Federal law enforcement agencies secretly request the data of Microsoft customers thousands of times per year, according to the congressional testimony of Tom Burt, the company’s VP for customer security and trust.
Remember back after 9/11 when they passed the Patriot Act which was nothing more than a systematic dismantling of the rights and freedoms of the average, everyday American citizen? Remember how up in arms everyone was about the massive violation of personal privacies? Sprinkle in a few recessions and foreign wars, and guess what? People forgot about the Patriot Act, the average college student in America has never even heard of it. But all those things we who were awake were so afraid absolutely have come to pass, and a whole lot more than that.
"Thou shalt not raise a false report: put not thine hand with the wicked to be an unrighteous witness." Exodus 23:1 (KJB)
It's such a pleasure to be able to store things in the cloud, isn't it? Sure is, and, it makes it so much easier for federal agencies to access your information without your knowledge or consent. Tucker Carlson is trending on Twitter after making the bombshell announcement that he has proof the NSA is reading his emails and text messages. If they can do that to him, think about what they are, right now, doing to you.
Microsoft VP: Federal Targeting of Americans’ Texts, Emails, Data ‘Routine’
FROM BREITBART NEWS: According to Burt, these requests — kept secret from their target, by court order — include requests for emails, text messages, and other sensitive data. The executive the House Judiciary Committee that the company received between 2,400 to 3,500 such requests a year, or between seven and 10 per day.
Via Associated Press:
“Most shocking is just how routine secrecy orders have become when law enforcement targets an American’s email, text messages or other sensitive data stored in the cloud,” said Burt, describing the widespread clandestine surveillance as a major shift from historical norms.
…
Since then, Brad Smith, Microsoft’s president, called for an end to the overuse of secret gag orders, arguing in a Washington Post opinion piece that “prosecutors too often are exploiting technology to abuse our fundamental freedoms.” Attorney General Merrick Garland, meanwhile, has said the Justice Department will abandon its practice of seizing reporter records and will formalize that stance soon.
…
Burt said that while the revelation that federal prosecutors had sought data about journalists and political figures was shocking to many Americans, the scope of surveillance is much broader. He criticized prosecutors for reflexively seeking secrecy through boilerplate requests that “enable law enforcement to just simply assert a conclusion that a secrecy order is necessary.”
AP’s full story.
The testimony about clandestine surveillance of Americans comes on the heels of explosive allegations from Tucker Carlson, whose Fox News show broke the record for the highest-rated program in cable news history in July 2020. Carlson recently alleged that the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) was spying on him without his knowledge, based on a tip from an alleged whistleblower.
The NSA denied “targeting” Carlson in a statement yesterday, but did not deny the specific allegation that it has read his emails or text messages. White House press secretary Jen Psaki also failed to deny the allegation, instead claiming the NSA “focuses on foreign threats and individuals who are attempting to do us harm on foreign soil.” READ MORE
No comments:
Post a Comment