Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Tech companies urge U.S. to ease secrecy rules on national security probes

on national security probes

Video: Two prominent civil rights groups have filed a lawsuit against the National Security Agency over its program that reportedly collects the telephone records of millions of American customers of Verizon.
Technology companies stung by the controversy over the National Security Agency’s sweeping Internet surveillance program are calling on U.S. officials to ease the secrecy surrounding national security investigations and lift long-standing gag orders covering the nature and extent of information collected about Internet users.
The requests, made by Google, Facebook and Microsoft and echoed by a top official from Twitter, came as debate intensified over whether oversight of government spying programs grew too lax in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, when security concerns combined with soaring technological capabilities led to individuals being monitored on a vast new scale.

Should the government monitor personal Internet data of U.S. citizens?

Yes
19%
No
81%
Results from an unscientific survey of Washington Post readers
Special Report

Snowden fired by Booz Allen after admitting leak

Snowden fired by Booz Allen after admitting leak
Admitted leaker worked as contractor to National Security Agency; his whereabouts are unknown.

Investigators looking at how contractor gained access at NSA

Investigators looking at how contractor gained access at NSA
Edward Snowden leaked documents on distinctly different operations.

Snowden’s girlfriend said to be shocked that he leaked documents

Snowden’s girlfriend said to be shocked that he leaked documents
Maryland native Lindsay Mills wrote in her blog of pole dancing and the couple’s life in Hawaii.

Google, Facebook ask leeway on sharing government requests

Google, Facebook ask leeway on sharing government requests
The companies say that secrecy around data leaves their actions open to misinterpretation.

Poll: Most back NSA tracking phone records

Poll: Most back NSA tracking phone records
New poll shows broad support for tracking telephone records; many say government should go even further.
The Senate Intelligence Committee, whose chairwoman, Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) has defended the surveillance efforts, on Tuesday asked the NSA to publicly explain programs that use telephone and Internet records “so that we can talk about them, because I think they’re really helpful,” she said.
Calls for greater transparency, rather than new limits on government powers, have been the main public fallout in the days since The Washington Post and Britain’s Guardian newspaper reported that the NSA was collecting and analyzing data flowing through nine U.S. Internet companies. The program, called PRISM, reportedly was focused on foreigners but also collected data on U.S. citizens and residents that could, under certain conditions, be reviewed by officials.
Both Google and Facebook, whose business models depend on hundreds of millions of users voluntarily sharing information about themselves, have denied participating in a surveillance program as broad as described in news reports on PRISM. Yet all the companies named in reports have struggled to stanch the damage to their reputations as stewards of personal privacy.
Google on Tuesday published an open letter to Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. and FBI Director Robert S. Mueller IIIrequesting the right to report publicly the numbers and scope of national security data requests, a move that would allow Google to significantly expand its semiannual “transparency reports” on the information sought by courts and police worldwide.
“Google has nothing to hide,” wrote Chief Legal Officer David Drummond. The Justice Department declined to comment.
Facebook soon after issued a statement suggesting that it may start publishing its own “transparency reports” — a move the company has long resisted. “We urge the United States government to help make that possible by allowing companies to include information about the size and scope of national security requests we receive, and look forward to publishing a report that includes that information,” wrote Ted Ullyot, general counsel to Facebook.
(Washington Post Co. Chairman Donald E. Graham is on Facebook’s board).
Microsoft issued a statement as well, saying that greater transparency “would help the community understand and debate these important issues.”
The moves sought to recast the companies as defenders of user privacy rather than willing participants in surveillance, as portrayed in NSA documents obtained by The Post and the Guardian. A set of slides listed Google, Facebook, Yahoo, Microsoft, Apple and other technology companies as being “providers” to PRISM, an NSA program that reportedly let intelligence analysts review a wide range of information that users shared with the companies.While publicly disputing the reports, some of the companies have privately expressed outrage to lawmakers over disclosures that threatened to alienate users — not to mention the company’s cadres of engineers whose political tastes, as a group, tend toward the libertarian.
Google, Facebook and Yahoo are particularly vulnerable to public fallout because they make money mainly from advertising, and can charge significantly higher rates when they have enough personal information to target an ad message precisely to a user’s individual interests. Apple and Microsoft, by contrast, profit mainly from selling products.

Should the government monitor personal Internet data of U.S. citizens?

Yes
19%
No
81%
Results from an unscientific survey of Washington Post readers
Special Report

Snowden fired by Booz Allen after admitting leak

Snowden fired by Booz Allen after admitting leak
Admitted leaker worked as contractor to National Security Agency; his whereabouts are unknown.

Investigators looking at how contractor gained access at NSA

Investigators looking at how contractor gained access at NSA
Edward Snowden leaked documents on distinctly different operations.

Snowden’s girlfriend said to be shocked that he leaked documents

Snowden’s girlfriend said to be shocked that he leaked documents
Maryland native Lindsay Mills wrote in her blog of pole dancing and the couple’s life in Hawaii.

Google, Facebook ask leeway on sharing government requests

Google, Facebook ask leeway on sharing government requests
The companies say that secrecy around data leaves their actions open to misinterpretation.

Poll: Most back NSA tracking phone records

Poll: Most back NSA tracking phone records
New poll shows broad support for tracking telephone records; many say government should go even further.
“The NSA doesn’t care about its brand,” saidChris Soghoian, an ACLU technologist who has worked for tech companies and the Federal Trade Commission. “It’s the Internet companies whose brands are suffering.”
One major company not mentioned as a participant in PRISM was the popular social media platform Twitter. Although the company hasn’t commented directly on PRISM, many in the technology community believe it may have resisted NSA requests to participate. The company is ranked by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a privacy group, as the most protective of user information among major Internet companies.
In 2011, the firm told Justice Department officials that it would not hand over information about users related to a government investigation of Wikileaks without a court order. Last year, it appealed an order by a U.S. District Court judge in New York to hand over records of a Twitter user associated with the Occupy Wall Street movement.
On Tuesday, the company’s general counsel,Alex Macgillivray, tweeted a message of support for efforts to require greater government transparency on data collection, including the so-called national security letters that can require companies to turn over extensive information while sharply limiting any disclosure about the request. “We’d like more NSL transparency and @Twitter supports efforts to make that happen.”
The most valuable information about Twitter users is their Internet addresses, which would allow authorities to track the location and habits of users. E-mails and documents are of greater interest to intelligence officials, said Peter Eckersley, technology project director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
“If these companies can’t be transparent with users about their participation in surveillance with the U.S. government, they will lose a lot of business,” he said. “If foreign companies know that using Google Docs or e-mail will expose them to U.S. spies, they will choose a different platform.”
The reaction to revelations about the NSA program has been particularly strong in Europe, where officials are developing a new data privacy law that has been the subject of intense lobbying by U.S. officialsconcerned that strict new rules could hinder the reach of American tech companies on the continent.
Tech giants such as Google, Apple and Facebook have been among the few bright spots in the U.S. economy as it slogged through the recent recession, and most are counting on overseas business to continue fueling their growth.
News that the NSA was using major U.S. companies to monitor foreign Internet users has complicated their positions abroad, according to a letter sent to Holder on Monday by European Commission Vice President Viviane Reding. It warned that PRISM threatened to “undermine the trust” of Europeans. She requested answers to a series of questions about the program by Friday.
Ed O’Keefe, Greg Miller, Peter Finn and Michael Birnbaum contributed to this report. Birnbaum reported from Berlin.

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