NSA
to end bulk call data collection by end November: memo
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[November 10, 2015]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. National
Security Agency is ready to end later this month collecting Americans'
domestic call records in bulk and move to a more targeted system,
meeting a legislative deadline imposed earlier this year, according to a
government memo seen by Reuters.
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The memo, sent on Monday from the NSA to relevant committees in
the U.S. Congress, stated that the spy agency "has successfully
developed a technical architecture to support the new program" in
time for it to become operational as scheduled on Nov. 29.
In stating the program's progress and the NSA's intent to use the
new system, the memo appeared to rebut claims by Senate Intelligence
Committee Chairman Richard Burr, a Republican security hawk, who
told Reuters last week that he anticipated the new program would
never be used because it was overly cumbersome and slow.
Congress passed legislation earlier this year that brought an end to
the NSA’s indiscriminate gathering of U.S. phone metadata, a
practice exposed by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden more than
two years ago.
The legislation, known as the USA Freedom Act, called for a
six-month transition period after which the NSA could only access
targeted data from telephone providers with judicial approval.
"While our work is not yet complete, testing of internal systems
functionality at both NSA and the telecommunications providers has
begun, and exchanges of test files with the providers are under
way," the NSA’s memo read.
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It added that it would be ready to begin the new system on Nov. 29
and that the NSA plans to provide further updates in early 2016
about the program's implementation in addition to "a comparison
between operations under [the] new program and those under the
soon-to-expire bulk collection program."
Earlier on Monday, a U.S. federal judge ordered the NSA to stop
collecting the call records of a lawyer and his firm, a narrow and
largely symbolic victory for privacy advocates that does not affect
the scheduled shut down of the full program later this month.
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