Business Standard

US foreign surveillan­ce requests doubles: Microsoft

- DUSTIN VOLZ 14 April

Microsoft Corp said on Thursday it had received at least a thousand surveillan­ce requests from the U.S. government that sought user content for foreign intelligen­ce purposes during the first half of 2016.

The amount, shared in Microsoft's biannual transparen­cy report, was more than double what the company said it received under the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act (FISA) during the preceding sixmonth interval, and was the highest the company has listed since 2011, when it began tracking such government surveillan­ce orders.

The scope of spying authority granted to US intelligen­ce agencies under FISA has come under renewed scrutiny in recent weeks, sparked in part by evolving, unsubstant­iated assertions from President Donald Trump and other Republican­s that the Obama White House improperly spied on Trump and his associates.

Microsoft said it received between 1,000 and 1,499 FISA orders for user content between January and June of 2016, compared to between 0 and 499 during both January-June 2015 as well as the second half of 2015. The number of user accounts impacted by FISA orders fell during the same period, however, from between 17,500 and 17,999 to between 12,000 and 12,499, according to the report.

The US government only allows companies to report the volume of FISA requests in wide bands rather than specific numbers. FISA orders, which are approved by judges who sit on the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court, are tightly guarded national security secrets. Even the existence of a specific FISA order is rarely disclosed publicly.

The Washington Post reported on Tuesday that the FBI obtained a FISA order to monitor the communicat­ions of former Trump advisor Carter Page as part of an investigat­ion into possible links between Russia and Trump's presidenti­al campaign.

Parts of FISA will expire at the end of the year, unless US lawmakers vote to reauthoriz­e it. Privacy advocates in Congress have been working to attach new transparen­cy and oversight reforms to any FISA legislatio­n, and to limit government searches of American data that is incidental­ly collected during foreign surveillan­ce operations.

FISA orders, which are approved by judges who sit on the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court, are tightly guarded national security secrets

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India