For those of you sick of reading me babble on about the FISA amendments, here’s the summary in pictures.
Entries Tagged as 'Privacy and Surveillance'
The Visible FISA
July 11th, 2008 · Comments Off on The Visible FISA
Tags: Privacy and Surveillance
Follow the Money
July 11th, 2008 · Comments Off on Follow the Money
Tags: Privacy and Surveillance
A Specific Problem
July 11th, 2008 · Comments Off on A Specific Problem
Since the previous post is long and a little technical, I want to pull out one point more succinctly. When Congress amended FISA in the years after 9/11 to allow for “roving” wiretaps, they made some other balancing changes in the law. In particular, since FISA orders can be granted based on a description of […]
Tags: Law · Privacy and Surveillance
A Few Further Questions About the FISA Bill
July 10th, 2008 · Comments Off on A Few Further Questions About the FISA Bill
Some things are clear about the FISA Amendments Act that President Bush signed into law today: Despite occasional attempts to persuade us otherwise, it licenses surveillance of Americans’ communications with overseas parties. But is that all it permits? Join me, if you will, on a short trip through the weeds of the foreign intelligence surveillance […]
Tags: Law · Privacy and Surveillance
Obama’s Support for My IMAGINARY Surveillance Bill Is Totally Defensible
July 8th, 2008 · 2 Comments
Over at Huffington Post, Lanny Davis establishes that he has no idea at all: (1) How to spell “Sister Souljah,” and (2) What the FISA “compromise” bill says. He writes: The compromise bill would provide strict supervision by the special FISA Court of all intelligence agency anti-terrorist surveillance activities, with strict time limits on renewal […]
Tags: Horse Race Politics · Privacy and Surveillance
FISA: Actually “Exclusive Means” for Surveillance
July 3rd, 2008 · 2 Comments
I’ve got a writeup at Ars Technica of an important ruling in yesterday in a suit against the government stemming from extralegal NSA wiretapping. Short version: Yes, FISA really is the “exclusive means” by which the government can do foreign intelligence wiretaps in the U.S., assertions of magical “inherent authority” notwithstanding. And no, you can’t […]
Tags: Law · Privacy and Surveillance · Self Promotion
Mmm, Capitulicious
June 25th, 2008 · 2 Comments
If you had told me five years ago I’d be writing pieces attacking Democratic leadership forThe American Prospect, I would have been… skeptical. Welcome to our brave new world.
Tags: Horse Race Politics · Privacy and Surveillance · Self Promotion
Kris on FISA
June 23rd, 2008 · 1 Comment
David Kris, a former top Justice Department attorney, knows more about FISA than pretty much anybody else out there. So his Guide to the FISA Amendment (part one and two) posted at Balkinization is required reading if ou care about the issue, as is Marty Lederman’s follow-up.
Tags: Privacy and Surveillance
Capitulation Report
June 21st, 2008 · 3 Comments
I sat through the painful House debates on the FISA deal, so you wouldn’t have to. My writeup is over at Ars. Possibly my favorite moment of the proceedings is up in the lede: “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance,” Rep Trent Franks (R-AZ) intoned on the floor of the House of Representatives, purporting […]
Tags: Privacy and Surveillance
Innocents Abroad
June 20th, 2008 · Comments Off on Innocents Abroad
One of the things we keep hearing from the apologists for the FISA bill that just passed is that it provides wonderful new protections for Americans abroad. I’m not so sure. (See update—I jumped the gun slightly here.) I’ve run this by some ACLU attorneys I know, who are studying the bill to attempt to […]
Tags: Privacy and Surveillance