In the weeks since former National Security Agency
contractor Edward Snowden exposed government spying into millions of
Americans’ phone calls and e-mails, the Obama administration has
reassured the public that there are restraints on U.S. espionage. One
check against Washington’s vast counterterrorism efforts is supposed to
be the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board. In a June 17
interview with Charlie Rose, the president said, “I’ll be meeting with
them, and what I want to do is to set up and structure a national
conversation” about privacy.
The board is staffed with five
presidential appointees who get top secret security clearances and, in
theory, the power to shape both legislation and regulations to assure
that espionage undertaken in the name of the Patriot Act or the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act doesn’t trample on the public’s privacy
rights. That’s how the 9/11 Commission, which proposed the board in
2004, envisioned it would work.http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-06-27/a-privacy-board-was-supposed-to-protect-americans-from-nsa-spies
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