Obama ending U.S. phone data collection inside the government
One of the first things we ever heard that put the NSA on the radar of anyone with a cell phone was that the government organization was collecting metadata from various wireless carriers, including records from U.S. citizens. There has been quite a lot more info to come out since then, and a lot of uproar about the overreaching of the NSA, but today President Obama has said that he is going to overhaul what happens.
The president said today that the government will no longer collect
American phone data, and that the current stores of information
collected would be moved out of the government. It is unclear where the
data will be housed though. Under the new directive, individual searches
will be limited, and any governmental intelligence officials will need
to obtain an order from a secret national-security court in order to
search phone data.
President Obama said:
''The
reforms I'm proposing today should give the American people greater
confidence that their rights are being protected, even as our
intelligence and law-enforcement agencies maintain the tools they need
to keep us safe. I recognize that there are additional issues that
require further debate.
As far as non-American phone data, not much will change, except
that there will no longer be any spying on the heads of state of close
U.S. allies. Although, it should be noted that even the staff members of
those heads of state are not immune from spying. The new directive
makes pretty wide-reaching changes, but seems focused on phone data
collection at first. Several government agencies are will feel the
changes, but none more so than the NSA.
source: WSJ
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