Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2023-11-21 09:36:27| Engadget

US Senator Ron Wyden wants the public to know about the details surrounding the long-running Hemisphere phone surveillance program. Wyden has written US Attorney General Merrick Garland a letter (PDF), asking him to release additional information about the project that apparently gives law enforcement agencies access to trillions of domestic phone records. In addition, he said that federal, state, local and Tribal law enforcement agencies have the ability to request "often-warrantless searches" from the project's phone records that AT&T has been collecting since 1987.  The Hemisphere project first came to light in 2013 when The New York Times reported that the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) was paying AT&T to mine and keep records of its customers' phone calls. Four billion new records are getting added to its database every day, and a federal or state law enforcement agency can request a query with a subpoena that they can issue themselves. Any law enforcement officer can send in a request to a single AT&T analyst based in Atlanta, Georgia, Wyden's letter says, even if they're seeking information that's not related to any drug case. And apparently, they can use Hemisphere not just to identify a specific number, but to identify the target's alternate numbers, to obtain location data and to look up the phone records of everyone who's been in communication with the target.  The project has been defunded and refunded by the government several times over the past decade and was even, at one point, receiving federal funding under the name "Data Analytical Services (DAS)." Usually, projects funded by federal agencies would be subject to a mandatory Privacy Impact Assessment conducted by the Department of Justice, which means their records would be made public.  However, Hemisphere's funding passes through a middleman, so it's not required to go through mandatory assessment. To be specific, ONDCP funds the program through the Houston High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, which is a regional funding organization that distributes federal anti-drug law grants and is governed by a board made up of federal, state and local law enforcement officials. The DOJ had provided Wyden's office with "dozens of pages of material" related to the project in 2019, but they had been labeled "Law Enforcement Sensitive" and cannot be released to the public.  "I have serious concerns about the legality of this surveillance program, and the materials provided by the DOJ contain troubling information that would justifiably outrage many Americans and other members of Congress," Wyden wrote in his letter. "While I have long defended the governments need to protect classified sources and methods, this surveillance program is not classified and its existence has already been acknowledged by the DOJ in federal court. The public interest in an informed debate about government surveillance far outweighs the need to keep this information secret."This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/us-senator-calls-for-the-public-release-of-att-hemisphere-surveillance-records-083627787.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

06.02Thailand's health department redefines normal sweetness for drinks, reducing sugar by 50%
05.02X's latest Community Notes experiment allows AI to write the first draft
05.02Everything we know about Valve's new Steam Machine
05.02Prime members can play Alan Wake 2 for free on Luna
05.02Meta is giving its AI slop feed an app of its own
05.02Project Hail Mary is getting its own LEGO set
05.02The CIA stops publishing The World Factbook
05.02The Switch 2-exclusive co-op adventure Orbitals launches this summer
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

06.02Pandora switching to platinum from silver as prices surge
06.02Average house price tops 300,000 for first time, says Halifax
06.02Friday Watch
06.02Indian stocks enjoy a rare combination, makes a case for re-rating: Morgan Stanley's Ridham Desai
06.02The hidden risk of building a leadership team with people you know
06.02Meesho slides 40% from peak, slips below listing price. Here is why brokerages still see 26% upside
06.02Why so many meme coins fail almost immediately
06.02LIC shares climb 4% after Q3 results. Should you buy, sell, or hold?
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .