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Policy

DOJ Opposes Tech Company Efforts to Publish Surveillance Stats

Most transparent administration yada, yada, yada

Reason Staff | 10.2.2013 7:10 PM

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The U.S. Department of Justice has opposed requests by Facebook, Google, Microsoft and other companies to publish the number of surveillance requests they receive from the National Security Agency and other agencies.

Requests from five Internet companies, also including Yahoo and LinkedIn, would hurt the NSA's ability to conduct surveillance on "particular" Internet communications, the DOJ said in a brief filed with the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court on Monday. If Internet communications providers publish statistics about surveillance requests, that information could drive terrorists to other providers, the DOJ said.

"Releasing information that could induce adversaries to shift communications platforms in order to avoid surveillance would cause serious harm to the national security interests of the United States," DOJ lawyers wrote in the brief.

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Reason Staff
PolicySurveillanceScience & TechnologyCivil LibertiesTransparencyNSADepartment of JusticePrivacyInternet
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