It is and has always been pretty clear that the government get
anything they want. Just who is going to say no at anyone's pay
level. Yet what they do get is raw data. What is more important for
the citizen, this raw data is collected without a warrant. This
means that it cannot be readily used to support a legal action. That
is really the true protection available to the citizen.
Thus an individual active in wholesale criminality get little comfort
but chuck the unlucky is pretty well off the hook.
When legal phone taps began in Canada, the first serious test case
ended up with the judge spending days listening to every scrap of
tape in order to establish context. That chilled out any further use
of the method and today such surveillance is done mostly without
warrant in the hope it will lead to material evidence that is
actionable.
The same will hold true here. It is all about intelligence.
Unfortunately they have chosen to expand the net to everyone well
beyond common sense and likely forget to watch congressmen conversing
with lobbyists whose conversations we would all love to see on prime
time.
Here's How Often
Google and Facebook Say Yes to Government Snoops
Plus, internal data on
how many user accounts have been targeted.
—By Dana
Liebelson
Tue Jun. 18, 2013
Edward Snowden's leaks
have prompted many questions about government surveillance activity
in the United States, including this one: How often do tech firms
turn over user data to the feds? In recent years, companies
including Google, Microsoft, and Twitter have released
data on this front—but it's been incomplete, because the government
has prohibited them from revealing the full extent of the requests
they've received.
Last week, following
Snowden's disclosures about the National Security Agency's PRISM
program, Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and Twitter pressed
the federal government to allow them to give the public a fuller
picture of how often the authorities request user
information, including the number of requests they receive under
the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). In
response, the FBI and the Department of Justice granted permission on
Friday to disclose the number of FISA requests they get—but with a
pretty big catch. The companies must lump these top-secret
surveillance orders in with ordinary criminal investigations by
local, state, and federal authorities, a caveat that provides little
insight into how often the government is invoking its
surveillance powers, let alone the type of content that is being
released to federal authorities. The government is "failing to
offer the public anything but the bare minimum amount of
transparency," argues Sina Khanifar, a privacy activist who
helped launch Stopwatching.us, a coalition demanding more information
about NSA surveillance efforts.
After the government
relaxed the rules about the type of information they could make
public, Microsoft and Facebook released
data combining national security requests and criminal
investigations. But Google and Twitter have
so far declined to do so until the government allows them to break
out FISA requests. "Our request to the government is clear:
to be able to publish aggregate numbers of national security
requests, including FISA disclosures, separately," says Google
spokesman Chris Gaither.
In an effort at
transparency, Google, Microsoft, and Twitter (but not Facebook) have
issued reports for the past several years disclosing bare bones
information about the requests they receive from a variety of law
enforcement authorities. Google and Microsoft (which owns
Outlook and Skype) have also reported limited data about national
security letters, controversial documents used by the FBI to secretly
compel the disclosure of certain online records. The companies have
permission to report only a vague range of the number of national
security letters they receive. For instance, Google could only report
that it had received as many as 999 national security letters in
2012, targeting between 1,000 and 1,999 user accounts.
Collectively, Google,
Facebook, Microsoft, and Twitter report receiving tens of
thousands of requests for user data from the US government annually.
In 2012, Google received more than16,400 requests covering
31,000-plus user accounts from federal, state, and
local authorities. The number of data demands directed to
Google has been increasing since 2010, when the company reported
receiving less than 9,000 requests. (Gaither says he
doesn't "want to speculate" on why the company is getting
more requests—although he points out that each year more people are
using the internet.)
Microsoft revealed on
Friday that in the second half of 2012 it received between
6,000 and 7,000 criminal and national security warrants, subpoenas,
and orders affecting up to 32,000 accounts. (Before it could
factor in FISA orders, the company had reported 11,000 data
requests affecting less than 25,000 accounts for all of 2012.)
During the same time period, Facebook says government entities
made between 9,000 and 10,000 requests, covering up to 19,000
accounts.
The tech companies
don't comply with all law enforcement requests, but they go along
with most of them. A Facebook spokesperson told Mother
Jones that the company provided information in response to 79
percent of the data requests it received between July and December
2012. The other companies haven't released new data that
incorporates FISA requests, but here are the compliance
rates reported in 2012 by Google, Microsoft, and Twitter:
The companies still
can't reveal much about the type of content released under
national security requests. Google says that it will only hand
over the content of an email if a search warrant is issued. According
to Gaither, under a subpoena, Google can disclose the name
listed when on the account, the IP address from which it was
created, and the date and time a user signed in and out.
Using a national security letter, Google says that the FBI
can also only obtain limited information, excluding email
content and Google search queries.
Twitter, which follows
a similar policy, received 1,494 requests affecting 2,093
accounts from federal, state and local authorities in 2012.
Between July and December 2012, most of the requests were subpoenas,
which require Twitter to provide basic user information. In
order to get direct messages, Twitter notes that the requester would
have to present a court order.
Microsoft put
together a chart detailing what is generally released when the
company provides "non-content information" to the
authorities:
Nate Cardozo, a staff
attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, notes that
normal restrictions on the type of information released may go
out the window when FISA orders are involved. "What we know
about FISA orders is that they seem to be targeting non-US persons,
so they may actually request content, since Fourth Amendment
protections don't apply." Snowden claimed Monday in a live chat
with the Guardian that when a NSA analyst targets an
email address, he or she gets "all of it…IPs, raw data,
content, headers, attachments, everything." And even when the
NSA isn't targeting domestic communications, Snowden claimed
that the content of a US citizen's email is only protected by a
"very weak" filter that can be "stripped out at any
time."
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