OTI Sends Coalition Letter in Response to the DNI’s Broken Privacy Commitment
聽Today, 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute joined 33聽privacy and civil liberties organizations聽 to Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Coats, which we . The coalition wrote to express our dismay at the director鈥檚 announcement that he is reneging on his commitment to provide a public estimate of the number of Americans whose communications are collected under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
Senator Wyden originally asked for this estimate in 2011. Since then, privacy and civil liberties organizations, Republican and Democrat members of the House Judiciary Committee, and several Senators have joined in this call for transparency and oversight. In response to requests from the House Judiciary Committee members, former DNI Clapper committed to publicly provide an estimate so that the information could meaningfully contribute to the reauthorization debate. At his nomination hearing, DNI Coats assumed responsibility for this commitment.
聽The letter explains that privacy and civil liberties experts roundly reject the DNI鈥檚 justifications for abandoning this commitment, which are based on spurious privacy concerns and potential resource constraints. We further caution that:
聽鈥淵our refusal to provide this estimate leaves congressional overseers and the public back where we started in 2011: in the dark, and with justifiable and significant concerns about the effect of Section 702 surveillance on Americans鈥 privacy and civil liberties. This omission is particularly striking given that Section 702 is set to expire at the end of the year, and the White House is urging Congress to make the authority permanent. Your decision diminishes public trust in the work the intelligence community undertakes and in its ability to adequately protect Americans鈥 privacy and civil rights, and as a result, will undermine mission success. We urge you to reconsider.鈥
聽The following quote can be attributed to Robyn Greene, policy counsel and government affairs lead at 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute:
聽鈥淭he American people and Congress have been waiting for six years for the NSA to provide an estimate of how many Americans鈥 communications are collected under Section 702. It is indefensible that one of DNI Coats鈥 first acts in office is to renege on his commitment to provide that critical information in a timely way. To add insult to injury, in breaking his promise, Coats relied entirely on the intelligence community鈥檚 debunked reasoning from 2012. The longer the intelligence community takes to let Americans know how harmful Section 702 is to their privacy, the more it seems like they simply don鈥檛 want to provide the estimate because of how significant it will be.鈥 聽