11. Potential for abuse is enough to justify oversight by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The trouble is the mistaken and misguided belief that if there has ever been an example of abuse, or a mistake, then ALL activity MUST be abuse.

    Nice strawman. The problem is that sometimes there is ALWAYS the potential for abuse and sometimes there actually are abuses. Thus we need oversight and lots of it. No rational person is claiming everything the NSA has done is abuse or in error. But only a naive fool would assume that the NSA is an entity to be trusted.

    Look, NSA intercepts communications, and it does so for only one purpose -- to protect the lives, the liberties and the well-being of the citizens of the United States from those who would do us harm

    You cannot possibly know that with any actual certainty. However even if true, that does not mean that US citizens cannot be abused by the actions of the NSA in the process. We locked up thousands of innocent citizens of Japanese descent in the 1940s in the name of "protecting" US citizens. There are almost countless examples of our law enforcement and government agencies abusing citizens with all the good intentions in the world. Martin Luther King was considered extremely dangerous by the FBI. Our government has a LONG track record of abusing citizens even when they have the best of intentions and that's even taking into account that the US government is relatively benign and benevolent compared with some of the other governments out there. (it could be a lot worse) Believing the only purpose of the NSA and it's employees is to protect US citizens is naive on the face of it. And even it if were true, it doesn't mean that bad things won't happen to people who do not deserve it.

    It's a question drilled into every employee of NSA from day one, and it shapes every decision about how NSA operates.

    Even if true (and I very much doubt that it is) that means precisely nothing. People do all sorts of evil things while thinking they are doing the right thing. Laws get followed that are bad laws. Don't get me wrong, I think the NSA or an organization similar to it serves an important purpose. But I don't really care at all what comes out of the mouths of the people in charge of it. What they are doing has the potential to both violate the law and to result in real and tangible harm to the rights, person and property of US citizens and that is worthy of serious concern.

  12. Re:Trust? No I don't trust the NSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    15 years ago I might have said the same thing, but not anymore.

    15 years ago the government was not trying to extradite foreigners for civil (not criminal) allegations.

    15 years ago US citizens were not being unilaterally assassinated without appropriate legal redress.

    15 years ago I didn't have to worry about some unregulated domestic pseudo military institution stopping me on highways without cause.

    15 years ago we didn't have to deal with unfair and unreasonable searches and seizures every time you want to get on a plane.

    The landscape is different. I don't have a grudge against the NSA, but I do not trust the government anymore like I used to. Also, don't call me a tea partier because my desired solution isn't to eliminate the government, but to change the way it operates--to make it more answerable, and more removed from corporate interests.

    The key think to remember in all of this is power differential. The government has more power than an individual citizen. In exchange, we expect complete transparency.

    Maybe intelligence has always been a bit secret, but my feeling is that if there's one whiff they're doing anything questionable, they should lose all of the privilege of that secrecy in order to maintain accountability. "This is the way it's always been" isn't an excuse for throwing away accountability.

  13. Instructions required by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Be cautious, be vigilant. But as I have said before, the mistake is believing that because there are some examples of abuse or mistakes â" and there are plenty â" that EVERY activity is intentional, systematic government abuse.

    Pray tell; how is an ordinary US citizen supposed to be vigilant against those that hold all the cards and wield that power with absolutely no verifiable checks in place?

  14. Re:IMAGINE MY SURPISE! by kilfarsnar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is unfortunate that we have reached a point where we expect and accept that our government officials lie to us. We accept it as a necessary evil in a dangerous world. And yet, it is the very people who lie to us who tell us what a dangerous world it is. The American people have lost control of their government.

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    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)