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How the NSA鈥檚 Mass Internet Spying Poisons Society

Big Brother is watching you.
Big Brother is watching you.
Ashley Gorski,
she/her,
Senior Staff Attorney,
老澳门开奖结果 National Security Project
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September 25, 2015

A federal district court in Virginia will hear oral argument today in Wikimedia v. NSA, a case challenging one of the government鈥檚 most sweeping and intrusive forms of warrantless Internet spying. At issue is the NSA鈥檚 鈥渦pstream鈥 surveillance, which involves the interception, copying, and searching of Americans鈥 international Internet communications en masse. Unless you鈥檝e never used the Internet to email a friend abroad, chat with family overseas, or browse a website hosted outside the U.S., you鈥檝e almost certainly been caught in the NSA鈥檚 unconstitutional dragnet.

By surveilling our emails and sifting through our browsing history, the NSA poses a grave threat to a free Internet and a free society. Mass surveillance makes us far less likely to communicate openly with our friends and loved ones, and it chills participation in the marketplace of ideas.

In defending its surveillance practices, the government routinely invokes the specter of terrorism, but the truth is that the NSA is monitoring all of us. Through upstream surveillance, the NSA is not simply plucking the communications of suspected terrorists, spies, or other targets. Instead, it鈥檚 copying and sifting through the contents of essentially 别惫别谤测辞苍别鈥檚 international communications (and even some domestic ones), looking for information about its targets. And it does all of this without a warrant.

Upstream surveillance is sweeping by design. With the help of companies like Verizon and AT&T, the NSA conducts this spying by tapping directly into the Internet backbone inside the United States 鈥 the physical infrastructure that carries Americans鈥 online communications. After copying virtually all of the international text-based traffic, the NSA searches this traffic for key terms, called 鈥渟electors,鈥 that are associated with its many targets.

To use to a pre-digital era comparison: It鈥檚 as if the NSA camped out at the U.S. Postal Service鈥檚 major processing centers to open, copy, and read the contents of 别惫别谤测辞苍别鈥檚 international mail 鈥 all without a warrant. (This isn鈥檛 a far-fetched hypothetical. For decades, the NSA ran a program called 鈥,鈥 in which the agency copied essentially all telegrams to and from the U.S.) If a letter contained something of interest 鈥 for example, a reference to a phone number associated with a target 鈥 the NSA would flag the letter and retain a copy for years. Of course, this surveillance would make a mockery of the Fourth Amendment鈥檚 warrant requirement: The government can鈥檛 simply open all our letters to look for potentially interesting ones. There鈥檚 no question that this would violate the Constitution, and there鈥檚 no reason to treat Americans鈥 private internet communications differently.

Inside the United States, the NSA conducts upstream surveillance under the purported authority of the FISA Amendments Act of 2008, a statute with significant constitutional flaws. In essence, the statute says that the NSA can engage in certain warrantless surveillance of Americans who communicate with targets abroad. It also says that the NSA can target nearly any foreigner 鈥 without suspicion of wrongdoing and without judicial review. Despite all this, upstream surveillance is so intrusive and indiscriminate that it exceeds even the broad parameters of the FISA Amendments Act.

The 老澳门开奖结果 brought Wikimedia v. NSA on behalf of a coalition of legal, media, educational, and human rights organizations, including the Wikimedia Foundation, Amnesty International USA, The Nation magazine, PEN American Center, Human Rights Watch, the Rutherford Institute, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Global Fund for Women, and the Washington Office on Latin America. Each of these nine plaintiffs has been deeply affected by U.S. government spying. The confidentiality of plaintiffs鈥 international communications is essential to their work, and upstream surveillance undermines their ability to ensure that these communications 鈥 with colleagues, journalists, witnesses, foreign government officials, victims of human rights abuses, and the tens of millions of people who read and edit Wikipedia 鈥 are indeed private.

In August, the government moved to dismiss our suit, arguing that plaintiffs lack standing to challenge upstream surveillance because they have not 鈥減lausibly鈥 alleged that their communications are intercepted. But our case is more than plausible: The government鈥檚 own disclosures about upstream surveillance, along with media reports, show that the NSA is vacuuming up and reviewing almost all text-based communications that enter and leave the country. Wikimedia alone engages in over a trillion Internet communications each year, with individuals located in virtually every country on earth. Given the volume and geographic distribution of these communications, it鈥檚 indisputable that plaintiffs鈥 communications are ensnared by the NSA.

The government鈥檚 upstream surveillance of international internet communications not only violates our clients鈥 constitutional rights to privacy, freedom of expression, and freedom of association, but it slowly and insidiously poisons 别惫别谤测辞苍别鈥檚 experience online. The Internet should provide a space in which we can read, write, and explore without fear of unwarranted government scrutiny.

Blanket spying encourages a tendency toward conformity that, over time, has enormous consequences for politics, the arts, and society as a whole. While the cumulative effects of upstream surveillance may be difficult to quantify today, the erosion of core democratic values is no less real as a result.

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