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Beyond Snowden

Privacy, Mass Surveillance, and the Struggle to Reform the NSA

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Safeguarding Our Privacy and Our Values in an Age of Mass Surveillance

America's mass surveillance programs, once secret, can no longer be ignored. While Edward Snowden began the process in 2013 with his leaks of top secret documents, the Obama administration's own reforms have also helped bring the National Security Agency and its programs of signals intelligence collection out of the shadows. The real question is: What should we do about mass surveillance?

Timothy Edgar, a long-time civil liberties activist who worked inside the intelligence community for six years during the Bush and Obama administrations, believes that the NSA's programs are profound threat to the privacy of everyone in the world. At the same time, he argues that mass surveillance programs can be made consistent with democratic values, if we make the hard choices needed to bring transparency, accountability, privacy, and human rights protections into complex programs of intelligence collection. Although the NSA and other agencies already comply with rules intended to prevent them from spying on Americans, Edgar argues that the rules—most of which date from the 1970s—are inadequate for this century. Reforms adopted during the Obama administration are a good first step but, in his view, do not go nearly far enough.

Edgar argues that our communications today—and the national security threats we face—are both global and digital. In the twenty first century, the only way to protect our privacy as Americans is to do a better job of protecting everyone's privacy. Beyond Surveillance: Privacy, Mass Surveillance, and the Struggle to Reform the NSA explains both why and how we can do this, without sacrificing the vital intelligence capabilities we need to keep ourselves and our allies safe. If we do, we set a positive example for other nations that must confront challenges like terrorism while preserving human rights. The United States already leads the world in mass surveillance. It can lead the world in mass surveillance reform.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 24, 2017
      Edgar, a former ACLU lawyer who left that group in 2006 to advise the director of national intelligence on safeguarding civil liberties and privacy, has the appropriate background to provide this deep dive into the recent history of the American intelligence community’s adoption of mass-surveillance techniques and the ensuing efforts to balance security and freedom. While the general public is familiar with the contours of the issues and the revelations that Edward Snowden provided, Edgar provides an insider’s perspective on the government’s internal debates. For example, after Snowden revealed the existence of the NSA’s collection of Internet communications, there were serious discussions about changing how the FISA court functions to include a privacy advocate as a check on government overreach. But Edgar, who left the Obama administration in 2013, concedes that the election of Donald Trump has left the future of such discussions in limbo, with even government officials who had pushed for “stronger surveillance powers” concerned about the potential for their abuse. Despite the seriousness of the issues raised, Edgar is forced to concede that his ultimate conclusion—that “there is or at least ought to be common call” among “both intelligence officials and civil libertarians” for a “future that reconciles the need for surveillance programs with respect for internet freedom, privacy and human rights”—is precatory, rather than descriptive.

    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2017
      A former civil rights lawyer considers changing attitudes regarding personal privacy within the National Security Agency following the disclosures by Edward Snowden.Formerly a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union and then a civil liberties protection officer for the Director of National Intelligence and the Obama White House, Edgar (International and Public Affairs/Brown Univ.) is well-versed in, and sympathetic to, the concerns of both civil liberties advocates and the national security establishment. In this debut, he argues that while their interests will always be in tension, both groups share fundamentally similar values, and NSA personnel try hard to respect legal limitations regarding the privacy rights of Americans (foreigners, not so much). However, these limitations have recently shifted in confusing ways, and their interpretations take time to understand and implement. Edgar suggests that a major problem in managing intelligence collection is that only the NSA really understands what it is doing, and hardly anyone in Congress, the courts, or the administration is adequately informed about its top-secret activities and interested in, or even capable of, providing suitable monitoring and correction. Another is that the laws governing privacy protections were written for an analog world and cannot be effectively applied in the digital era where concepts like the location of data are increasingly meaningless. The author includes a dozen specific recommendations for legal, procedural, and technical changes to our approach to electronic surveillance. While his basic themes are clear, Edgar's argument can be difficult to follow. This is in part because the topic is a highly technical one, and government secrecy prevents the author from enlivening his points with concrete examples. Readers may struggle to keep straight the shifting state of the law or to understand why the changes are significant and where they lead. In this, reader confusion and frustration perhaps mirror those of NSA workers themselves. A perceptive but discouraging analysis of the current state of government electronic surveillance.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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