Just two weeks ago, the director of the National Security Agency, Keith Alexander, stood before a technology audience and declared that U.S. phone and Internet surveillance sets “a standard for other countries.”
He talked of strict internal controls, and said relatively few people were able to query databases. If anyone was doing the wrong thing within the agency, he added, “our auditing tools would detect them and they would be found accountable, and they know that” (see “NSA Chief Says U.S. Phone and Web Surveillance Sets Standard for Other Countries”).
Now comes the Washington Post, letting us know that according to internal NSA audits leaked to the paper, privacy breaches have happened 2,776 times in one year ending in May 2012, mostly “unauthorized surveillance of Americans or foreign intelligence targets in the United States.” The primary documents—and the Post story and related graphics—are very well worth reading here.
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