President Barack Obama on Friday announced significant changes to the way the National Security Agency collects communications data, but those reforms stop short of what privacy advocates wanted.
Speaking at the Justice Department, Obama acknowledged critics who said that surveillance authorities could be abused. He also strongly defended the intelligence community.
“I would not be where I am today were it not for the courage of dissidents, like Dr. King, who were spied on by their own government,” Obama said. “As a president who looks at intelligence every morning, I also can’t help but be reminded that America must be vigilant in the face of threats.”
Obama announced that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court judge will now have to approve queries to the database holding information collected under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. Currently, the agency can acquire telephone communications records in bulk with a court order, but the NSA does not require judicial approval to search the database. The requirement to seek the approval of a judge will go into effect immediately, even without legislation from Congress.
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“The question is whether the court is going to be more suspicious and more demanding of the NSA than the NSA would be of itself,” says Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at American University. “The only thing we know for sure is it won’t be less suspicious.”
The president also said that the NSA should no longer hold the data, but he stopped short of saying that it should not be collected at all. Obama recommended that the attorney general and intelligence community work together with Congress to decide how the data should be held.
“I think these are steps in the right direction; of course, the devil will be in the details,” said Michelle Richardson of the American Civil Liberties Union. A key question is what legal standard will be required for querying data under the president’s proposal. Currently, the NSA is allowed to make three “hops” from the target of a query — that is, they are allowed to analyze the records not only of a target, but those of parties three degrees of separation from the target. The question, Richardson says, is “when you go get your court order, are you still grabbing millions of people’s records at a time?”
Obama said Friday that the agency would be limited to searching records two “hops” from a target, rather than three.
“This is without a doubt the most significant reforms in our surveillance programs since President Obama took office,” a senior administration official told reporters on a conference call Friday morning ahead of the president’s speech.
Other changes Obama proposed include a panel of attorneys who would argue significant cases before the Secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and an easing of the gag orders that come with the issuance of national security letters. National security letters allow the government to seek business records without a warrant, and to prevent the recipient of such a letter from revealing publicly that they have received one.









