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KEEF
08-19-2013, 06:04 AM
Why The 2,776 NSA Violations Are No Big Deal (http://ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/featured-articles/2013/august/18/why-the-2,776-nsa-violations-are-no-big-deal.aspx)[/h]sunday august 18, 2013http://ronpaulinstitute.org/media/31155/ronpaul-tst_239x84.jpg

Thanks to more documents leaked by Edward Snowden, this time to the Washington Post, we learned last week that a secret May 2012 internal audit by the NSA revealed 2,776 incidents of “unauthorized” collection of information on American citizens over the previous 12 months. They are routinely breaking their own rules and covering it up.

The Post article (http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/nsa-broke-privacy-rules-thousands-of-times-per-year-audit-finds/2013/08/15/3310e554-05ca-11e3-a07f-49ddc7417125_story.html) quotes an NSA spokesman assuring the paper that the NSA attempts to identify such problems “at the earliest possible moment.” But what happened to all those communications intercepted improperly in the meantime? The answer is, they were logged and stored anyway.

We also learned that the NSA routinely intercepts information from Americans while actually targeting foreigners, and that this is not even considered a violation. These intercepts are not deleted once discovered, even though they violate the government’s own standards. As the article reports, “once added to its databases, absent other restrictions, the communications of Americans may be searched freely.”]

More at http://ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/featured-articles/2013/august/18/why-the-2,776-nsa-violations-are-no-big-deal.aspx