Government Watchdog Calls Out Dangers in Section 702 Surveillance
A divided board recommends reforms as Congress debates renewing snooping authority.

Ten years after Edward Snowden sparked a debate over domestic (and international) spying by the U.S. government and its allies, arguments continue and so does the snooping. This year, one key component of the surveillance state—Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act—is up for congressional reauthorization. Now, the executive branch's own civil liberties watchdog says that, while Section 702 plays an important role, it's also dangerous to our freedom and needs reform.
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Surveillance, American-Style
To hear America's professional spooks, Section 702 is made up of equal servings of mom, apple pie, and a trench coat.
"In 2008, Congress enacted Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), a critical intelligence collection authority that enables the Intelligence Community (IC) to collect, analyze, and appropriately share foreign intelligence information about national security threats," insists the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. "Section 702 only permits the targeting of non-United States persons who are reasonably believed to be located outside the United States. United States persons and anyone in the United States may not be targeted under Section 702."
The Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB), established in 2007 in an effort to limit the excesses of the burgeoning post-9/11domestic intelligence apparatus, sees things a little differently.
"The Board finds that Section 702 poses significant privacy and civil liberties risks, most notably from U.S. person queries and batch queries" in which multiple query terms are run as part of a single action, according to the PCLOB's Report on the Surveillance Program Operated Pursuant to Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, published September 28 and following up on a 2014 report on the same topic. "Significant privacy and civil liberties risks also include the scope of permissible targeting, NSA's new approach to upstream collection, a new sensitive collection technique that presented novel and significant legal issues approved by the FISC in 2022, how data is initially ingested into government repositories, incidental collection, and inadvertent collection."
The report points out that the definition of "foreign intelligence information" is very broad and that 246,073 non-U.S. persons were targeted for surveillance in 2022, up 276 percent from 2013. While Section 702 surveillance isn't "bulk" surveillance of the sort that hoovers up mass quantities of information, it "lacks individualized and particularized judicial review of targeting decisions" with the result that "targeting can be overbroad or unjustified."
Foreign Intelligence Isn't Always So Foreign
The result of broad and somewhat indiscriminate data collection is that "the government acquires a substantial amount of U.S. persons' communications as well." This interception of Americans' communications "should not be understood as occurring infrequently or as an inconsequential part of the Section 702 program." In particular, "FBI's querying procedures and practices pose the most significant threats to Americans' privacy."
Why is the FBI of such particular concern? Because the FBI focuses on domestic law enforcement and "one of the most serious risks to individual civil liberties associated with the incidental collection of U.S. person information is that this classified information collected for intelligence purposes could be used in a criminal prosecution," notes the board. The government is required to disclose when it uses Section 702 intelligence in criminal cases, but it has done so only nine times—which is not the same as saying that it rarely uses such information. "In multiple cases, rather than providing notice to criminal defendants of Section 702-derived information, the government has instead sought to develop evidence through other sources" so prosecutors can avoid admitting they used foreign intelligence tools.
The Real Targets Are Often Americans
Often, federal agents seem to explicitly use Section 702 to bypass safeguards. "The large amounts of incidental collection may include communications between attorneys and their clients," adds the report. It also notes that "the government has identified a significant number of noncompliant queries where government personnel have conducted queries related to instances of civil unrest and protests."
How often does this happen?
"In the Annual Statistical Transparency Report for calendar year 2021, FBI reported that it ran 3.4 million [later revised downward to 2.97 million] U.S. person queries of Section 702-acquired information in all its systems," according to a report footnote.
The Debate Over Reform
The divided five-member PCLOB recommends multiple reforms, including a specific prohibition on "about" interceptions that are neither to or from targets, but merely mention them, and a requirement for Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court approval of U.S. person query terms. Even so, the report concludes "the United States is safer with the Section 702 program than without it." Despite that call for reauthorization, two of the five board members voted against the report for being excessively critical and demanded that it not be attributed to them.
Civil liberties groups quickly noted the report's contribution to the debate over Section 702.
"Congress has the power to safeguard the constitutional rights of Americans by fundamentally reforming this invasive and unconstitutional mass surveillance program," Kia Hamadanchy, senior policy counsel at the ACLU, commented in an emailed statement. "As the Board rightly points out, requiring the government to obtain individualized judicial approval is critical to ensuring that Section 702 cannot be used by the FBI, NSA, and CIA to quietly circumvent Americans' constitutional rights."
"The PCLOB report is damning, in terms of both the frequency with which government agencies conduct warrantless searches of data collected under Section 702 and the purposes for which those searches are conducted, yet the report's recommendations don't go nearly far enough to ensure Americans' privacy from this overreaching, oft-abused digital dragnet," agreed Electronic Frontier Foundation Senior Policy Analyst Matthew Guariglia.
Damning it may be, but the White House National Security Council has already rejected part of the report's call for modest reform as "operationally unworkable."
Given the current debate over Section 702, it's easy to forget about other legal authorizations for domestic surveillance. These include other parts of FISA, Executive Order 12333, and national security letters, which often are subject to looser safeguards. But, the PLCOB adds, "Section 702 enables the government to target a broader array of persons," including those who aren't suspected of violating American laws or acting against the United States, "which also increases the risks of privacy and civil liberties harms."
Section 702 expires in December with its fate, and that of proposed reforms, in the hands of Congress.
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requiring the government to obtain individualized judicial approval is critical to ensuring that Section 702 cannot be used by the FBI, NSA, and CIA to quietly circumvent Americans' constitutional rights
If you can't trust the FBI, the NSA, and the CIA, who can you trust? Surely our representatives in Congress will do the right thing and reauthorize 702. Especially the Republicans who have every reason to be leery of government fuckery. They're our most dependable allies.
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When euthanasia is not forbidden, it becomes mandatory.
https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/the-canadian-culture-of-death-brooks-no-dissent/
"That process is accelerating in Canada. Ontario already requires individual doctors, at the risk of professional discipline, to participate in euthanasia — either by killing a legally qualified patient (a category that keeps expanding) or providing an “effective referral,” which means finding for the patient a doctor who’s known to be willing to kill.
Now, efforts are being mounted to coerce objecting institutions into allowing euthanasia — euphemistically called medical assistance in dying (MAID) — even when it violates the faith precepts of a hospital, nursing home, or hospice. Toward that end, a study newly published in BMC Medical Ethics argues that the government should force dissenting institutions to comply with patients’ requests to die."
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The absence of top-down regulation may impose a significant burden on clinicians to undertake advocacy and negotiate patient access. Given that the model of assisted dying in Canada relies on clinician involvement to facilitate patient access, reducing burdens on clinicians is also important in ensuring provider sustainability and, in turn, patient access.'"
"What might that look like? Stripping institutions of all health-care-related government funding and/or seizing control of dissenting institutions. Both actions were imposed in 2021 against Delta Hospice in British Columbia after it refused to euthanize patients. Delta was crushed even though it was only a ten-bed institution and was adjacent to a public hospital where doctors would have happily euthanized requesting patients. But, even that tiny institutional objection was deemed beyond the pale by the BC government, whose action was later approved by the courts.
One of the main arguments for legalizing euthanasia, or assisted suicide, has always been that it furthers the great principle of “choice.” But sooner or later, choice becomes a one-way street. Comity is eventually shattered, and the freedom of conscience and religion of medical professionals and faith-based institutions becomes a human-rights violation to be remedied by the government and punished by the courts."
Glorious deimocracy.
Ten years after Edward Snowden
sparked a debate overexposed illegal domestic (and international) spying by the U.S. government and its allies, arguments continue and so does the snooping.If Trump gets elected and uses these agencies to identify, locate, kidnap, and deport dirty foreigners who are committing the heinous crime of not having papers, it will all be worth it.
Yes, that is the real concern here.
Also, the IC are all well-established Trump sycophants.
Point is that most people appear to really like a powerful, intrusive government, as long as it goes after people they don’t like.
Also, wasn't the warrantless wiretapping ordered by a Republican? No, that's not possible. Republicans are the good guys.
I’m the last one to get on someone’s case about day drinking, but you need to slow down, and cool it with the tripling down already.
I’ll take that as you fully approving the use of the surveillance state to go after illegals.
NO! Puleeeeze don' sen' me back to Puerto Rico! Econazis and communists have banned all energy except toppling turbines and wind-scattered fragments of subsidized solar collectors. Tormenteras and tornado shelters are a "provocation" because they might help someone survive a storm or nuke attack.
So is a Communist Chinese spy that illegally crossed the southern place that used to be a border able to be spied on through 702?
Is he foreign or domestic?
No. Section 702 forbids targeting individuals who are located in the United States, or who are "United States persons" (essentially citizens and lawful permanent residents) located anywhere in the world. Of course, other surveillance authorities can be used to target people inside the United States, including FISA Title I.
They cave on the budget, spending do nothing about the borders or the illegals already here so we all know what's going to occur this December when 702 comes up for renewal. The only unknown is what line of BS they will use to 'declare victory' and protecting the rights of citizens to be left alone.
Dangerous to you and me perhaps.
Beneficial and lucrative to politicians and government employees, and that's really the only thing that matters in government.
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act has (at least) *702* sections? Holy cow... reminds me of the old joke about feeling sorry for the poor schmuck who had to test Preparations A through G.
There are people that believe those in power follow the law? That's cute!
To hear America's professional spooks, Section 702 is made up of equal servings of mom, apple pie, and a trench coat.
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