OTI Joins With Privacy Groups and Tech Companies to Tell Congress: End the NSA’s Backdoor Access to Internet Users’ Data
WASHINGTON, DC –听Today, a coalition of technology companies and non-profit organizations including 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute (OTI) sent a letter to Congress in support of an amendment to the Department of Defense Appropriations Act that would rein in National Security Agency鈥檚 鈥渂ackdoor鈥 access to Internet users鈥 data.听 Signers included companies such as Google and CloudFlare, trade associations such as the Computer & Communications Industry Association and the Internet Infrastructure Coalition, and civil society organizations such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Center for Democracy & Technology.
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The amendment, which is expected to be offered by Representatives Massie and Lofgren and a bipartisan coalition of cosponsors and could be debated as early as this evening, would restrict funding to the Defense Department in two ways that would help constrain the NSA鈥檚 broad surveillance powers. 听[UPDATE JUNE 19, 2014: The amendment is now additionally supported by House Judiciary Crime Subcommittee Chair Jim Sensenbrenner, a key Republican leader, and House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member John Conyers, a key Democratic leader.] First, it would prohibit the use of appropriated funds to exploit the so-called 鈥渂ackdoor search loophole鈥 that allows government agents to search the private communications of Americans who have been swept up in the NSA鈥檚 surveillance programs without first getting a search warrant.听 Second, it would respond to reports that the NSA has been pushing companies to insert security vulnerabilities into their products to facilitate surveillance, by preventing the NSA or the CIA from using any appropriated funds to require or request that providers of products or services build such surveillance 鈥渂ackdoors鈥 into their offerings.
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鈥淲e deserve to be able to rely on the security of our communications services and our digital devices, yet the National Security Agency has been actively working to insert new weaknesses鈥攕urveillance 鈥渂ackdoors鈥濃攊nto those products and services in a way that undermines everyone鈥檚 privacy and security,鈥 said听Kevin Bankston, OTI鈥檚 policy director.听 鈥淭herefore, the Open Technology Institute is very pleased to see members of Congress working to shut these NSA 鈥渂ackdoors鈥 that threaten the security of the Internet, and to ensure that instead of hacking into our data, the NSA has to come through companies鈥 front doors with appropriate legal process.鈥
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鈥淭he NSA shouldn鈥檛 be able to get backdoor access to our laptops or cellphones or email accounts or social network profiles鈥攁nd neither should it be able to get backdoor access to Americans鈥 data using surveillance authorities that are supposed to be targeted at people outside the United States,鈥 according to听Robyn Greene,听OTI policy counsel specializing in surveillance issues.听 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why the Open Technology Institute supports the amendment to close the 鈥渂ackdoor search loophole鈥 and require the NSA to get a search warrant before searching Americans鈥 private communications.听 That same reform was in the original version of the USA FREEDOM Act, before it was watered down in secret negotiations with the intelligence community, and we appreciate the amendment sponsors鈥 willingness to keep fighting for this critical privacy protection.鈥
The full text of the letter is available .听