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NSA: Is the juice worth the squeeze

Wiseone

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We all know that the NSA is trolling through massive amounts of data to stop terrorist attacks from happening on US soil, but is it worth the damage done to our rights, specifically the fourth amendment? Well its difficult to do a true cost-benefit analysis since so much of what the NSA does is unknown, however this article does a fine job with the information we do have and the answer is quite clearly not worth it, not in terms of benefits of security gained or in dollars spent to gain them.

Cost-benefit analysis and state secrecy: Foiled plots and bathtub falls | The Economist
 
Here's the cost benefit analysis:

This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

Wow, that was easy.
 
It sounds like you think you're arguing against my position, but you aren't.

Well, yes and no. Its pretty obvious by reading your post that we're in agreement here. I'm arguing against the notion that a cost-benefit analysis should be done. It doesn't matter if the NSA program would result in everyone getting magical pixies that grant wishes; improper search and/or seizures goes against what we stand for as a people. It's a little insulting that we even have to entertain the idea of a cost-benefit analysis on such a thing. I understand the authors intention in writing this but it's ridiculous to even hint that a cost-benefit analysis means anything to the issue. Would we condone slavery if the benefits outweighed the costs? It's utilitarian nonsense that, while the author clearly does not believe in it, simply gives validity to the notion that it's permissible to sacrifice cornerstones of our society on the basis of some obscure benefit.
 
Well, yes and no. Its pretty obvious by reading your post that we're in agreement here. I'm arguing against the notion that a cost-benefit analysis should be done. It doesn't matter if the NSA program would result in everyone getting magical pixies that grant wishes; improper search and/or seizures goes against what we stand for as a people. It's a little insulting that we even have to entertain the idea of a cost-benefit analysis on such a thing. I understand the authors intention in writing this but it's ridiculous to even hint that a cost-benefit analysis means anything to the issue. Would we condone slavery if the benefits outweighed the costs? It's utilitarian nonsense that, while the author clearly does not believe in it, simply gives validity to the notion that it's permissible to sacrifice cornerstones of our society on the basis of some obscure benefit.

Well maybe, depending on what reasonable means in "reasonable search and seizure" something that shows a benefit would be easier to argue in court, even the SCOTUS if it went that far, that it is reasonable because benefits are reasonable are they not? Not exactly a slam dunk argument but even if it doesn't mean anything to you, a shown benefit would mean something to other people and to judges.
 
Well maybe, depending on what reasonable means in "reasonable search and seizure" something that shows a benefit would be easier to argue in court, even the SCOTUS if it went that far, that it is reasonable because benefits are reasonable are they not? Not exactly a slam dunk argument but even if it doesn't mean anything to you, a shown benefit would mean something to other people and to judges.

Even with a benefit, you still need probable cause. Blind surveillance, regardless of benefit, can never satisfy probable cause. That is pretty much why probable cause exists.
 
The current US Intelligence gathering strategy also beings in to conflict with other laws such as Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Europe warns US: you must respect the privacy of our citizens | World news | The Guardian

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Prism: how can this level of state surveillance be legal?

It's hard to see how any system that captures data from millions of law-abiding citizens satisfies our right to privacy

Anya Proops

The Guardian, Tuesday 18 June 2013

Prism: How can this level of state surveillance be legal? | Anya Proops | Comment is free | The Guardian


Presidio-Modelo-Cubas-Pan-008.jpg

Presidio Modelo, Cuba. ‘The bricks and mortar of Bentham's Panopticon have
been replaced by cyber-surveillance systems.' Photograph: Wolfi Poelzer/Alamy



In the late 18th century the philosopher Jeremy Bentham developed a new type of institutional establishment which had a singular advantage over its predecessors: it allowed the authorities to observe inmates without their being able to tell in any particular moment whether or not they were being watched. The name given to this new architectural form of state control was Panopticon, literally meaning "watch all".

In our modern digital world the bricks and mortar of Bentham's Panopticon have been replaced by a network of cyber-surveillance systems. Now the inmates are not incarcerated criminals or the unhappy occupants of the asylums but potentially everyone on the planet, or at least anyone who has actively embraced the internet. Certainly, that is what the revelations about Prism seem to suggest. But is the deployment of such all-encompassing and apparently indiscriminate surveillance systems itself lawful? Is this something which as a matter of law we are obliged to tolerate, despite its ostensibly chilling effect on civil liberties?

Answering those questions from the perspective of our domestic law is not easy. This is not least because the law governing the use of surveillance by the state in the UK is complex, and still relatively untested. Those who have dipped their toes into the murky world of surveillance law will know there are typically three legal regimes which have to be considered, all of which focus to a greater or lesser extent on the concept of personal privacy.

First, there is Article 8 of the European convention on human rights, incorporated into domestic law through provisions in the Human Rights Act 1998. Article 8 recognises that all human beings enjoy a fundamental right to privacy. This right certainly extends to an individual's private online activities. A state agency that snoops on an individual's private e-activities will be acting unlawfully for the purposes of Article 8 unless the interference with privacy rights can be justified.

An interference will be justified only if it is both in accordance with the law and necessary in order to serve certain specified legitimate aims, including the aims of preserving national security, public safety or economic wellbeing. Importantly, an interference with privacy rights will not be lawful for Article 8 purposes if it is disproportionate. Put simply, the state cannot lawfully use a surveillance sledgehammer to crack a small albeit socially offensive nut.

Second, there is the Data Protection Act 1998, derived from the European data protection directive. This is a fairly intricate enactment that embodies a number of detailed rules relating to the circumstances in which personal data – including not only written information but also photographs, voice recordings and other recorded data – may lawfully be processed. The conceptual spinal cord on which the rules hang is that personal data must be managed in a way that avoids excessive infringements of privacy rights. In that sense, the effects of the Data Protection Act are similar to those of Article 8. The data protection rules will certainly provisionally apply to any personal data which may be obtained by the UK government from a foreign state, and also to any the government may itself wish to transfer abroad.

However, critically, the rules are effectively disapplied in any case where the government certifies that this is necessary for the purposes of safeguarding national security. The scope for challenging a national security certificate is very limited. Perhaps even more significantly, the affected individuals will only be able to contemplate a challenge if they know the state has disapplied the rules in their case. The difficulty here is that the disapplication of the rules may itself result in a situation where individuals are kept in the dark about what is happening to their data.

Third, there is the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (Ripa). This fiendishly complex enactment is essentially intended to set out the circumstances in which secret surveillance activities undertaken by the state must be treated as lawful. Thus, for example, it sets out the circumstances in which individuals may lawfully be subject to surveillance (like using surveillance devices or covert human intelligence sources). It is clear that Ripa was enacted above all in order to ensure that the state was not using the veil of secrecy to conduct surveillance activities which unjustly interfered with the privacy rights of citizens.

But a fundamental difficulty with Ripa, as with the Data Protection Act, is that it is difficult to detect when abuses are taking place. The secret nature of the surveillance being undertaken means that the subjects of the surveillance are themselves not in a position to hold the relevant authorities to account.

Standing back from the detail, two things become clear. First, as a matter of domestic law, any surveillance system deployed by the state must operate in a proportionate manner. It is hard to see how any surveillance system that enabled the state indiscriminately to capture data relating to millions of law-abiding citizens could ever satisfy the requirements of Article 8. Second, it is a fundamental precondition to the exercise of legal rights that individuals know whether their rights have been infringed. Keeping the public in a state of ignorance about the very existence of super-surveillance systems is constitutionally offensive.

Even if there are good reasons why individual operations must remain secret in the national interest, there surely can be no justification for keeping people in the dark about dramatic expansions in the surveillance state. If super-surveillance systems are as all-encompassing and indiscriminate as the revelations about Prism tend to suggest, then all the more reason why these new modes of state watchfulness should be subject to robust scrutiny by both the public and the courts.

Of course we could simply sit back and accept the assurances given to us by our political leaders that the state can be relied upon to regulate itself, that it will scrupulously turn its attentions only to those who clearly seek to threaten our comfortable existence. But such a trusting, laissez-faire attitude is inherently naive. Our liberty as citizens depends very substantially on our ability to safeguard ourselves against arbitrary interference and excessive control by the state. If we abnegate our own responsibility to watch over the state's burgeoning surveillance activities, the price we will pay is an inevitable loss of personal liberty in the face of an increasingly data-bloated and overweening state.
 
Well maybe, depending on what reasonable means in "reasonable search and seizure" something that shows a benefit would be easier to argue in court, even the SCOTUS if it went that far, that it is reasonable because benefits are reasonable are they not? Not exactly a slam dunk argument but even if it doesn't mean anything to you, a shown benefit would mean something to other people and to judges.

To me reasonable, does not include rummaging around in Grandma's emails without probable cause and especially without having exhausted all other options. Those are two barriers to overcome, and I DOUBT the NSA has even cleared the easy one, which is the latter. All I see in the available information is an agency that has built for itself a giant vacuum cleaner that sucks up information from everywhere, and sits there sifting through it looking for problems. That is not probable cause.
 
To me reasonable, does not include rummaging around in Grandma's emails without probable cause and especially without having exhausted all other options. Those are two barriers to overcome, and I DOUBT the NSA has even cleared the easy one, which is the latter. All I see in the available information is an agency that has built for itself a giant vacuum cleaner that sucks up information from everywhere, and sits there sifting through it looking for problems. That is not probable cause.


^^^ And that is the can of worms opened by wireless wiretapping.
 
^^^ And that is the can of worms opened by wireless wiretapping.

Do you mean warrantless? At least in that case they were targetting suspects, not the entire country. And they got a warrant after the fact. Thats a reasonable search, IMO.
 
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