It expands the definition of “electronic communication service provider”—the entities which the government can compel to assist in surveillance, such as an email service—to include any “equipment that is being or may be used to transmit or store such communications.”
“Any business that has access to ‘equipment’ on which communications are stored and transmitted would be fair game,” the organizations’ joint statement reads. “That means hotels, libraries, coffee shops, and other businesses that provide wifi could be compelled to serve as surrogate spies, structuring their systems so that they can give the government access to entire communications streams. Conscripting U.S. business into intelligence agencies’ service was a feature of the 2007 Protect America Act; Congress explicitly and appropriately rejected this feature one year later when it passed Section 702.”
There’s still room to expand?
just give me my NSA agent’s name so I can send pics of my hog directly to him
If you don’t want things like this to happen, you need to for
What’s the answer? End-to-end encryption? Mesh networks? Other stuff I don’t know about yet?
Seconding this. If you are planning anything genuinely cool, coordinate over signal or better yet in person a meeting time for those involved, then meet in a public park or something similar without any electronics on you.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
“Yeah, but you see, solving climate change would be authoritarian.”
Just pass the:
America-Israel Partnership to Abandon Censorship
We’ll call it the AIPAC law.
Through extensive spying, mostly domestically*, Congress ™️ will ensure that we, the Great American People, are free from censorship due to nations like China, Russia or the terrorist group Hamas.
*anything deemed “useful but questionably ethically and legally wrong” will be forwarded to our Israeli allies for further processing, well outside US jurisdiction and thus “not our problem”