The NSA did not overstep constitutional boundaries with the massive data collection activities brought to light by Edward Snowden last year, according to an oversight board tasked with reviewing a wide-reaching National Security Agency surveillance program.
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The group’s decision, released Wednesday, also found that the program, which allowed for warrantless surveillance of international communications, including those of Americans, had been an effective tool in the prevention of terrorism. The Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board is a bipartisan group appointed by President Obama to review programs that have allowed the NSA to monitor data such as email, online chats, and text messages.
“Overall the board has found that the information the program (Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act) collects has been valuable and effective in protecting the national security,” said Chairman David Medine. However, he continued, “outside of this fundamental core, certain sections of the 702 program do raise privacy concerns and push the program close to the line of constitutional reasonableness.”
Section 702 of the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, a provision added in 2008, “is not a bulk collection program or dragnet,” board member Rachel Brand said. “The government may never target anyone located inside the United States. The government must select specific targets for surveillance and collect only the communications of those targets.”
The board also issued ten recommendations for minor changes “at the margins of the program,” as board member Elisebeth Collins Cook said.









