Poe-Lofgren Bill Against Backdoor Spying is Next Step for Comprehensive Surveillance Reform
Today, Representative Poe (R, TX-2), Representative Lofgren (D, CA-19), and Representative Massie (R, KY-4) introduced the . 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute strongly supports the End Warrantless Surveillance of Americans Act because it would create new important privacy protections and enhance Internet security–both by closing legal backdoors into Americans鈥 private data and by prohibiting technical backdoors into our personal devices and communications.
H.R. 2233 would require that the government obtain a court order before conducting 鈥渂ackdoor鈥 searches for information about Americans in databases of communications that were collected pursuant to authorities intended for foreign intelligence surveillance, such as Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act or Executive Order 12333. It would also prohibit the government from requiring tech companies to weaken the security of their products and services in order to facilitate government surveillance. OTI at a just last week on why such technical 鈥渂ackdoors鈥 are a .
This bill is similar to an amendment that was introduced during the House Judiciary Committee鈥檚 markup of the USA FREEDOM Act surveillance reform bill last week, though it is stronger since its protections extend to EO 12333 surveillance. that amendment, along with a, businesses, and whistleblowers. A also supported the substance of the amendment, but voted against it for fear it would endanger the passage of USA FREEDOM. However, Committee leaders promised to take up the issue again in the future, and today鈥檚 bill is following up on that promise.
H.R. 2233 is also similar to Representative Massie and Representative Lofgren鈥檚 amendment to last year鈥檚 Department of Defense appropriations bill, which would have closed the Section 702 backdoor search loophole and prohibited the government from requiring companies to build 鈥渟urveillance backdoors鈥 into their products.聽OTI strongly supported that amendment, and helped to organize a聽聽that supported it. Though the amendment passed the House overwhelmingly with, it was stripped out of the final bill and never became law.
鈥淚f USA FREEDOM Act is the first step toward comprehensive surveillance reform, then the End Warrantless Surveillance Act is the next,鈥澛said Kevin Bankston, Policy Director at 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute.鈥淪upport for the reforms in this bill has echoed through the halls of the House for over a year. Now it鈥檚 up to House leaders to act on their members鈥 and the American people鈥檚 demands that Congress protect the security of their personal devices and block warrantless searches of their private data. We need to shut the surveillance backdoor, not only to protect our privacy but to rebuild the consumer trust that is necessary for our tech industry to succeed globally–trust that has been seriously eroded in the two years since the NSA鈥檚 mass surveillance programs were revealed.鈥