http://news.yahoo.com/house-passes-curbs-nsa-phone-surveillance-221025685--politics.html


WASHINGTON (AP) — In an overwhelming vote, the House moved the U.S. closer to 
ending the National Security Agency's bulk collection of Americans' phone 
records Thursday, the most significant demonstration to date of leaker Edward 
Snowden's impact on the debate over privacy versus security.
But the final version of the legislation, "watered down" in the words of one 
supporter, also showed the limits of that impact. The bill was severely 
weakened to mollify U.S. intelligence agencies, which insisted that the 
surveillance programs that shocked many Americans are a critical bulwark 
against terror plots.
The bill was approved 303-121, which means that most House members can now say 
they voted to end what many critics consider the most troubling practice 
Snowden disclosed — the collection and storage of U.S. calling data by the 
secretive intelligence agency. But almost no other major provision designed to 
restrict NSA surveillance, including limits on the secret court that grants 
warrants to search the data, survived the negotiations to get the bill to the 
House floor.
And even the prohibition on bulk collection of Americans' communications 
records has been called into question by some activists who say a last-minute 
change in wording diminished what was sold as a ban.
"People will say, 'We did something, and isn't something enough,'" said Steven 
Aftergood, who tracks intelligence issues for the Federation of American 
Scientists. "But this bill doesn't fundamentally resolve the uncertainties that 
generated the whole controversy."
Though some privacy activists continued to back the bill, others withdrew 
support, as did technology companies such as Google and Facebook.
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Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan, the Republican chairman of the House Intelligence 
Committee, said, "I believe this is a workable compromise that protects the 
core function of a counterterrorism program we know has saved lives around the 
world."
The measure now heads to the Senate, where Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., 
told reporters Thursday that "we must do something."
The USA Freedom Act would codify a proposal made in January by President Barack 
Obama, who said he wanted to end the NSA's practice of collecting and storing 
the "to and from" records of nearly every American landline telephone call 
under a program that searched the data for connections to terrorist plots 
abroad.
The phone records program was revealed though the leaks last year by Snowden, 
who used his job as a computer network administrator to remove tens of 
thousands of secret documents from an NSA facility in Hawaii. Snowden fled 
first to China, then Russia where he is avoiding an extradition order to face 
criminal charges for revealing classified information.
The phone companies create and store those billing records, and the legislation 
still would give the NSA authority to request batches of data from the 
companies to search in terrorism investigations in response to a judicial 
order. Law enforcement agents routinely obtain such records in criminal 
investigations.
HOUSE VOTES TO CURB NSA DATA COLLECTION
The USA Freedom Act started its life as the idea of those who wanted to clamp 
down on NSA surveillance, but it was "watered down," as Rep. Jan Schakowsky, 
D-Ill., acknowledged, shedding a series of provisions favored by civil 
liberties activists. Some activists continued to back the bill, including the 
American Civil Liberties Union, whose Washington legislative director, Laura 
Murphy, called it an imperfect but "unambiguous statement of congressional 
intent to rein in the out-of-control NSA."
Technology companies such as Google and Facebook said they were most concerned 
with a last-minute definition change that they fear will allow the government 
to collect huge volumes of records — including, for example, records of all the 
phone calls made from a particular U.S. city during a certain period, or all 
the internet data associated with a particular commercial router.
The bill's original text limited the government's data requests to those 
associated with specific people, entities or accounts. The approved version 
says the government may use any "specific selection term" to set the parameters 
of its search, including a type of device or an address. The new language 
appears to allow much broader data requests.
"The new version deliberately contains ambiguity in a very critical area," said 
Harley Geiger, senior counsel for the Center for Democracy and Technology. 
"We've learned about the government track record of exploiting ambiguity in the 
law to broaden its surveillance activity."
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., a member of the House Intelligence Committee, said 
the vagueness was designed to protect the government's surveillance methods, 
not to facilitate secret bulk collection.
Other provisions that were dropped from the bill included requirements to 
estimate the number of Americans whose records were captured under the program, 
and the creation of a public advocate to challenge the government's legal 
arguments before the secret surveillance court.
NSA officials were pleased with the bill for another reason: The new 
arrangement will give them access to mobile calling records they did not have 
under the old program.

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