• Flying Squid
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    668 months ago

    Strange that Snowden, of all people, is assuming the NSA is waiting for this bill to pass to do this stuff rather than them having done it for a very long time already.

    Does he really think the NSA isn’t already spying on people through things like public wifi?

    • @[email protected]
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      318 months ago

      My understanding is this will make public operators liable to participate. Like, they have to have infrastructure in place to do the recording for the NSA.

      Like, they could mandate back doors in all equipment.

    • Flying Squid
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      278 months ago

      You can definitely still watch weird porn. Just know that you won’t be the only one jerking off while you’re doing it.

      • @PlasticExistence
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        218 months ago

        They could at least have the decency to do a video call so we can make eye contact while we climax. It’s more wholesome that way.

    • @Viking_Hippie
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      208 months ago

      yes. In fact there will be mandatory minimums with stiff penalties for noncompliance, pun intended.

  • @virku
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    288 months ago

    I guess the policy of the Company I work for, that we don’t use any service hosted in the USA, is sticking around then.

    • @kbotc
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      88 months ago

      The NSA couldn’t really work in the US before this, but they were free and encouraged to work in foreign countries. You should look up how the “five eyes” actually worked, and ECHELON before it: Your data stored overseas is fair game for the NSA. Inside the country they needed a secret warrant to nab it.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        They collected everything from the US but pretended they could only search comms with at least one non-US party without a warrant (there were no technical barriers to this and Snowden even claimed it would be easy for a low level NSA agent to read the President’s emails). Foreigners may be easier to search without a warrant at the NSA, but using services outside the US gives a greater chance your data isn’t in their database to begin with.

  • @mansfield
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    88 months ago

    May I remind everyone of CALEA. Just in case your skim of the page makes you think it is only for phone/telecoms…

    In the years since CALEA was passed it has been greatly expanded to include all VoIP and broadband Internet traffic.

  • @_sideffect
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    68 months ago

    Doesn’t the government already do this with our cellphones since they pass through the cell towers?

  • @Larry
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    48 months ago

    What was the vote for this in the House called? Looking up my Congressman’s votes but I see multiple FISA votes

  • @markstos
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    -248 months ago

    Any downvoters care to comment on their vote?

    • DumbAceDragon
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      8 months ago

      The article is just really bad tabloid garbage

      1. Does not even show the section of this bill that it is talking about
      2. Source is just “Edward Snowden said a thing on twitter” (not shitting on Snowden, he’s done some great work. I’m shitting on the article)

    • @Saprophyte
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      68 months ago

      FISA authorizes a specific court to authorize warrants, the FISC, however the article looks directly at the NSAs role who is not affiliated with or charged by FISC, but through warrants and direction of the FBI. The FBI is not very scary since people normally associate them with protection of national interests, so instead the article only mentions who the tasking authority and holder of the warrant actually is. The article uses key terms specifically to get a reaction from a small subset as click bait without even providing accurate information about the topic. It’s lazy and uninformative.