In a not-at-all-shocking revelation,War Archives the New York Timesreports the FBI has been using secret subpoenas to collect data from more than just big tech companies.
Documents show the subpoenas — which can include requests for usernames, locations, IP addresses, and purchase records — were sent to credit agencies including Experian and Equifax, numerous banks such as Bank of America and Chase, and even universities, including Kansas State.
Previously, Twitter, Google, Facebook, and Apple publicly acknowledged getting the requests, known as National Security Letters, via transparency reports. Telecom companies such as Comcast, AT&T, and Verizon have done the same.
The Timesobtained the documents via the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), which had filed (and won) a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the FBI over the bureau's "gag orders issued with National Security Letters (NSLs)."
The subpoenas, allowed under expansions to the Patriot Act, are part of the FBI's counter-terrorism efforts and the bureau and the Department of Justice have argued that the secrecy of such documents is necessary so as not to tip-off suspects about how data on them is being collected.
The EFF reports over 500,000 have been issued since 2001, but few have been made public due to the gag orders.
SEE ALSO: Hey, internet companies: Pay attention to the FBI's new take on conspiracy theoriesCongress passed the USA Freedom Act in 2015, which was supposed to limit these kinds of investigations, including the gag orders issued by the FBI. Yet the new documents appear to show that the FBI, as EFF attorney Andrew Crocker told the Times, isn't "taking its obligations under USA Freedom seriously."
In a statement to Mashable, Crocker said:
Our FOIA lawsuit about national security letters points to an ongoing failure of transparency into the bureau's secret requests requiring companies to turn over customer information. In 2015 Congress ordered the FBI to evaluate whether companies that have been gagged from talking about these secret requests should continue to be silenced about them. The results of our lawsuit show either that the law isn't having its intended effect, or that the FBI isn't taking its obligation seriously, or both. Permanent gag orders continue to be a problem. Just as concerning is the revelation, uncovered in our FOIA documents, that many companies decide not to tell customers that they gave account information to the government, even when they have been cleared to do so. National security letters are a uniquely invasive form of surveillance with little to no judicial oversight or accountability, and users deserve more transparency about their use.
The DOJ and FBI declined comment.
UPDATE: Sept. 20, 2019, 3:49 p.m. EDT Updated with EFF statement
Topics Cybersecurity Politics
Gay man hits back at politician for calling proPerseverance has landed on MarsTwitch hilariously dubbed over a Metallica livestream during BlizzConIn Australia, sometimes you've got to pick a shark out of a pool'I Care a Lot' review: Rosamund Pike shines in uneven Netflix thriller21 Halloween costumes ideas for all you book worms out thereOculus Quest 2 headsets get multiWhy 1619 is an important year in U.S. historyFrightened teens had to watch a giant snake slithering up the side of their moving car windowChange this Google Calendar feature so you're never late for a meetingStudents email professor with study question, get an unexpectedly kind responseFlipboard's next act is hereFrightened teens had to watch a giant snake slithering up the side of their moving car windowIkea has launched a new furniture collection just for your petsDisney and Marvel can use all of Netflix's Defenders now. Should they?Satellite image captures Mars rover parachuting through atmosphereHow to use Canva: A simple guide to the graphic design platformEverything coming to Hulu in March 2021'To All the Boys': How the Coveys' costumes reflect the charactersApple looks to rid App Store of ‘rip Instagram now lets you post portrait and landscape photos in albums Acer Aspire S24 is so thin you can't tell there's a computer inside Google Wifi has come to Asia, 6 months after its debut in the U.S. Comedian Jim Gaffigan's chatbot is here and it demands snacks Gospel singers at Harvey shelter will give you the chills Is Cersei pregnant or lying? Game of Thrones finale director weighs in Essential might have accidentally phished preorder customers Brooklyn's unluckiest man gets leg stuck in world's smallest sinkhole Taylor Swift just broke another video record 'Game of Thrones' Season 7 power rankings: Jon and Daenerys in trouble There is now pumpkin spice latte deodorant so you can smell even worse than you already do Travis Kalanick welcomes Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber's official new CEO Ford and Domino's team up for pizza deliveries with self 7 Nintendo Switch indie games that will get you hyped Best Buy apologizes after Texas store charges $42 for cases of water Jon Snow's letter to Sansa in the 'Game of Thrones' finale holds some Season 8 clues During Harvey, social media rose to the challenge as a force for good Journalists cheer judge's decision to toss Sarah Palin's New York Times lawsuit Apple ARKit is about to transform your app life Japanese Twitter users figured out a polite way to mansplain
2.3175s , 10131.546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【War Archives】,Information Information Network