The National Security Agency (NSA) may be ending a program that analyzes the records of hundreds of millions of domestic calls and messages in the U.S.
A senior Republican congressional aide, Luke Murry, mentioned on the Lawfare podcast that the agency hadn’t used the program in months, making its renewal unlikely when it expires at the end of the year.
A ‘fundamentally flawed’ program
The phone metadata program, later known as Section 215 of the Patriot Act, passed in secret after the attacks of September 11, 2001, and required popular phone carriers to hand over logs of phone calls and text messages to the NSA without the need for a court order.
It was only in 2013 when Edward Snowden leaked evidence of the program’s existence that the government was forced to acknowledge this practice. The revelations eventually led to the passing of The Freedom Act, which altered and slowed the collection process but did not end it.
However, it seems that the system for analyzing this data may be put to bed at the end of this year, as the government “hasn’t actually been using it for the past six months,” according to Murry. Going further, Murry also referred to problems in the data, where “technical irregularities” led to the collection of unauthorized message logs (though the NSA later purged the data).
“I’m actually not certain that the administration will want to start [the phone records analysis] back up,” he added.
The NSA has yet to confirm that the program will close, but Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) is already pushing to cement a permanent end to it, stating, “The NSA’s implementation of reforms to the phone records dragnet has been fundamentally flawed. In my view, the administration must permanently end the phone records program, and Congress should refuse to reauthorize it later this year.”
The NSA is still tracking you through other means
Unfortunately, the possible removal of one program would make but a small dent in the agency’s ability to listen in to its citizens.
There are still many other ways the NSA can spy on its citizens. The troubling backdoor loophole in Section 702 of FISA, for instance, also remains active, enabling mass surveillance programs such as PRISM and Upstream to collect billions of communication logs from both U.S. and non-U.S. citizens.
The NSA can also call on other states to harvest data on citizens. The so-called “14 Eyes” have varying data retention laws that enable them to snoop on each other’s citizens and share the collected data. The U.S. is not alone in its endeavor to surveil the masses.
Protect your data from government surveillance
The demise of Section 215 would be a good step forward, but we’d be kidding ourselves if we said this would make our lives significantly more private. There are still many surveillance tools in place, from both the NSA and CIA, although there are ways to stop them from tracking you.
Comments
I have Rogers as my internet service providrer. Is the hitronics router still needed or can I return it to Rogers?
Isn’t it Ron Wyden, not Rob Wyden?
Thank you for the correction, we’ve changed it now 🙂
Suggest you might want to note that the POTUS was under Surveillance by C_A & F_I and you can read all about this on the Q and Q Anon Posts. Also the C_A has lost all of its S_Y tools due to all tools were on an UnC-ASS Server and this was caught by the White Hats and Provided to POTUS. I worked for 32+yrs and NEVER saw a program that they stopped because it violated US Law. Remember that the 14 Eyes are actually more than that and they have different laws that regularly S_Y on the US People. This is Why the two major players on the world stage always want to kill access for their people to the www. Anon