Friday, July 30, 2010

FBI Can Now Snoop In Your Email and Web Surfing

Do you remember how the Democrats cryed about Bush when he snooped on foreign phone calls? I wonder if they will be as upset now that Obama has made it OK for the FBI to go into your emails and computer without a warrant? I'm sure they will protest this with as much vin and vigor as they did under Bush. This is incredible. The left are most likely not worried about this. But once the Republicans take back the government they will be all over it.  I'm sure we have nothing to worry about with this regime. And when the tide is turned for our liberal friends we will do as mu ch as you did when the shoe is on the other foot. If you think the Republicans wont use it just like the Democrats then you are batshit crazy. So if I was a left wing blogger I'd want this overturned sooner then later because we all know it wont turn out good for any of us. This is something we should all protest about. Obama expanded the Patriot Act and the left said nothing. It's time to realize that the Republicans will misuse this power as much as the Democrats will. They will just turn it on different Americans.  Lets see what the left wing media and bloggers do about this and then judge them on their reaction to this unconstitutional law.  Wake up America and that means you Democrats as well.             By Pete  Yost, The Associated Press    WASHINGTON - Invasion of privacy in the Internet age. Expanding the reach of law enforcement to snoop on email traffic or on Web surfing. Those are among the criticisms being aimed at the FBI as it tries to update a key surveillance law.

With its proposed amendment, is the Obama administration merely clarifying a statute or expanding it? Only time and a suddenly on guard Congress will tell.

Federal law requires communications providers to produce records in counterintelligence investigations to the FBI, which doesn't need a judge's approval and court order to get them.

They can be obtained merely with the signature of a special agent in charge of any FBI field office and there is no need even for a suspicion of wrongdoing, merely that the records would be relevant in a counterintelligence or counter terrorism investigation. The person whose records the government wants doesn't even need to be a suspect.

The bureau's use of these so-called national security letters to gather information has a checkered history.

The bureau engaged in widespread and serious misuse of its authority to issue the letters, illegally collecting data from Americans and foreigners, the Justice Department's inspector general concluded in 2007. The bureau issued 192,499 national security letter requests from 2003 to 2006.

Weathering that controversy, the FBI has continued its reliance on the letters to gather information from telephone companies, banks, credit bureaus and other businesses with personal records about their customers or subscribers — and Internet service providers.

That last source is the focus of the Justice Department's push to get Congress to modify the law.

The law already requires Internet service providers to produce the records, said Dean Boyd, a spokesman for the Justice Department's national security division. But he said as written it also causes confusion and the potential for unnecessary litigation as some Internet companies have argued they are not always obligated to comply with the FBI requests.

A key Democrat on Capitol Hill, Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy of Vermont, wants a timeout.

The administration's proposal to change the Electronic Communications Privacy Act "raises serious privacy and civil liberties concerns," Leahy said Thursday in a statement.

"While the government should have the tools that it needs to keep us safe, American citizens should also have protections against improper intrusions into their private electronic communications and online transactions," said Leahy, who plans hearings in the fall on this and other issues involving the law.

Critics are lined up in opposition to what the Obama administration wants to do.

"The FBI is playing a shell game," says Al Gidari, whose clients have included major online companies, wireless service providers and their industry association.

"This is a huge expansion" of the FBI's authority "and burying it this way in the intelligence authorization bill is really intended to bury it from scrutiny," Gidari added.

Boyd, the Justice spokesman, said the changes being proposed will not allow the government to obtain or collect new categories of information; rather it simply seeks to clarify what Congress intended when the statute was amended in 1993, he argued.

Critics, however, point to a 2008 opinion by the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel which found that the FBI's reach with national security letters extends only as far as getting a person's name, address, the period in which they were a customer and the numbers dialed on a telephone or to that phone.
The problem the FBI has been having is that some providers, relying on the 2008 Justice opinion — issued during the Bush administration — have refused to turn over Internet records such as information about who a person emails and who has emailed them and information about a person's Web surfing history.
To deal with the issue, there's no need to change the law since the FBI has the authority to obtain the same information with a court order issued under a broad section of the Patriot Act, said Gregory Nojeim, director of the Project on Freedom, Security and Technology at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a non-profit Internet privacy group.
The critics say the proposed change would allow the FBI to remove federal judges and courts from scrutiny of its requests for sensitive information.
"The implications of the proposal are that no court is deciding whether even that low standard of 'relevance' is met," said Nojeim. "The FBI uses national security letters to find not just who the target of an investigation emailed, but also who those people emailed and who emailed them."

8 comments:

  1. There goes the remainder of our illusion of privacy. Unless you want to kill the unborn that is--we have privacy if we want to kill babies.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Great point Kristin.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I give up on these Dems. I'd love to hear what JoeC and bfealk think about this. Chris would you like to visit local 2280 and speak sometime or just have a pop with us?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Call this the Anti-Patriot Act.

    Hey UAW Local 2280,,Pop?

    ReplyDelete
  5. So basically you bashed us liberals insinuating that all Bush did was spy on foreign calls and then the article goes on to discuss a 2007 report about how the Government illegal gathered information on citizens and foreigners. WTF?

    I dson't like this nor did i like the reckless and unconstitutional actions of Bush, the same ones you tend to defend chris.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Batman, President Bush authorized monitoring American citizens' overseas phone conversations to persons with ties to known terrorist organizations. Did you have a problem with that? I know that most "Liberal Fools" in the lamestream media tried to spin it to "All American Citizens" calling anywhere overseas.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Maybe We Can Tell terrorist We Are Monitering Their Calls Sorta Like A Mianda Warning From Ma Bell. Betcha Holder Would Love That.

    On Different Note Theres One Of Those Memo Thingys Out There From Homeland Security About Illegal Immigration Legislation And Leaving Congress Out Of The Process. Regime Is Once Again Forgetting About Constitution. My Guess Regime "Knows Nothing" About Memo! Wonder Where The Buck Stops. My Guess With Liberals At Trumans Grave.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Driveby asshole, the monitoring went alot further than foreign calls to the US. I know most jackass Faux news talking heads tried to sweep it under the rug, but it got out anyway.

    ReplyDelete

Please keep it clean and nice. Thank you for taking the time to post you thought. It means a lot to me that you do this.