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It's been nearly 10 months since Edward Snowden first exposed the NSA was collecting troves
of data on Americans' phone records.
Now, President Obama is expected to propose putting a stop to that once-secret program.
(Via The White House SaveFrom.net)
This, according to The New York Times. Citing unnamed administration officials, The Times
reports phone companies "would not be required to retain the data for any longer than they
normally would" under the new plan. (Via The New York Times)
Instead of turning over data to the NSA, companies like Verizon and AT&T would hold on to it
themselves, and only have to provide the records to the agency under a new type of court order.
That data would include calls made to or from a suspected terrorist's phone number. (Via
National Security Agency)
Currently, the NSA can hold on to phone data for up to five years. Under the new proposal,
agency could only keep the records for 18 months.
A senior White House official described the plan to ABC as: "a sound approach to ensuring
the government no longer collects or holds this data, but still ensures that the government
has access to the information it needs..."
The proposal hardly comes as a surprise. Ending the NSA's bulk phone data collection was one
of the proposals set forward by the review board President Obama created in January tasked
with coming up with alternatives to the NSA's intelligence-gathering practices. (Via The
White House SaveFrom.net)
On Tuesday, members of the House Intelligence Committee are expected to present their own
similar NSA reform bill. Both proposals will likely face an uphill battle in Congress.
(Via C-SPAN)
And the phone companies have yet to weigh in. As ZDNet writes, "Toss in compliance costs
for companies that have to cooperate with the NSA and you have a complicated brew.
According to the The New York Times, President Obama will announce the NSA changes this Friday,
which is when the court order originally authorizing the program expires.