Surveillance Costs: The NSA鈥檚 Impact on the Economy, Internet Freedom, and Cybersecurity
As a new version of the USA FREEDOM Act surveillance reform bill is expected to be introduced in the Senate this week, the debate about the National Security Agency鈥檚 surveillance programs still tends toward a simplistic focus on striking the right balance between national security and individual privacy. But a new 60-page released today by 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute (OTI) catalogues the significant costs of the NSA programs beyond their impact on privacy and liberty, describing how the NSA鈥檚 actions are also affecting the U.S. economy, American foreign policy, and the security of the Internet as a whole. The report, Surveillance Costs: the NSA鈥檚 Impact on the Economy, Internet Freedom & Cybersecurity, attempts to quantify and categorize four different types of impact:
The direct economic costs to U.S. businesses that have lost consumer trust and major contracts internationally, particularly the cloud computing and telecommunications industries;
The economic and technological costs of data localization and data protection proposals now being floated by foreign governments concerned about NSA spying;
The political costs to U.S. foreign policy and especially America鈥檚 鈥淚nternet Freedom鈥 agenda, and
Cybersecurity costs as a result of the NSA weakening encryption standards, inserting backdoors into commercial products, stockpiling security vulnerabilities, and using these exploits to create a massive network of compromised computers around the world.
鈥淭oo often, we have discussed the National Security Agency鈥檚 surveillance programs through the distorting lens of a simplistic 鈥榮ecurity versus privacy鈥 narrative,鈥 said Danielle Kehl, a policy analyst at OTI and the primary author of the report. 鈥淏ut if you look closer, the more accurate story is that in the name of security, we鈥檙e trading away not only privacy, but also the U.S. tech economy, Internet openness, America鈥檚 foreign policy interests, and cybersecurity. What we found in our paper is that the NSA鈥檚 surveillance programs could cost the technology industry billions of dollars in the next few years, undermine the U.S. 鈥業nternet Freedom鈥 agenda, and damage the architecture and security of the Internet itself. When you weigh those costs against the dubious benefits of many of these programs, the need to rein in the NSA and restore international confidence in America and its stewardship of the Internet becomes clear.鈥
After discussing the costs at length, the paper lays out a series of eight recommendations for reform, urging the U.S. government to:
Strengthen privacy protections for both Americans and non-Americans, within the United States and extraterritorially;
Provide for increased transparency around government surveillance, both from the government and companies;
Recommit to the 鈥業nternet Freedom鈥 agenda in a way that directly addresses issues raised by NSA surveillance, including moving toward international human-rights based standards on surveillance;
Begin the process of restoring trust in cryptography standards through the National Institute of Standards and Technology;
Ensure that the U.S. government does not undermine cybersecurity by inserting surveillance backdoors into hardware or software products;
Help to eliminate security vulnerabilities in software, rather than stockpile them;
Develop clear policies about whether, when, and under what legal standards it is permissible for the government to secretly install malware on a computer or in a network;
Separate the offensive and defensive functions of the NSA in order to minimize conflicts of interest.
鈥淲e literally cannot afford to continue ignoring these costs,鈥 said Kevin Bankston, OTI鈥檚 Policy Director and an author of the report. 鈥淭he USA FREEDOM Act鈥攁 new and strengthened version of which is expected in the Senate this week鈥攚ould go a long way toward stemming the costs of the NSA鈥檚 spying programs and restoring trust in the American Internet industry, by prohibiting bulk records collection and providing substantially more transparency around the NSA鈥檚 surveillance programs. But ensuring that a strong version of USA FREEDOM becomes law is only the first step toward repairing the damage that the NSA has done to America鈥檚 tech economy, its foreign relationships, and the security of the Internet itself.鈥
Bankston continued, 鈥淲e desperately need more comprehensive reforms to address the mass Internet surveillance being done inside the United States under Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act and outside of the country under the President鈥檚 authority. Congress also needs to protect the security and popularity of U.S. tech products and services by prohibiting the NSA from weakening them with surveillance 鈥檅ack doors,鈥 a prohibition that the House of Representatives supported by a vote of nearly three to one just .鈥
This study on the serious costs of the NSA programs follows the 国产视频 National Security Studies Program鈥檚 report on the dubious benefits of those programs, It also builds on the discussions at two 国产视频 panel events from earlier this year, and , and Internet Freedom. A short six-page preview version of the report was also distributed to members of Congress two weeks ago at the Capitol Hill briefing sponsored by the Congressional Internet Caucus.
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