Slashdot Mirror


'It's Time To End the NSA's Metadata Collection Program' (wired.com)

Jake Laperruque, Senior Counsel at The Constitution Project, where he is working on issues of government surveillance, national security and defending privacy rights in the digital age, argues via Wired that it's time to end the National Security Agency's metadata collection program, known as CDR. An anonymous reader shares an excerpt: In 2015, Congress passed the USA Freedom Act to reform Section 215 and prohibit the nationwide bulk collection of communications metadata, like who we make calls to and receive them from, when, and the call duration. The provision was replaced with a significantly slimmed-down call detail record program, known as CDR. Rather than collecting information in bulk, CDR collects communications metadata of surveillance targets as well as those of individuals up to two degrees of separation (commonly called "two hops") from the surveillance target. But this newer system appears to be no more effective than its predecessor and is highly damaging to constitutional rights. Given this combination, it's time for Congress to pull the plug and end the authority for the CDR program.

It's unsurprising that just last week a bipartisan group in Congress introduced a bill to do so. Last month, the New York Times reported that a highly placed congressional staffer had stated that the CDR program has been out of operation for months, and several days later, NSA Director Paul Nakasone issued comments responding to questions about the Times story by saying the NSA was deliberating the future of the program. If accurate, this news is major but not shocking; this large-scale-collection program has been fraught with problems. Last year, the NSA announced that technical problems had caused it to collect information it wasn't legally authorized to, and that in response, the agency had voluntarily deleted all the call detail records it had previously acquired through the CDR program -- without even waiting for a court order or trying to save some of the data -- indicating that the system was unwieldy and the data being collected was not important to the agency.

2 of 87 comments (clear)

  1. Collection will increase... by Excelcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone who think that it was just metadata that the NSA was collecting is hopelessly naive. Intelligence agencies, which, by definition, are intended to run with limited oversight, are not capable of voluntarily self restricting their information collection. You build an apparatus that is capable of monitoring, it will fulfill its design intention. It's not a matter if if the information is being collected, it's only a matter of who is collecting it.

    1. Re:Collection will increase... by SirAstral · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Agree, if metadata was not that big of a deal then why are they willing to crap all over the constitution to get hold of it. Additionally, the fact that Government regulates telephony to a high degree telecom essentially serves as an extension of law enforcement as well. Knowing that the government has mandated collection in advance without warrant is more than enough to call it a breach of the 4th. Collection of data is a seizure of it, the moment they make a law to require businesses to keep them they overstepped.

      Now if a businesses decided to collect and keep it for their own purposes that is another story, but we all know that there are multiple ways to skin a cat. The result is the same... the government the one the constitution expressly says cannot perform a collection of data without warrant specifying the person, place, and things to be searched or seized. The gimmick of saying a business has to do it, is really just a smoke an mirrors act to "knowingly and intentionally" breach the constitution.

      Heck that alone is proof that people will willingly give up their liberty. You can drive people to give up everything and willingly submit to slavery if you promise then enough security and protection.