Chris Inglis, the agency’s deputy director, was one of several government representatives—including from the FBI and the office of the Director of National Intelligence—testifying before the House Judiciary Committee this morning. Most of the testimony largely echoed previous testimony by the agencies on the topic of the government’s surveillance, including a retread of the same offered examples for how the Patriot Act and Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act had stopped terror events.
But Inglis’ statement was new. Analysts look “two or three hops” from terror suspects when evaluating terror activity, Inglis revealed. Previously, the limit of how surveillance was extended had been described as two hops. This meant that if the NSA were following a phone metadata or web trail from a terror suspect, it could also look at the calls from the people that suspect has spoken with—one hop. And then, the calls that second person had also spoken with—two hops. Terror suspect to person two to person three. Two hops. And now: A third hop.
The True Measure Of A Mans Character Is What He Would Do If He Believed He Would Never Be Caught
Sunday, July 21, 2013
“The NSA Is Spying On Our Phone Calls, Internet Searches And Financial Transactions”
Thanks to Edward Snowden, we have learned much more about how the NSA
spies on all of us. And just this week it has come out that the NSA has
no problem snooping on you if you are a friend of a friend of a friend of someone that might be a potential terrorist…
Labels:
illegal,
irs scandal,
Nsa,
snooping,
Unconstitutional
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