Trove of NSA Documents and FISC Opinions Declassified Thanks to EFF Lawsuit
An anonymous reader writes "Thanks to an EFF lawsuit, the office of the Director of National Intelligence is releasing declassified redacted versions of various documents relating to the NSA's domestic surveillance activities. The documents are being released on the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks."
The EFF is hosting the documents, which are searchable. A few initial findings were posted yesterday evening; they include (thanks to another anonymous reader) the NSA illegally using phone data for three years, and evidence that Clapper knowingly mislead the public about metadata collection.
And he is us.
Releasing the information on the anniversary of 9/11 can't be completely coincidental. On a day national security is rallied behind by those in power to protect us from another such incident it comes across as just a PR move to lessen the outrage if possible of those that will be up in arms over their activities.
Should we expect criminal charges, or will we find out that since he lied to protect the politicians they'll go soft on this do nothing?
Because he's either committed a criminal act, or he's just a stooge covering up for someone else.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
The news is full of all sorts of illegal shit that the NSA and its lackeys have been doing for years, yet I haven't heard a peep about any hints of prosecution.
Where're the prosecutors with the balls to hold the watchers accountable?
b&
All but God can prove this sentence true.
NSA shares raw intelligence including Americans' data with Israel
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/11/nsa-americans-personal-data-israel-documents
Will a Google SWAT team show up at your house based on emails about hydroponics? No, but one from the DEA might.
Facebook and Google want to sell ads. Whereas the government wants to prosecute people with illegally gathered evidence, as when the NSA feeds data to the DEA. Pretty fucking serious difference.