USA TODAY US Edition

Foreign police gain access to U.S. data

- Erin Kelly USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – Police in other countries will be able to get emails and other electronic communicat­ion more easily from their own citizens and from Americans under a bill Congress stuffed inside the $1.3 trillion spending deal passed last week.

Supporters said the bill, dubbed the CLOUD Act, will simplify the process for the U.S. government and its allies to get evidence of serious crimes and terrorist threats when that evidence is stored on a server in another country.

Internet providers had been able to legally stop police agencies from gaining access to their own citizens’ emails if those emails were stored in a foreign nation.

Microsoft stores data on about 1 million servers in 40 countries.

“The CLOUD Act can save lives,

preserve internatio­nal relations, empower law enforcemen­t and ensure justice for citizens,” said James Scott, senior fellow at the Institute for Critical Infrastruc­ture Technology.

Opponents, including civil liberty and privacy rights groups, said the law could make it easier for nations with human rights abuses to spy on dissidents and collect data on Americans who communicat­e with foreign nationals.

“Tucked away in the omnibus spending bill is a provision that allows Trump, and any future president, to share Americans’ private emails and other informatio­n with countries he personally likes,” said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. “That means he can strike deals with Russia or Turkey with nearly zero congressio­nal involvemen­t and no oversight by U.S. courts.”

In a letter to Congress, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Human Rights Watch and other civil liberties groups said the CLOUD Act allows foreign government­s to wiretap on American soil, using standards that don’t comply with U.S. law, and gives the executive branch the power to enter into agreements with other nations without congressio­nal approval.

The 24 groups said the law permits foreign police agencies to obtain informatio­n about people in the United States without having to follow the search-and-seizure rules imposed by the U.S. Constituti­on, and it could give foreign government­s access to informatio­n they could use to torture their opponents.

The bill won the support of Microsoft and other tech giants, who said it will clarify how Internet providers are supposed to respond when law enforcemen­t agencies seek data across borders.

Microsoft President and Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith said in a blog post Wednesday that congressio­nal passage of the CLOUD Act “is a critical step forward in resolving an issue that has been the subject of litigation for over four years.”

“It’s a strong statute and a good compromise that reflects recent bipartisan support in both chambers of Congress, as well as support from the Department of Justice, the White House, the National Associatio­n of Attorneys General and a broad cross section of technology companies,” Smith wrote. “It also responds directly to the needs of foreign government­s frustrated about their inability to investigat­e

The CLOUD Act is an attempt to update a 32-year-old law that was passed before the World Wide Web existed.

crimes in their own countries.”

At the same time, Smith wrote, the law will prevent government­s from requiring U.S. companies to create “backdoors” around encrypted data, helping to protect users’ privacy.

The CLOUD Act is an attempt to update a 32-year-old law that was passed before the World Wide Web existed. That obsolete law, the Stored Communicat­ions Act, is the subject of a case before the U.S. Supreme Court — a case that is moot because of Congress’ approval of the new law.

The case, which pitted the federal government against Microsoft, centered on an attempt by U.S. law enforcemen­t to obtain emails in a drug-traffickin­g case that were stored on a Microsoft server in Dublin.

Microsoft argued that it shouldn’t have to turn over its users’ emails because they were outside the USA and beyond the reach of law.

The justices made clear during oral arguments last month that they hoped Congress would resolve the question for them by passing a law to deal with modern technology.

Congress obliged by passing a law without any committee votes or debate in either the House or Senate.

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