The Tables Have Turned: Now We're Watching the NSA
After a decade of being able to do pretty much whatever it wants, whenever it wants, America's top spy shop, the National Security Agency (NSA), is running into some roadblocks.
It's about time.
First, the NSA's extensive phone- and Internet-tapping intelligence programs are about to get reviewed in a public court of law. That's thanks to an opinion handed down by U.S. District Court judge Richard Leon, which raises questions about whether the NSA's surveillance is constitutional.
Second, the Obama administration's review of the NSA's surveillance programs has delivered its preliminary report to the president, and sources tell Politico that the report pulls no punches. Far from being the whitewash many of us expected, the report "recommends sweeping and far-reaching changes in the way the NSA conducts its electronic surveillance operations, from a greater degree of executive-branch oversight of the agency’s operations to the imposition of new limits on what data it can collect," Politico writes.
First the judicial branch rebukes the NSA, then the executive branch does it. Will the legislative branch complete the circuit in 2014, delivering its own spanking to the agency via a congressional resolution or a new law? We can only hope.
The problem, as I see it, is that the NSA has operated pretty much without restraint since 2001.
While the agency has had plenty of facetime with lawyers and judges so far, most of them have been in secret meetings, as the New Yorker's Ryan Lizza recently reported in great detail. Take, for example, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which specifies that a secret court must make decisions about any agency spying that happens in the U.S. But the FISA court is overseen by a single judge, with presentations made by a single lawyer (the NSA's), and with no counterarguments. When the FISA court rules -- as it repeatedly has -- that the NSA can go ahead and collect all the data it wants, with almost no restraint, the legal grounding for that opinion is kept under lock and key.
The result is that no one -- not even members of the Senate Intelligence Committee -- knew exactly what the NSA was up to. At least until former NSA contractor Edward Snowden's documents started appearing on the Guardian, the New York Times, and the Washington Post.
You can say what you want about the legality of Snowden's "liberation" of NSA documents. It was probably illegal. But then, so was Daniel Ellsberg's theft of the Pentagon Papers, and Ellsberg is considered a hero now, living in comfortable retirement in Berkeley, Calif. after having helped end one of the most useless wars in American history.
There's a greater good to be considered in the Snowden case, too: keeping the country's top surveillance and security agency in check.
When, in history, has a spy agency willingly regulated itself? Without serious oversight, even the most well-meaning intelligence agency can quickly overstep the bounds of what is reasonable and just. I'm certain that the NSA is full of well-meaning individuals, and I'm not questioning the urgency of their need to identify and stop terrorist plots.
It's just not possible to have a meaningful democracy in a world where there is no possibility of private thought and conversation, as Dave Eggers' book The Circle so chillingly showed -- or as the residents of the former East Germany could also tell you.
Now, Judge Leon stopped short of saying that what the NSA is doing is unconstitutional, but he did say that there was enough evidence to allow plaintiff Larry Klayman's lawsuit to go ahead -- and that Klayman has standing to bring a constitutional suit.
This is a good thing. The problem is not so much that the NSA, and other spy agencies around the world, are collecting data on us -- the problem is that their data collection is so unfettered and unavailable to public scrutiny. We don't know what they're collecting, how they're gathering it, or how much of it they have.
It's time for the NSA to bring its surveillance programs into the open just a bit more. Let it approach a panel of judges, instead of a single FISA court judge, and let the proceedings of those court dates be accessible to more people -- at a minimum, to the members of congressional oversight committees. Let it defend the constitutionality of its programs in court. And give it some meaningful oversight by the administration.
And, here's a radical suggestion: Declassify the NSA's data-collection programs every five years. By then, technologies will have moved on enough that today's techniques will no longer be useful, anyway -- and the prospect of eventual accountability will help keep the nation's top spy agencies just a little more honest.
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Dylan Tweney is the editor-in-chief of VentureBeat. Read more about the NSA on VB:
- Unconstitutional NSA surveillance: Why today’s ruling was a huge step for privacy
- 3 ways the NSA makes sense of 5B mobile phone data points every day
- Microsoft to join Google & Yahoo in heavily encrypting data against NSA
former Master Mariner
10 年Mass data collection is a vital tool for all intelligence services, but the main problem they face is how to filter such an amount of data ! The NSA still remain a very young and unexperienced intelligence services ! The main purpose of an intelligence service must not be just to provide data for the official propaganda and to it's allays !
Owner at Wenham Building and Land Design
10 年When I first looked at the title of the article I thought it said 'Tables have turned, we are watching NASA' . It caught my attention as we should be watching NASA. Watching how much money they spend on sending junk into orbit. Not all but many of those missions seem a waste of money. Those scientists are much more needed helping out with the problems on the ground.
Owner Reaching Freedom Industries LLC
10 年There are those that do not care how much privacy is lost to any government. Fine, just don't give up mine or anyone else's before you ask permission. In the USA we have a Right to Privacy. This Right has been abridged over time in the name of security. BS! It has been torn from the page of OUR CONSTITUTION by a secret court, secret judge, secret agents all in the name of secrecy. IF anyone believes the NSA has a right let me inform you that they do not. It is WE the People, as stated in our Constitution, that retain the Rights. This is a strange concept for the rest of the world to understand. Especially those under the thumb of royal or dictatorial oppression. We got rid of one King of England off our collective necks and can do it again if we need. If you work on the inside of a secret agency and have intel that the rest of the world should know, does one really think that going to a higher level inside the agency will not put ones life in hazards way? Rubbish! You will be eliminated with extreme prejudice. And no one finds out. That is the sole occupation of the secret service...keep it secret. If our current government really wants to protect the citizens then stop breaking the laws that are legal and stop making illegal laws. It is that simple. The Constitution was formed by brilliant men under noble obligation to create a singular document. Now under assault by those entrusted to protect it.