AFP: Coalition wants US to end bulk data sweep
CDT has endorsed a letter on the end of bulk collection of all types of data. AFP reports on the coalition ask and what reforms are being demanded.
More than 40 activist organizations and companies called Tuesday for an overhaul of US government surveillance authority that goes beyond President Barack Obama’s proposal.
The coalition said Obama’s proposal to end bulk collection of telephone data by the National Security Agency is positive, but does not go far enough.
Any reforms should “prohibit bulk collection for all types of data, not just phone records,” the groups said in a letter to the White House and US lawmakers.
“Legislation that focuses only on phone records may still allow for the bulk collection of, for example, Internet metadata, location information, financial records, library records, and numerous other records.”
The letter said the reform should require prior approval for each record request from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.
“If there is concern that the FISA Court would move too slowly to authorize domestic surveillance beforehand, then the solution should be to provide the FISA Court with sufficient resources,” the letter said.