Chicago Sun-Times

New law would close loophole in federal government’s right to snoop

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When the federal government is in a snooping mood, it can’t just go to big tech companies and buy all the personal informatio­n they collect on us each day. There are rules against that.

But nothing stops the government from buying that same informatio­n from third parties that get it from the big tech companies or elsewhere, sometimes without permission. A company called Venntel, for example, sells location data from users’ cellphones to government agencies. Another company, Clearview AI, has scooped up facial recognitio­n images from Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube and sells that informatio­n to the government.

That kind of once-removed government surveillan­ce puts the privacy of every American at risk.

There are times — legitimate times — when the government needs such highly personal informatio­n to pursue or prevent wrongdoing. But that’s what judges and warrants and special courts are for. There is a process for balancing privacy and government needs.

But to allow the government to peek into our private lives just out of curiosity takes us down a dangerous road.

To protect Americans’ privacy, Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Illinois, and others in Congress are sponsoring “The Fourth Amendment is Not for Sale Act.” The Fourth Amendment is the one that guarantees the right of people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonab­le searches and seizures by the government.

The bill would require the federal government to follow rules already spelled out in the Electronic Communicat­ions Privacy Act, which regulates law enforcemen­t, and the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, which regulates intelligen­ce agencies. Those laws didn’t anticipate the pervasive rise of thirdparty data brokers.

In recent years, law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies have tapped into the fathomless dossiers on almost everyone, much of it scraped up by third-party companies with no accountabi­lity. But government has no business going on fishing expedition­s, unchecked by warrants or judges, into the private lives of presumed innocent persons.

Earlier laws to rein in such indefensib­le government snooping have been left in the dust by the rapid advance of technology. The new law, closing a loophole, is overdue.

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