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tiedye420
05-11-2006, 11:52 PM
Questions and answers about the NSA phone record collection program Thu May 11, 7:28 AM ET (posted by tiedye420-clipped from yahoo)



The National Security Agency has been collecting domestic calling records from major telecommunications companies, sources told USA TODAY. Answers to some questions about the program, as described by those sources:

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Q: Does the NSA's domestic program mean that my calling records have been secretly collected?


A: In all likelihood, yes. The NSA collected the records of billions of domestic calls. Those include calls from home phones and wireless phones.


Q: Does that mean people listened to my conversations?


A: Eavesdropping is not part of this program.


Q: What was the NSA doing?


A: The NSA collected "call-detail" records. That's telephone industry lingo for the numbers being dialed. Phone customers' names, addresses and other personal information are not being collected as part of this program. The agency, however, has the means to assemble that sort of information, if it so chooses.


Q: When did this start?


A: After the Sept. 11 attacks.


Q: Can I find out if my call records were collected?


A: No. The NSA's work is secret, and the agency won't publicly discuss its operations.


Q: Why did they do this?


A: The agency won't say officially. But sources say it was a way to identify, and monitor, people suspected of terrorist activities.


Q: But I'm not calling terrorists. Why do they need my calls?


A: By cross-checking a vast database of phone calling records, NSA experts can try to pick out patterns that help identify people involved in terrorism.


Q: How is this different from the other NSA programs?


A: NSA programs have historically focused on international communications. In December, The New York Times disclosed that President Bush had authorized the NSA to eavesdrop - without warrants - on international phone calls to and from the USA. The call-collecting program is focused on domestic calls, those that originate and terminate within U.S. borders.


Q: Is this legal?

A: That will be a matter of debate. In the past, law enforcement officials had to obtain a court warrant before getting calling records. Telecommunications law assesses hefty fines on phone companies that violate customer privacy by divulging such records without warrants. But in discussing the eavesdropping program last December, Bush said he has the authority to order the NSA to get information without court warrants.

Q: Who has access to my records?

A: Unclear. The NSA routinely provides its analysis and other cryptological work to the Pentagon and other government agencies.

Contributing: Leslie Cauley

tiedye420
05-11-2006, 11:55 PM
P.S.
What really scares me is what happens when they begin to abuse this power, As if they haven't already...

The Cannarchist
05-12-2006, 12:10 AM
"When"........lol @ TD......

of course they are abusing it.

Batman
05-12-2006, 12:20 AM
I think one big thing that hasn't been publicised very much and should be, is the fact that the ONLY phone company that refused all government "requests for this information is QUEST. They refused without first being served a subpoena.

I say good for them. and if I was anywhere near their service area, I would sign up with them regardless of their prices, just because they refused to take part in this bullshit.

The Cannarchist
05-12-2006, 12:44 AM
What? They get to monitor the Bat phone as well?

Sacrilegious I tell you! Don't they understand what you are doing for Gotham,sorry C-W ,Batman?

Signed:Robin the boy blunder

tiedye420
05-12-2006, 07:02 AM
Rolmao
I saw this blasted on yahoo today and began twitching and trembling, sure enough my finger sprang forth and I could not stop it from "clipping the ad".
After all im delevering the news for a living now, MMHHWWAAA waaha ha ha
thought youd like seeing it all down so concise though, pretty good Q&A session detailing just how well uncle sam has thouroghly greased our A here.
carry on boys.... im loading the launcher, the "bonghit launcher" that is...
tiedye