Millennium Post

US NSA spy agency halts controvers­ial email sweep

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The National Security Agency has announced it would end its controvers­ial practice of sweeping up any email or text message an American exchanges with someone overseas that makes reference to a real target of NSA surveillan­ce.

The powerful US spy agency yesterday said although it has the legal power to continue scooping up such communicat­ions, it would halt the practice to protect the privacy of US citizens.

“NSA will no longer collect certain internet communicat­ions that merely mention a foreign intelligen­ce target,” it said in a statement.

The NSA, the country’s premier signals intelligen­ce body, is permitted to collect communicat­ions of any foreign target, but not that of Americans except in certain situations, or if it gains a warrant to do so.

Under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, it is allowed to scoop up a US citizen’s emails or texts with someone outside the country if those merely mention a specific NSA surveillan­ce target -- so-called “about” collection.

The practice has sparked heavy criticism from civil liberties advocates, who say it violates constituti­onal protection­s. Many have threatened to try to block the renewal of Section 702 at the end of this year if the law is not tightened.

But the country’s intelligen­ce community wants the law to be renewed unchanged.

The NSA said it would voluntaril­y end “about” collection even if it means that it might lose access to other important informatio­n in the fight against cyber threats and terrorism.

Senator Ron Wyden, a Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, praised the move but said that Section 702 needs multiple changes.

“To permanentl­y protect Americans’ rights, I intend to introduce legislatio­n banning this kind of collection in the future,” he said.

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