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Dear Privacy Board: It鈥檚 Us, the 95%

Naureen Shah,
Deputy Director of Government Affairs, Equality Division,
老澳门开奖结果 National Political Advocacy Division
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July 3, 2014

There are seven billion people in the world, and 95 percent of them live outside the United States. We know from dozens of revelations from the last year that few, if any, are immune from the watchful eyes of the National Security Agency.

Yet in its latest on surveillance, the government鈥檚 independent Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board focused almost exclusively on the rights of people inside the United States. Here are five reasons why the PCLOB should have defended the rights to privacy and free expression for everyone 鈥 including the 95 percent:

  • Privacy is a human right. As , privacy is not just guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, it is a basic human right of everyone around the world. In ratifying the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the U.S. government assumed legally binding obligations to protect this right. In failing to defend it and articulate legally defined limitations on global spying, the PCLOB abdicated a core responsibility.
  • Our government claims authority for surveillance 鈥渃oncerning鈥 nearly every country on Earth. This week the reported that the National Security Agency sought authority to intercept information 鈥渃oncerning鈥 193 countries 鈥 every country in the world but the 鈥淔ive Eyes鈥 of Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which operates with excessive secrecy, signed off. Ignoring U.S. international obligations to protect privacy rights, the Privacy Board has given a green light to the NSA to continue conducting surveillance that implicates nearly the entire world.
  • Almost any person outside the U.S. could potentially be targeted based on 鈥渇oreign intelligence鈥 value. Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act, which the Privacy Board reviewed in its new report, authorizes the 鈥渢argeting鈥 of non-U.S. citizens or residents reasonably believed to be located outside the U.S .for 鈥渇oreign intelligence鈥 purposes. But the government鈥檚 definition of 鈥渇oreign intelligence鈥 that it potentially encompasses the communications of vast numbers of non-citizens. That could include communications of many, not just persons it considers foreign agents, engaging in criminal activity, or connected, even remotely, with terrorist activities.
  • The internet should be free 鈥 for everyone. The government鈥檚 powerful surveillance apparatus, coupled with its expansive claims of authority for global surveillance, threatens the way all of us use and view the internet. When people know that they may be under watch, they act differently. Online freedom of expression 鈥 ironically a 鈥溾 for the United States 鈥 becomes stifled. Worse still, the U.S. government could share the millions of emails, Gchats and Skype calls it collects with foreign governments, putting at risk journalists, human rights activists and dissenters worldwide who face persecution from their home governments based on their beliefs and the views they express online.
  • The world is watching. In its report, the PCLOB described 鈥渟pirited debate鈥 at the international level over the right to privacy. Indeed, lawyers and activists around the world are seeking to hold their governments accountable for surveillance activities that we knew little about until Edward Snowden鈥檚 revelations. (This 鈥渟pirited debate,鈥 for example, is what led the German government to say it would .) The PCLOB should be a leading voice in this international debate, not a member of the audience. Though PCLOB suggested it would address the issue more in its future report on Presidential Policy Directive-28 鈥 including the President鈥檚 direction to sync up some protections for citizens and non-citizens, to the extent feasible 鈥 human rights protections are not a matter of policy. They are binding law. In the meantime, PCLOB has squandered a valuable opportunity to encourage a U.S. government approach to surveillance that respects the human right to privacy. That, in turn, would have positively influenced global trends on these issues at a critical juncture.

The United States has been a world leader in promoting and developing the internet. Now it鈥檚 time to lead the world and ensure the internet remains safe and free.

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