http://m.techcrunch.com/2013/10/14/to-get-around-us-law-the-nsa-collects-email-address-books-and-chat-buddy-lists-from-foreign-locations/

To Get Around US Law, The NSA Collects Email Address Books And Chat Buddy Lists 
From Foreign Locations

by       ALEX WILHELM posted 2 Hours Ago

The Washington Post [link below] broke news this afternoon that the National 
Security Agency (NSA) is collecting huge numbers of email address books and 
chat buddy lists for both foreign individuals and United States citizens.

It appears that the NSA lacks Congressional authority to collect buddy lists 
and address book information in the way that it currently does. As the Post 
rightly points out, address book data can include physical addresses, very 
personal information, and more.

To get around that lack of a mandate, the NSA has agreements with non-U.S. 
telcos and works with other, non-U.S. intelligence groups. So to get its 
hands on even more information, the NSA avoids the constraints of its provided 
oversight and legal boundaries, by going to alternative sources of the data 
that it wants.

That matters because the rules of other countries for tracking the 
communication of United States citizens are more lax. Recall that the NSA is in 
some ways slowed from collecting information on citizens of the United States, 
but not those of other countries.

So, if the NSA is willing to accept data from foreign intelligence agencies 
that it is not able to collect in this case, why not in other cases as well?

If the NSA won’t respect the constraints that are put in place on its actions 
for a reason, and will instead shirk its responsibilities and find a way to get 
all the data it could ever desire, then we have even less reason to trust its 
constant petitions that it follows the law, and is the only thing keeping the 
United States safe from conflagration.

The Post continues: “When information passes through ‘the overseas collection 
apparatus,’ [an intelligence office] added, ‘the assumption is you’re not a 
U.S. person.’” This means that when the NSA sweeps up contact data, buddy 
lists, and address sets from overseas, the same rules that keep it from 
collecting information on United States citizens aren’t likely in play. 
Minimization, it would seem, would be minimal.

The phone metadata program knows who you called, when, and for how long. PRISM 
can force your private information out of major Internet companies. XKeyscore 
can read your email, and tracks most of what you do online. And the above 
program circumvents Congressional oversight by collecting more data on U.S. 
citizens by merely executing that collection abroad.

How private are you feeling?
–
Facebook provided TechCrunch with the following statement:
“As we have said many times, we believe that while governments have an 
important responsibility to keep people safe, it is possible to do so while 
also being transparent. We strongly encourage all governments to provide 
greater transparency about their efforts aimed at keeping the public safe, and 
we will continue to be aggressive advocates for greater disclosure.”

Microsoft repeated to TechCrunch what it had told the Washington Post, that it 
“does not provide any government with direct or unfettered access to our 
customers’ data” and that if the above revelations are true, then the company 
would “have significant concerns.”


Source: 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/nsa-collects-millions-of-e-mail-address-books-globally/2013/10/14/8e58b5be-34f9-11e3-80c6-7e6dd8d22d8f_story.html

(also archived at Cryptome)


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