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ID130474
Title ProperReforming the NSA
Other Title Informationhow to spy after snowden
LanguageENG
AuthorByman, Daniel ;  Wittes, Benjamin
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The long-running debate over the tradeoffs the United States should make between national security and civil liberties flared up spectacularly last summer, when Edward Snowden, a National Security Agency contractor, handed journalists a huge trove of heavily classified documents that exposed, in excruciating detail, electronic surveillance programs and other operations carried out by the NSA. Americans suddenly learned that in recent years, the NSA had been acquiring the phone and Internet communications of hundreds of thousands of U.S. citizens, as well as collecting massive volumes of bulk telephone records known as "metadata" -- phone numbers and the time and length of calls. Along with the rest of the world, Americans found out that the NSA had broken common forms of online encryption, tapped the phones of various foreign heads of state, and monitored global communications far more aggressively than was previously understood.
`In' analytical NoteForeign Affairs Vol.93, No.3; May-June2014: p.127-138
Journal SourceForeign Affairs Vol.93, No.3; May-June2014: p.127-138
Key WordsUnited States - US ;  National Security Agency - NSA ;  National Security ;  Civil Liberties ;  Electronic Surveillance ;  Internet ;  Communications ;  Online Encryption ;  Intercept - Surveillance ;  Global Communications ;  Edward Snowden


 
 
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