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“NSA broke privacy rules thousands of times per year.” [Darleen Click]

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… but it’s a phony scandal!

Do read the whole article. Much of it confirms what has already been suspected by the revelation of the vast hoovering of American citizen communications. Yet, what comes through here is the cavalier attitude of those connected with NSA towards the data gathered and the equivocations used to deflect concern.

The documents, provided earlier this summer to The Washington Post by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, include a level of detail and analysis that is not routinely shared with Congress or the special court that oversees surveillance. In one of the documents, agency personnel are instructed to remove details and substitute more generic language in reports to the Justice Department and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. […]

James R. Clapper Jr., the director of national intelligence, has acknowledged that the court found the NSA in breach of the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures, but the Obama administration has fought a Freedom of Information lawsuit that seeks the opinion.

Generally, the NSA reveals nothing in public about its errors and infractions. The unclassified versions of the administration’s semiannual reports to Congress feature blacked-out pages under the headline “Statistical Data Relating to Compliance Incidents.” […]

“What you really want to know, I would think, is how many innocent U.S. person communications are, one, collected at all, and two, subject to scrutiny,” said Julian Sanchez, a research scholar and close student of the NSA at the Cato Institute.

The documents provided by Snowden offer only glimpses of those questions. Some reports make clear that an unauthorized search produced no records. But a single “incident” in February 2012 involved the unlawful retention of 3,032 files that the surveillance court had ordered the NSA to destroy, according to the May 2012 audit. Each file contained an undisclosed number of telephone call records. […]

The large number of database query incidents, which involve previously collected communications, confirms long-standing suspicions that the NSA’s vast data banks — with code names such as MARINA, PINWALE and XKEYSCORE — house a considerable volume of information about Americans. Ordinarily the identities of people in the United States are masked, but intelligence “customers” may request unmasking, either one case at a time or in standing orders.

In dozens of cases, NSA personnel made careless use of the agency’s extraordinary powers, according to individual auditing reports. One team of analysts in Hawaii, for example, asked a system called DISHFIRE to find any communications that mentioned both the Swedish manufacturer Ericsson and “radio” or “radar” — a query that could just as easily have collected on people in the United States as on their Pakistani military target.

The NSA uses the term “incidental” when it sweeps up the records of an American while targeting a foreigner or a U.S. person who is believed to be involved in terrorism. Official guidelines for NSA personnel say that kind of incident, pervasive under current practices, “does not constitute a .?.?. violation” and “does not have to be reported” to the NSA inspector general for inclusion in quarterly reports to Congress. Once added to its databases, absent other restrictions, the communications of Americans may be searched freely.

In one required tutorial, NSA collectors and analysts are taught to fill out oversight forms without giving “extraneous information” to “our FAA overseers.” FAA is a reference to the FISA Amendments Act of 2008, which granted broad new authorities to the NSA in exchange for regular audits from the Justice Department and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and periodic reports to Congress and the surveillance court.

Using real-world examples, the “Target Analyst Rationale Instructions” explain how NSA employees should strip out details and substitute generic descriptions of the evidence and analysis behind their targeting choices.

“I realize you can read those words a certain way,” said the high-ranking NSA official who spoke with White House authority, but the instructions were not intended to withhold information from auditors.

Most transparent administration, EVAH!

12 Replies to ““NSA broke privacy rules thousands of times per year.” [Darleen Click]”

  1. sdferr says:

    Most transparent administration, EVAH!

    Man, you can say that again . . . I mean, leaking to Al Qaeda that they’ve broken Al Qaeda’s communication codes and are listening to the Islamists’ board meetings is pretty damn transparent, relative to earlier administrations.

  2. Libby says:

    That whole DC monitoring “mistake” (oopsie, entered “202” instead of “20”) sure is fishy. Guess those concerns that the WH was monitoring Congress and possibly SCOTUS, etc. aren’t so outlandish after all.

  3. geoffb says:

    So the NSA ‘accidentally‘ wiretapped the DC area code in an election year when illegal NSA surveillance was an issue

  4. dicentra says:

    Always keep in mind that we’re looking only at what made it into the records.

    The worst offenses — especially stuff used to blackmail people — don’t go on the books.

  5. Darleen says:

    di

    don’t worry about it … Obama has top men working on this for sure!

    And what you don’t know about illegal searching of your stuff doesn’t really affect you. It’s not like you’re doing anything wrong, correct?

  6. […] Others: Politico, protein wisdom, Hillicon Valley, Washington Monthly, Le·gal In·sur·rec· tion,Taylor Marsh, Salon, Hullabaloo, The Switch, The Fix, RIA Novosti, CNN, Crooks and Liars,Firedoglake, Balkinization, Guardian, Hit & Run, The Hill, Techdirt, The Daily Banter,americanthinker.com, msnbc.com, Hot Air, The Week, Washington Wire, The Daily Caller, WJLA-TV,Scared Monkeys, BBC, Right Wing News, The Verge, Weasel Zippers, Prairie Weather, GigaOM,Mashable, Alan Colmes’ Liberaland, Little Green Footballs, Balloon Juice, Simple Justice, Mediaite,WFPL, emptywheel, Post Politics, The Volokh Conspiracy and Philly.com, Firedoglake, Daily Kos, No More Mister Nice Blog, emptywheel, The Dish, Pat Dollard and The Right Scoop […]

  7. BigBangHunter says:

    – Perhaps Hilldebitch could start her “regaining trust in the government” speaking tour with a slide presentation of why we should just accept anything the NSA wants to do and all the reasons why you have nothing to worry about as long as you’re not doing anything wrong.

    – Ann Rynd wept.

  8. dicentra says:

    It’s not like you’re doing anything wrong, correct?

    They have my records and they say I have. All of my kiddie-porn searches, tax evasion, and prostitution are right there in black and white.

  9. DarthLevin says:

    Oh, come on, di.

    It’s not like anybody could just put together a text file that looks like a server activity log and use it to accuse of something you didn’t do. Nothing like that has ever happened in the history of ever.

  10. McGehee says:

    “If you haven’t done anything wrong (like laugh at a rodeo clown or talk to an empty chair) you have nothing to worry about.”

  11. palaeomerus says:

    Maureen Dowd, Alan Grayson, Harry Reid, and Chris Matthews will take what you DON’T say, or even think, against you too. Who afe you going to believe? An oafish, projection filled, cartoonish liberal calumny or your won lying eyes ? Yeah, that’s what I thought, you creepy ass cracker. OBAMAPHONE! RAAAACSISM! Shut up!

  12. David Block says:

    Trust the government? On what basis?

Comments are closed.