Congress Has No Idea How Much Web Browsing Data the FBI Collects
With Congress looking to renew the PATRIOT Act, privacy advocates are scrambling to re-attach a provision that would prevent law enforcement agencies from collecting Americans web histories without a warrant.
But as usual, fighting the governments secretive spying powers means taking shots in the dark. For one, Congress doesnt even really know how much web browsing data federal agencies are collecting.
On Thursday, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) sent a letter to acting Director of National Intelligence Richard Grenell, asking whether the numbers disclosed in the governments annual transparency report include the collection of web browsing data and search history. The report includes the number of unique identifiers collected by federal agencies under Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act, which allows for domestic mass-surveillancebut its unclear how those identifiers might apply to the collection of web browsing data.
While this may help put into context the scale of the governments collection of email communications, I am concerned it does not necessarily apply to web browsing and internet searches, Wyden wrote in the letter. This ambiguity creates the likelihood that Congress and the American people may not be given the information to realize the scale of warrantless government surveillance of their use of the internet.
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https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/ep4d97/congress-has-no-idea-how-much-web-browsing-data-the-fbi-collects