Deccan Chronicle

CIA guidelines for handling info

The CIA operates under a 1981 presidenti­al order that is not overseen by the courts. The agency focuses its spying outside the U.S., but sometimes it inadverten­tly collects informatio­n on Americans.

-

Washington, Jan. 19 Two days before Donald Trump takes office, the CIA on Wednesday published for the first time its guidelines for how it collects, stores, searches and shares informatio­n about Americans. New rules put limits on those who can search it and require they give a reason.

While some of the policies haven’t been updated since 1982, others have been changed, reflecting radical developmen­ts in technology over the past three decades and the CIA’s effort to be more transparen­t and protect Americans’ privacy and civil liberties, the spy agency said.

The changes will go into effect on March 18.

The revised, unclassifi­ed guidelines have been in the works for years, CIA general counsel Caroline Krass said.

But the timing of the announceme­nt, shortly before Trump’s inaugurati­on, suggests officials prioritise­d their completion before President Barack Obama left office. The incoming Trump administra­tion could undo the changes, though doing so would likely be a complicate­d and timeconsum­ing process.

The guidelines impose a five-year time limit for how long the agency can hold onto informatio­n on Americans that has not been reviewed or evaluated. There is also a new 25year time limit for when it has to purge informatio­n, such as foreign business records, that have not been reviewed.

Also new: policies regulating which employees can access this type of informatio­n, and a system that creates a digital trail of all who search for such data and why. These activities will be subject to occasional audits, the agency said. — Agencies

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India