By PAMELA HESS
WASHINGTON (AP) - A top intelligence official says it is time people in
the United States changed their definition of privacy.
Privacy no longer can mean anonymity, says Donald Kerr, the principal
deputy director of national intelligence. Instead, it should mean that
government and businesses properly safeguards people's private
communications and financial information.
Kerr's comments come as Congress is taking a second look at the Foreign
Surveillance Intelligence Act.
Lawmakers hastily changed the 1978 law last summer to allow the
government to eavesdrop inside the United States without court
permission, so long as one end of the conversation was reasonably
believed to be located outside the U.S.
The original law required a court order for any surveillance conducted
on U.S. soil, to protect Americans' privacy. The White House argued
that the law was obstructing intelligence gathering.
The most contentious issue in the new legislation is whether to shield
telecommunications companies from civil lawsuits for allegedly giving
the government access to people's private e-mails and phone calls
without a court order between 2001 and 2007.
Some lawmakers, including members of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
appear reluctant to grant immunity. Suits might be the only way to
determine how far the government has burrowed into people's privacy
without court permission.
The committee is expected to decide this week whether its version of
the bill will protect telecommunications companies.
The central witness in a California lawsuit against AT&T says the
government is vacuuming up billions of e-mails and phone calls as they
pass through an AT&T switching station in San Francisco.
Mark Klein, a retired AT&T technician, helped connect a device in
2003 that he says diverted and copied onto a government supercomputer
every call, e-mail, and Internet site access on AT&T lines.
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Intel Official: Say Goodbye to Privacy
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