No. 598 September 1 - 7, 2010

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No. 385, June 1 - 7, 2006
 
Snooping goes beyond phone calls
 
May. 29- The phone giants involved in the recent NSA scandal represent only one of many commercial sources of personal data that the government seeks to "mine" for evidence of terrorist plots and other threats.
The Departments of Justice, State and Homeland Security spend millions annually to buy commercial databases that track US citizens' finances, phone numbers and biographical information, according to a report released last month by the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the investigative arm of Congress. Often, the agencies and their contractors don't ensure the data's accuracy, the GAO found.
Buying commercially collected data allows the government to dodge certain privacy rules. The Privacy Act of 1974 restricts how federal agencies may use such information and requires disclosure of what the government is doing with it.
But the law applies only when the government is doing the data collecting.
The Justice Department alone, which includes the FBI, spent $19 million in fiscal 2005 to obtain commercially gathered names, addresses, phone numbers and other data, according to the GAO.
Despite the GAO's findings, a Homeland Security spokesman denies that his agency purchases consumer records from private companies. The State Department didn't respond to requests for comment.
"Grabbing data wholesale from the private sector is the way agencies are getting around the requirements of the Privacy Act and the Fourth Amendment," says Jim Harper, director of information policy studies at the libertarian Cato Institute in Washington and a member of the Homeland Security Department's Data Privacy & Integrity Advisory Committee.
 
Source: Business Week
 
Nation
   Anti-gay amendment aimed at energizing GOP base
   Enron chiefs face life in jail after guilty verdicts
   General confirmed as CIA chief
   PATRIOT Act 'gag' provision ruled undemocratic
   Snooping goes beyond phone calls
   Used the phone lately? Worried?
   White House invokes privilege in spy cases
   Nation Briefs
World
   Activist Suu Kyi's sentence extended
   Amnesty attacks US 'disappearances'
   Families of prisoners in Iraq press for resolution
   Ijaw win $1.5 billion suit against Shell
   Iran proposal to US: peace with Israel
   Iraqi city of Basra is beginning to fall apart
   Mass arrests at Moscow gay march
   Rights group: US killed 34 Afghan civilians
   Torture and death 'routine' behind bars in Burma
   UN investigates 'forced suicides' in Turkey
   US faces new challenge after riots in Kabul
   US shuts eyes to abuses of key ally, Egypt
   White House blocks direct talks with Iran
   World Briefs
Iraq War
   Marines cover-up civilian killing spree
   Iraq War Briefs
Labor
   Sportswear companies exploiting their workers
   Labor Briefs
Environment
   Pending pesticide approvals trouble EPA scientists
   Tropical forests are protected only on paper
   WHO alarmed by new bird flu deaths
   Environment Briefs
Media Watch
   FCC to investigate unlabeled ads
   Halt Pentagon payoffs to Iraqi journalists, DoD report recommends
   Pres. Bush 'planted fake news stories on TV'
   Media Watch Briefs
Culture
   Speaking of rebels: An interview with Dan Berger
Commentary
   Big Brother's history
 
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Quote of the Week
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Total US deaths in Afghanistan have doubled under President Obama, and when the next US soldier is reported dead, the majority of US deaths in Afghanistan will have occurred under President Obama.
"
-- Robert Naiman, truthout, 8/16/2010.



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