Reform Could Create More Privacy Concerns
Nathan A. Sales, former Justice Department official
If phone companies, instead of the government, kept control of records, they may not be as secure.
Light Version of Oversight
Faiza Patel, Brennan Center
The bill leaves untouched N.S.A. authority to search another vast trove of information: what we say on the phone and write in emails to friends and family abroad.
Secret Last-Minute Changes Broadened Powers
Kate A. Martin, Center for National Security Studies
A precise, limited definition of the scope of data collection was replaced with one that is ambiguous and expansive.
Limiting N.S.A. Tools Makes Us Less Safe
Stewart Baker, former Homeland Security Department official
If the agency identifies a suspect foreign number, it will no longer be able to do a quick search to find who is calling from this country.
Include the Public in the Debate
Khaliah Barnes, Electronic Privacy Information Center
The current bill leaves in place the one-sided proceeding that allows the government to argue for expanded surveillance of Americans without anyone on the other side to make the opposite argument.
A Platform to Build Real Reform
Gabe Rottman, American Civil Liberties Union
This is the first time since passage of the Patriot Act that Congress has acted to restrain, rather than expand, foreign intelligence surveillance authority.
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