Telecoms
could be forced to collect even more metadata under Obama’s NSA
overhaul
RT
,
4
April, 2014
An
effort from the White House to revamp the rules that govern how the
National Security Agency goes about getting telephone data may
actually force service providers to start logging more records that
they do now, a new report suggests.
Government
and industry sources in the United States say that the NSA has been
collecting only a fraction of the so-called metadata it’s allowed
to acquire under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, Reuters
reported this week, and that the systems used by telecommunication
companies to create those records rarely capture all the details they
could be.
Last
month, US President Barack Obama said his administration had settled
on a plan that, if approved by Congress, would no longer allow the
NSA to regularly collect the metadata pertaining to millions of
Americans without first getting authorization on an individual basis.
Currently, Section 215 of the US PATRIOT Act is interpreted in a way
that allows the NSA to compel telecoms for metadata without making a
case against intelligence targets, but Pres. Obama’s new proposal
would make it so that the telephone companies would create and keep
those records for themselves unless they’re specifically requested
by intel officials and approved of by the FISA court.
According
to Reuters’ sources, however, telecoms aren’t recording as much
metadata as many Americans think. Although secret documents leaked to
the media last year by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed
that the NSA was compelling telecoms for those call records, sources
say telephone service providers seldom log all the data that the
government wants them to.
An
industry source told Reuters on condition of anonymity that the
systems used by telecoms to log records are “complex,” but added,
“I doubt there are companies out there that have a nice, neat,
single database that can tell you how long records are kept
universally.”
Another
source identified only as being a former senior US official also
suggested to Reuters that fewer records are being kept on account of
the growing popularity of unlimited-calling plans offered by
telecoms, the likes of which often don’t involve billing customers
for individual calls. Without individual calls being billed, some
companies may not be logging conversation-specific metadata.
"The
change in the nature of billing data means that there's a lot less
such data than there used to be," Stewart Baker, a former senior
official at both the NSA and the Department of Homeland Security,
told Reuters.
Both
the industry source and the unnamed former government official, the
Reuters report continued, said the NSA has been collecting only 25
percent to one-third of the total US metadata that it is authorized
to collect. Obama’s new plan would relinquish the agency from
holding onto any of that information, but would instead require the
telecoms to make more detailed logs.
"It
strips from us the ability to make business decisions as the
technology evolves," the industry source told Reuters
journalists Mark Hosenball and Alina Selyukh. "It would cause us
to continue to collect stuff that we don't need,” they said.
Currently,
the US Federal Communications Commission, or FCC, requires telecoms
to retain for 18 months the records on “toll,” or long-distance
calls, Reuters reported.
“Will
the reconstituted program retain equal efficiency in acquiring and
analyzing the data as the current program?” Carrie Cordero, the
director of National Security Studies at Georgetown University Law
Center, asked on the Lawfareblog this week. “This is a big
question, with a very unclear answer from where we sit today.
Currently, it is impossible to tell, but also hard to imagine that it
will. What we do know is that communications companies are in the
business of providing communications services. And while they will
respond to lawful legal process, they are not inherently suited to
perform, nor are they interested in dramatically changing their
business model to facilitate, intelligence collection and analysis.”
Last
week, the executive vice president for public policy at Verizon wrote
on the telecom’s own blog that the company will of course compel
with future requests for call records from the government, but added
that he believed “companies should not be required to create,
analyze or retain records for reasons other than business purposes.”
Under
the White House’s plan, telecoms “would be compelled by court
order to provide technical assistance to ensure that the records can
be queried and that results are transmitted to the government in a
usable format and in a timely manner.” Pres. Obama has asked
Congress to draft and approve legislation that adheres to that
provision and others announced last month by his administration.
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