The top tech companies are sharpening their blades in their battle with the
National Security Agency. While they've been doggedly asking for transparency
on the agency's mass surveillance program for months, they're now calling for
reform.
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Google, Apple, Microsoft, Yahoo, Facebook, and AOL penned a letter to the
lead members of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday urging the lawmakers
to substantially reform the NSA surveillance practices. The companies also
asked for additional oversight and accountability mechanisms for the spying
programs.
"Transparency is a critical first step to an informed public debate,
but it is clear that more needs to be done," the letter reads. "We
urge the Administration to work with Congress in addressing these critical
reforms that would provide much needed transparency and help rebuild the trust
of Internet users around the world."
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The NSA is one of the biggest surveillance and eavesdropping agencies in the
US
and was whistleblower Edward Snowden's workplace before he decided to leak some
of the agency's top-secret documents to the press in June.
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That document leak opened the public's eyes to the government's collection
of data on US residents through both cellular records and metadata from
Internet companies. Since Snowden's original leak, thousands more documents
have surfaced. The NSA and the Obama administration have maintained that the
surveillance program was carried out to protect Americans and track down
foreign terrorists.
The letter sent by the tech companies "applauds" Sen. Patrick J.
Leahy (D-Vt.) and Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R-Wis.) who recently sponsored
a bill called the USA Freedom Act. This bill has the goal of "ending
eavesdropping, dragnet collection, and online monitoring" by the NSA and
other government agencies.
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Sensenbrenner is considered one of the architects of the Patriot Act, which
the NSA often cites as a legal justification for its surveillance activities.
However, Sensenbrenner is adamant that mass government spying wasn't the
intention of the Patriot Act.
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"We have to make a balance between security and civil liberties,"
Sensenbrenner told the Associated Press in an interview last week. "And
the reason the intelligence community has gotten itself into such trouble is
they apparently do not see why civil liberties have got to be protected."
In their letter, the six tech giants echoed Sensenbrenner's sentiment.
"As companies whose services are used by hundreds of millions of people
around the world, we welcome the debate about how to protect both national
security and privacy interests and we applaud the sponsors of the USA Freedom
Act for making an important contribution to this discussion," the letter
reads.
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