NSA Quietly Releases a New Report Detailing ‘Unauthorized’ Spying on American Citizens ‘thousands of times per year’

NSA Quietly Releases a New Report Detailing ‘Unauthorized’ Spying on American Citizens ‘thousands of times per year’

What would it take to get Congress to finally rein in the NSA? Apparently, there’s nothing that the NSA can do that will spur Congress to action, as even a new report detailing NSA’s illegal spying on American citizens has elicited a big fat nothing from the do-nothings in DC.

nsa spying

If you want to release something no one will pay attention to, what time’s better than Christmas Eve? At least, that appeared to be the National Security Agency’s thinking. Last night, the NSA released reports detailing all the times they’ve illegally spied on American citizens. Ho ho ho!

The heavily-redacted documents were released in response to a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union under the Freedom of Information Act. Many of these privacy violations have been previously reported on, but these documents show new specifics. A series of annual and quarterly reports from 2001 through the second quarter of 2013 are now available for perusal, and they cover some of the NSA’s greatest hits: stalking potential romantic partners, a practice apparently so common it’s been nicknamed LOVEINT; erroneously targeting US citizens for spying; database queries that returned queries on US citizens who weren’t targeted; storage of data on servers “not authorized” to hold it; and access by people without security clearance to — well, to something; the specifics were redacted.

In fact, the frequent redactions make it hard to judge how often these privacy violations are happening, though previous reports suggest they occur thousands of times a year. But don’t worry, the NSA says. “The problems uncovered were routine,” according to NSA/CSS Office of the Inspector General report in the documents representing the first quarter of 2013.

Sure, the NSA overstepped its bounds with illegal spying, but who cares? That was only a concern during the Bush administration. It’s so 2008.

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