Yahoo News: New spying revelations prove once again Edward Snowden was right.
https://news.yahoo.com/spying-revelations-prove-once-again-175342050.html

Your government is spying on you — again.

A heavily redacted letter from Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Martin Heinrich 
(D-N.M) revealed Thursday that the CIA has been doing some sort of bulk 
collection of Americans' data. We don't really know the details — those parts 
are blacked out in the redactions, natch — but it was enough to alarm the 
senators, who both sit on the Senate Intelligence Committee. "These documents 
reveal serious problems associated with warrantless backdoor searches of 
Americans," they said in a joint statement.

This is an old problem, but one that was supposed to have been reined in. It's 
been nearly a decade since whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed the National 
Security Agency had bulk collected records of Americans' phone calls and 
emails. Federal courts later found the practice was illegal, and Congress 
tightened up the laws to end the snooping. (Here's a good Twitter thread 
detailing the state of the law.)

The CIA, however, literally plays by a different set of rules. The agency's 
program exists "entirely outside the statutory framework that Congress and the 
public believe govern this collection, and without any of the judicial, 
congressional or even executive branch oversight," Wyden and Heinrich wrote.

That's an obvious problem. Even if bulk collection is somehow justifiable — and 
that's a big "if" — it's dangerous in a democratic society to let an agency 
like the CIA hoover up Americans' personal info without some form of outside 
scrutiny. That power is easily abused, and indeed the data has been misused in 
the past: The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court found in 2018 the FBI had 
regularly used NSA information to check up on potential informants who weren't 
suspected of criminal or national security violations. The FBI blamed the 
transgression on a "fundamental misunderstanding" of how the data could be 
legally used. Funny how that happens.

Snowden, still living in exile after fleeing the United States when he turned 
whistleblower, had something to say about all of this. "You are about to 
witness an enormous political debate in which the spy agencies and their 
apologists on TV tell you this is normal and okay and the CIA doesn't know how 
many Americans are in the database or even how they got there anyway," he 
tweeted on Thursday. "But it is not okay."





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