President Obama is proposing a bill that will end the NSA’s current cell phone monitoring methods: namely bulk data collection.
This means that the NSA will no longer be able to have access to all
people’s cell phone and call records at all times. The new bill propose a
whole new slew of regulations.
User call and text data would be safeguarded by cell phone companies,
and they wouldn’t be forced to hold onto the records for extended
periods of time so the NSA can have access to it later. The only way the
NSA can access user data is unless there was hard evidence that a
user’s call had terrorist links.
The bill comes a little over a month after President Obama gave a
speech on NSA reformation, which promised three significant changes in
the way the NSA collects data: that personal user data would not be
stored indefinitely, that all data gathered must be pertinent to a
current investigation, and that user metadata would be taken out of NSA
hands.
Although this new bill will make good on these promises, there are
still some other current NSA bulk data-gathering practices that aren’t
addressed.
For example, the CIA can still get their hands on money transfer
records, personal user web data, and hack into Google and Yahoo networks
carte blanche.
But some progress is better than none, right?
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