Wednesday, June 5, 2013

NSA Said to Collect Millions of Verizon Phone Records

NSA Said to Collect Millions of Verizon Phone Records

Bloomberg - ‎13 minutes ago‎
The Obama administration is collecting the telephone records of millions of U.S.-based Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) customers, relying on a secret court order obtained under a Bush administration policy that sparked a national controversy, the Guardian ...
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NSA Said to Collect Millions of Verizon Phone Records

The Obama administration is collecting the telephone records of millions of U.S.-based Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) customers, relying on a secret court order obtained under a Bush administration policy that sparked a national controversy, the Guardian newspaper reported.
White House officials declined to comment on the report that the FBI was granted a court order in April that required Verizon to provide the National Security Agency with information about calls inside the U.S. and between the U.S. and other countries on a daily and “ongoing” basis.
Pedestrians use their phones in front of a store in San Francisco. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
The April 25 order from the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court covers telephone numbers as well as the location and duration of calls, according to the Guardian, which said it obtained a copy of the document. The order doesn’t apply to the content of customers’ conversations and expires on July 19, the newspaper said.
News of the order emerged as President Barack Obama’s administration is being challenged over its regard for civil liberties. The Justice Department, as part of its inquiries into leaks of national-security information, has obtained search warrants for telephone records of journalists from the Associated Press and Fox News, prompting protests from U.S. lawmakers and media-advocacy groups.
The disclosure may put further pressure on U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who’s under fire for targeting reporters in the crackdown on leaks. It also may weigh on the nomination of Obama’s choice as the next Federal Bureau of Investigation director, James B. Comey.

‘Beyond Orwellian’

Privacy-rights advocates issued swift protests upon learning of the Guardian report, calling the data collection an intrusion on millions of innocent Americans. The American Civil Liberties Union called for the Obama administration to halt the program and disclose its scope and asked Congress to investigate.
“It is beyond Orwellian,” said Jameel Jaffer, deputy legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union, in a statement. It shows “the extent to which basic democratic rights are being surrendered in secret to the demands of unaccountable intelligence agencies.”
It wasn’t clear whether the NSA is pursuing similar surveillance through other U.S. telecommunications companies.
White House National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden referred questions to the NSA, which didn’t respond to requests for comment, and the FBI. Paul Bresson, an FBI spokesman, and Verizon spokesman Ed McFadden declined to comment.

Sept. 11

The Verizon data-collection order was signed 10 days after the Boston Marathon bombing killed three people and injured more than 260 in the highest-profile terrorist incident on U.S. soil since 2001. U.S. agencies vastly expanded surveillance efforts during the past 12 years in a bid to avoid a repeat of the attacks on New York and the Pentagon.
President George W. Bush’s administration began the so-called Terrorist Surveillance Program in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, with intelligence agencies secretly conducting electronic surveillance on U.S. phone calls and e-mails without court warrants.
Congress passed a law in 2008 codifying parts of the program and allowing intelligence agencies to get broad electronic surveillance orders from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.

Terrorist Activities

That law, updating the more than three-decade-old Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, lets intelligence agencies monitor the e-mail, Internet activity and phone calls of non-U.S. citizens reasonably believed to be located outside the U.S. and involved in terrorist activities or other crimes. Congress voted last year to extend it until the end of 2017.
“We’ve been saying for over a decade that the law is incredibly broad and could be interpreted to allow something like this, but people didn’t believe it,” said Michelle Richardson, legislative counsel of the ACLU. “Now that there is hard proof, hopefully this will force Congress to take a look at it.”
In 2012, there were 212 such FISA orders, known as “business records requests,” according to a letter from the Justice Department to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. The letter doesn’t specify the targets or scope of the requests.
“Once a year they send a report to Congress that says here’s how many orders we did, here’s how many wiretaps, here’s how many national security letters,” Richardson said.

‘Worst Fears’

The Guardian report marks the first time since broad surveillance was authorized in 2008 that an unredacted order has come to light, Richardson said.
“It confirms the worst fears that these tools are not being used in a targeted manner just against suspected terrorists and spies,” she said
Richardson said she is concerned the NSA is obtaining orders covering all major U.S. phone providers and Internet as well as phone data.
The disclosure has the potential to spiral into controversy for U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, as the NSA is part of the Pentagon. It may also emerge as an issue for the president’s incoming national security adviser, UN Ambassador Susan Rice, whom he announced as the replacement for Tom Donilon starting next month.
Senators led by Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden and Kentucky Republican Rand Paul unsuccessfully tried to amend last year’s legislation extending FISA so it would have included what they said were needed provisions to protect the constitutional rights of U.S. citizens.

‘Government Overreach’

“‘While I cannot corroborate the details of this particular report, this sort of widescale surveillance should concern all of us and is the kind of government overreach I’ve said Americans would find shocking,” Senator Mark Udall, a Colorado Democrat, said in an e-mailed statement.
Udall voted against renewing the surveillance law last year. At the time, he said the law doesn’t ensure the privacy of Americans and complained the Obama administration had refused to disclose how many U.S. citizens had their communications monitored by the NSA.
To contact the reporters on this story: Margaret Talev in Washington at mtalev@bloomberg.net; Chris Strohm in Washington at cstrohm1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Steven Komarow at skomarow1@bloomberg.net; Bernard Kohn at bkohn2@bloomberg.net

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NSA Said to Collect Millions of Verizon Phone Records

Is this a good thing or a bad thing? Likely both. Also, what I find interesting is the NSA is even more secret than the CIA and there are organization now so secret that they have no public name at all.

Also, the NSA was originally started to keep track of UFO encounters and their relationships with mankind. My theory is that most UFO's are from the future (our descendents) protecting their births. So they protect their ancestors from time wars there in the future. If one of us ancestors dies it affects the future. So, keeping us ancestors alive prevents time wars. So, the NSA is a part of all this I now believe. They are also involved in linguistics with UFOs I believe as well. So, likely one of the many many reasons the NSA would want millions of telephone records is to find out what people think and do with aliens from off planet, in the future or from other dimensions. 

Later Note: Thursday June 6th:

Scientifically and pragmatically speaking I find it more useful to see earth and all places like planets, places etc. as dimensions. Because it is just more useful in the end. Otherwise, how can one perceive with any clarity thousands of dimensions and places including polar opposite Anti-matter universes  as opposites to our matter universe, heaven realms, nebula, inside of stars etc. ?

It seems that seeing Earth (all places on Earth) as a part of the Earth Dimension, the Sun, as a part of the Sun dimension, Venus, Mars and all the other planets as part of the Venus, Mars and other planetary dimensions as much more useful than seeing them as we tend to as physical planets like we tend to do earth.

For example, as a Soul Traveler over the years I have discovered that somehow we humans are already anywhere we go. Quantum physics explains this to me by saying, "It is only a probability that any atom is anywhere or many different places at the same time." What does this mean? I guess I experience this as meaning that an atom can and does exist many places at once. Things that we don't want to believe because they are uncomfortable might be important at least to try to understand, even if we then go back to believing in comfortable things most of the time.

It is sort of like when we are home in our apartments or homes worldwide we feel relatively safe. But when we go out in our cars or trucks on the freeway we realize we have to be very conscious of all the variables or we are dead. It is the same thing in regard to places and thinking of them like dimensions. If you are soul traveling or if you are evolved enough to travel and to take your body to literally any space or time like Jesus and possibly Buddha were(and may still be able to) then when you are traveling you must at least intuitively take in many more variables to navigate time and space. So thinking about all places and times including Earth as dimensions rather than being physical seems much more useful and practical to me when you are traveling anywhere to any place or time.

 

 

 


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