Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Privacy Democrats Government United States

House Leaders Strike Deal To Protect US Web Browsing Data From Warrantless Surveillance (gizmodo.com) 38

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: After three days of negotiations, House lawmakers have struck a deal on an amendment to protect innocent Americans from being spied on by their own government online. Discussions were carried out behind closed doors over Memorial Day weekend after news broke Friday that House leaders had agreed to allow a vote on an amendment introduced by Reps. Zoe Lofgren and Warren Davidson to prohibit the FBI from collecting Americans' web browsing history without a warrant.

The Lofgren-Davidson amendment will require the FBI to obtain a warrant even if there's only a possibility that the data it seeks is tied to a U.S. person. If the government wishes to access the IP addresses of everyone who has visited a particular website, it could not do so without a warrant unless it can "guarantee" that no U.S. persons will be identified. The House is preparing to vote as early as this week on the surveillance re-authorization bill, which will reinstate several key tools used by the FBI to conduct foreign intelligence investigations.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

House Leaders Strike Deal To Protect US Web Browsing Data From Warrantless Surveillance

Comments Filter:
  • by omfglearntoplay ( 1163771 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2020 @04:47PM (#60108002)

    I sure hope the government is truly doing what they are claiming, and not putting in some loophole. If they are doing it right, good, about damn time. If they aren't, we'll know soon enough.

    • What? How could you doubt us, Comrade?

      Of course we put in loophole. Don't worry.

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2020 @05:56PM (#60108228) Journal
      Given how much people have complained over contact tracing apps (which do not violate privacy), it's surprising how little people have complained about warrantless browser history checks. It's as if the public isn't watching.
    • No, the public is not watching. They do their shit *behind closed doors*. The public doesn't want to see.

    • by Xenographic ( 557057 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2020 @10:40PM (#60108840) Journal

      > I sure hope the government is truly doing what they are claiming, and not putting in some loophole.

      The whole thing was going to expire, I mean, the FISA court only found it was being abused some 85% of the time and all. This deal is to restart the overall spying. But hey, at least they need a warrant for this, I guess? Yay?

      • As an addendum, Trump is now vetoing the whole damned thing because he wants a review of why they were abusing it so much to begin with, as determined by the FISA court.

        Of course, we know the answers to that--Obama was spying on his campaign the entire time and constructed an ex post facto justification via the infamous dossier where they laundered random Russian rumors from Oleg Deripaksa through Steele. But don't expect the same people laundering stories for McCabe, Comey & the rest to own up to that

    • I'm a bad person for saying this, but I'm betting:
      1) They don't understand the technology that's involved
      2) They have NO idea it's already being monetized and being helped by private industry
  • by npcole ( 251514 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2020 @04:51PM (#60108024)

    That fight was over quickly.

    Now, what's in the Bill that we didn't notice?

  • The founders laws couldn't predict modern guns, so the gun rights don't apply. They couldn't predict modern speech platforms, so the rights dont apply. They also couldn't predict browsers, but those right still apply. Viewing browsing history should have the same rules as if the FBI is tailing you and watching which stores you visit.
    • Jefferson bought a (relatively) silent, high rate of fire (ca 20 shots/minute), 46 caliber air gun in Europe. Hugely expensive, it was most highly deployed with some small, elite Austrian military units.

      Napoleon, probably afraid of assassination, ordered the Austrian military's air guns all destroyed when Austria surrendered to him. Napoleon also made possession a death penalty offense.
  • "The House is preparing to vote as early as this week on the surveillance re-authorization bill, which will reinstate several key tools used by the FBI to conduct foreign intelligence investigations."

    So the FBI can't legally do certain surveillance activities at this time. Interesting...

    • " So the FBI can't legally do certain surveillance activities at this time. Interesting... "

      Since when does the FBI let something like LAWS get in their way ?

  • Fuck 'em...

    Sucks that 90% of them will be reelected

  • by ugen ( 93902 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2020 @08:37PM (#60108610)

    FBI? What about the NSA that is collecting the bulk data. What about all the other 3 letter agencies? (And they, then, can share with the FBI if they need to)

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2020 @08:56PM (#60108670)

    Is why we even need to have discussions and / or laws written to prevent spying on citizens by their government in the first place.
    They're fully aware of what the Fourth Amendment is, they just don't seem to give a shit about it.

    What's the point of even having a Bill of Rights / Constitution if the Government ( and the technology industries they utilize as a
    proxy to do their dirty work for them ) simply ignores it when it suits them to do so ?

    The last time I read that particular passage there was no mention of exceptions due to:

    1) Borders
    2) Terrorism
    3) Think of the Children
    4) How difficult our rights makes it for Law Enforcement
    5) Whatever excuse they come up with in the future

    • But our ruling class can't trust us. If we knew what they have been doing, we'd overthrow them in an instant. They must safeguard themselves against us. We're dangerous and unpredictable.

      We already terrorized them with voting for Trump and Brexit. They clearly instructed us the correct way to vote on both, through the media, and we rudely disobeyed. We deserve whatever is coming to us. We cannot be trusted. We are a threat to everything they hold dear.

      If you think they're going to give up without

  • The question is not "several key tools used by the FBI to conduct foreign intelligence investigations", the question is domestic investigations. And domestic investigations carried out by other countries on behalf of the FBI (CIA, DIA, NSA, etc.), that the FBI would be prohibited from doing.

"The medium is the message." -- Marshall McLuhan

Working...