MESSAGE
DATE | 2013-12-29 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Re: [conspire] NSA ruling error
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On 12/28/2013 07:18 PM, Ross Bernheim wrote: > Ruben, > > I think that what disappoints me most is the Judge?s lack of understanding of intelligence work. > > We had plenty of information to stop the 9-11 attacks. We even had people trying to get the attention of their superiors to pay attention to the > information that we had and do something about it. > > More data collection is not the problem. The real problem is an overload of information and a lack of analysts to attend to it. We have also > instituted a privatization program to move intelligence gathering and analysis out of the NSA to private contractors and a massive duplication > and waste and lack of oversight. > > The ?We must collect everything!? meme is based on the false assumption that missing one piece of data would cause us to miss a terrorist > threat. The reality is there are always plenty of data. It is the analysis area that is short and adding more data just makes the haystack they have > to shift through less manageable. And as we saw with 9-11 even when analysts flag the danger, it is not acted on. > > ?Terrorist threat? ?Think of the children? and other jingoist fear mongering does not lead to answers that solve the problems. > > NPR had a story about the coverage of a chemical fertilizer explosion in Texas about the same time as the Boston Marathon bombing. > Lack of followup and enforcement of regulations were largely responsible for the divesting explosion and since then no real change in oversight > or enforcement of regulations of dangerous chemicals in urban areas has taken place. But mention ?Terrorist? and we fall all over ourselves to > prevent an ?attack?. The unsuccessful shoe bomber has us all either taking off our shoes at the airport of paying money and giving up privacy to > avoid the inconvenience. What about the underwear bomber? > > > Ross > > On Dec 28, 2013, at 2:46 PM, Ruben Safir wrote: > >> >> Note: >> >> http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/25529677 >> This judge is a total asshole and a danger to the pubic >> >> Call his chambers and tell him you can't accept the government >> eroding your 4th amendment protections, regardless of what individuals may >> or may not do in our private lives. >> >> The Judges Chambers telephone number is: >> >> Hon. William H. Pauley III >> United States District Judge >> >> Daniel Patrick Moynihan >> United States Courthouse >> 500 Pearl St. >> New York, NY 10007-1312 >> >> >> Courtroom: 20B >> Chambers Phone: (212) 805-6387 >> >> Deputy Phone: (212) 805-6393 >> >> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> >> December 2013 Last updated at 13:23 ET >> Share this page >> >> Email >> Print >> >> Share >> Facebook >> Twitter >> >> NSA surveillance lawful, judge rules >> >> The surveillance programme was leaked by former National Security Agency >> contractor, Edward Snowden >> Continue reading the main story >> Spy leaks >> >> How intelligence is gathered >> History of spying >> NSA secrets failure >> 'Five eyes' club >> >> A US federal judge has ruled that mass government surveillance of the >> phone network is legal, a week after another court said the opposite. >> >> New York District Judge William Pauley described the snooping as a >> "counter-punch" against al-Qaeda. >> >> He said the National Security Agency (NSA) programme might even have >> prevented the 9/11 attacks. >> >> Last week a Washington DC federal judge ruled the surveillance was >> "likely unconstitutional" and "Orwellian". >> >> But in Friday's decision, Judge Pauley, of the US District Court for the >> Southern District of New York, said "the balance of equities and the >> public interest tilt firmly in favour of the Government's position". >> 'Extremely disappointed' >> >> In his 53-page ruling, he concluded: "The right to be free from searches >> and seizures is fundamental, but not absolute." >> Continue reading the main story >> How intelligence is gathered >> How intelligence is gathered >> >> Accessing internet company data >> Tapping fibre optic cables >> Eavesdropping on phones >> Targeted spying >> >> Read more in our in-depth report >> How the US spy scandal unravelled >> Profile: Edward Snowden >> >> He also noted: "Every day, people voluntarily surrender personal and >> seemingly-private information to trans-national corporations, which >> exploit that data for profit. >> >> "Few think twice about it, even though it is far more intrusive than >> bulk telephony metadata collection. >> >> "There is no evidence that the Government has used any of the bulk >> telephony metadata it collected for any purpose other than investigating >> and disrupting terrorist attacks." >> >> Judge Pauley dismissed a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties >> Union (ACLU), which told the BBC it would appeal. >> >> "We are extremely disappointed with this decision, which misinterprets >> the relevant statutes, understates the privacy implications of the >> government's surveillance and misapplies a narrow and outdated precedent >> to read away core constitutional protections," said the civil rights >> organisation's deputy legal director, Jameel Jaffer. >> >> The Obama administration, which has been on the defensive over the NSA >> revelations, welcomed the ruling. >> >> "We are pleased the court found the NSA's bulk telephony metadata >> collection program to be lawful," US Department of Justice spokesman >> Peter Carr told the BBC. >> 'Arbitrary invasion' >> >> Friday's ruling contradicts that on 16 December by Washington DC federal >> Judge Richard Leon, who said the NSA's surveillance was "indiscriminate" >> and an "arbitrary invasion". >> >> His 68-page decision backed a conservative activist's legal challenge on >> the merits of the Fourth Amendment, the clause in the US constitution >> barring unreasonable search and seizure by the government. >> >> Judge Leon suspended his ruling pending an appeal by the justice >> department, enabling the programme to continue for now. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> conspire mailing list >> conspire-at-linuxmafia.com >> http://linuxmafia.com/mailman/listinfo/conspire >> >
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