FBI Wants Users' Browser History Without A Warrant

Tay

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The FBI is at it again, this time trying to lobby Congress to update a US surveillance law so they can get access to web browser history in the same way they can get telephone records - without a warrant.

The FBI contends that such data is covered implicitly under current statute, which was written years ago and only explicitly covers data normally associated with telephone records.

Director James Comey now is lobbying Congress to make clear it also applies to the digital equivalent.

Late on Monday, major technology companies including Google, Facebook and Yahoo sent a letter warning Congress that they would oppose any efforts to rewrite law in the FBI’s favor.

"This expansion of the NSL statute has been characterized by some government officials as merely fixing a ‘typo’ in the law," the companies wrote. "In reality, however, it would dramatically expand the ability of the FBI to get sensitive information about users’ online activities without court oversight."

It marks another battle over a small clause in federal law that could dramatically affect how the US conducts terrorism investigations. For years, the bureau has relied on the controversial national security letters to obtain certain types of data quickly from technology companies. These letters don’t require a warrant and often come with a gag order prohibiting the recipients from discussing them. Technology companies complain the FBI has become too reliant on them, but the FBI complains that cases are getting slowed down because some companies have stopped cooperating.

It’s not so much that technology companies don’t want to give any user data to the government. Rather, their legal teams have problems with the growth of national security letters because the accompanying gag orders prevent companies from telling users much about how they help the government. This can create mistrust and, as happened after the Edward Snowden leaks, eventual embarrassment if the details are disclosed.

Companies also argue NSLs are problematic because of the lack of judicial oversight. They give too much power to one branch of government, they argue, and make it hard to predict what the government may ask for next.

Comey has said expanding NSL rules is one of his agencies top legislative priorities. US senators are exploring multiple ways to pass the law tweak this year.

Technology and legal experts also dispute Comey’s argument that he effectively is asking Congress to correct a typo. In 2008, the justice department’s office of legal counsel said explicitly that the agency can only issue national security letters for “name, address, length of service, and local and long distance toll billing records”.

At the time, the government had asked DoJ’s lawyer if those four types of data are "exhaustive or merely illustrative of the information that the FBI may request and a provider may turn over".

To which the office of legal counsel responded: "We conclude that the list ... is exhaustive."


Source: Facebook and Google battle latest FBI attempt to expand surveillance

Now might be a good time to update your privacy settings on your devices, browsers, Google, FB, and Twitter accounts and anything that touches the internet. The massive amount of data already being collected by the likes of Google for example would be complete browser history when you are logged in. There are settings to turn that off though (https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/465?hl=en).

As well using a browser like Firefox which allows you to clear browser history upon quitting the program instead of Chrome - which doesn't have this setting is another recommendation. But none of that matters if the FBI gets it at the ISP level, so a VPN can be a solution.
 
The way I see it is all of the giant surveillance agencies around the world have been doing this since for a decade as it is. They just want to set the legal precedence for it and gain direct access for more complete records.

It reminds me of the Battlestar Galactica remake. The only reason that starship and a small piece of mankind survived the data-hack at all was that it was decommissioned as a museum so they never actually re-connected it to the internet, but they did keep their intranet up.
 
The FBI can just call up NSA they having gathering all internet traffic and conversations for years, and funny enough google and facebook among others has gladly helped them, they must have somethng against FBI then, oh well standars are good, double standards are twice as good LOL
 
More news from the FBI's activities:

The FBI runs face recognition on 411 million photos, most of which are innocent Americans

"According to a new government report, the FBI can currently run face recognition on 411.9 million photos. They include mugshots, passport photos and driver license photos from 16 states. The FBI plans to expand the database by partnering with 20 additional states to get access to their driver license databases."


"The problem with the database is that the FBI has been remiss about talking about it and not done enough to ensure that the face recognition is accurate, according to the Government Accountability Office’s new report on FBI facial recognition usage. The report, released on Wednesday and conducted at the request of Senator Al Franken (D-MN), doesn’t mince words with its title: “FACE RECOGNITION TECHNOLOGY: FBI Should Better Ensure Privacy and Accuracy.”

The FBI’s biometric database includes fingerprints, palm prints, and DNA profiles, but the report focuses on its facial recognition components. That includes the Next Generation Identification-Interstate Photo System (NGI-IPS), which is used by the Bureau and, as of December 2015, seven states, as well as the FBI’s internal Facial Analysis, Comparison and Evaluation Services group (FACE), which also has access to databases from the State Department, Defense Department, and 16 states. All told, FACE has access to 411.9 million images for facial recognition purposes, which are used to provide leads, though not concrete identification, for investigations."

[..]

"At the end of its more than year-long audit, which started in January 2015, the GAO has recommendations for FBI to improve the facial recognition system. It says the Department of Justice should look into why the FBI wasn’t producing regular privacy reports; that the FBI should be running regular tests for the accuracy of its face recognition; and that the FBI should also be testing the accuracy of the external state and federal databases on which it relies. It also admonishes the FBI for letting people run searches that return just 2 candidate matches for a photo, when its system is run assuming accuracy when 20 results are returned."

The FBI responded to the report saying that it agrees with some of the GAO’s recommendations, but that it has “no authority to set or enforce accuracy standards for face recognition technology” performed by external partners, i.e. the state and local agencies with which it works. While the agency emphasizes the fact that searches are simply used to provide leads, it still means there is no standard for accuracy on searches being performed on hundreds of millions of photos of Americans who’ve done nothing wrong. Between August 2011 and December 2015 the FBI requested 36,420 searches of the external partner databases over which it says it cannot enforce accuracy.

[..]

All this news is alarming on its face, but it’s made worse by the fact that the FBI wants the biometrics database of which the NGI-IPS is a part exempted from disclosures required by the Privacy Act. The FBI’s request, which has been publicly opposed by a coalition of civil society and private groups, would make it so that the FBI wouldn’t have to tell individuals what biometric information the FBI has collected about them.

[..]

In a statement issued in response to the report, Senator Franken criticized the FBI’s lax auditing.

"The report shows that the FBI hasn’t done enough to audit its own use of facial recognition technology or that of other law enforcement agencies that partner with the FBI, nor has it taken adequate steps to ensure the technology’s accuracy."

So as more and more photos are being made available for facial recognition searches a federal agency with a history of dodging scrutiny is outsourcing standard-making to state and local agencies. What could go wrong?

Source: The FBI runs face recognition on 411 million photos, most of which are innocent American
 
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