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September 18, 2015

privacy sos
Congress sneaks massive surveillance expansion into budge

Thu, 12/17/2015 - 14:06

You might think that just a few short years after the Snowden revelations, Congress would hesitate to give the executive branch brand new, dragnet surveillance powers. If you thought that, you would be wrong.

Advocacy groups like the ACLU have succeeded in blocking cybersurveillance bills masquerading as so-called "cybersecurity" legislation for years, but this week, proponents in Congress slipped the package into the 2016 omnibus budget authorization. The omnibus budget includes funding for core functions of government, including the US military, so the chances that the White House will veto it are approximately zero.

Unfortunately, the version of the cybersurveillance bill that appears at the end of the omnibus budget is worse than any prior iteration of the scheme we've seen thus far. Cybersecurity experts say it wouldn't do anything to protect US computer networks, but would give the government far more power to spy on us without warrants or individualized suspicion. Worse still, the legislation would protect companies like Google and Apple from civil lawsuits if they hand over our private information to the government without court orders or warrants.

The ACLU joins many other civil liberties groups in signing a letter to Congress urging them to remove the cyberspying bill from the omnibus before it passes. The letter lays out the fundamental problems with the legislation, which if enacted would:

Click on Link:
http://privacysos.org/node/1868