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posted by cmn32480 on Thursday November 19 2015, @01:43PM   Printer-friendly
from the never-let-a-crisis-go-to-waste dept.

A U.S. senator plans to introduce legislation that would delay the end of the bulk collection of phone metadata by the National Security Agency to Jan. 31, 2017, in the wake of security concerns after the terror attacks last Friday in Paris.

Senator Tom Cotton, a Republican from Arkansas, believes that the termination of the program, scheduled for month-end under the USA Freedom Act, "takes us from a constitutional, legal, and proven NSA collection architecture to an untested, hypothetical one that will be less effective."

The transition will happen in less than two weeks, at a time when the threat level for the U.S. is "incredibly high," he said Tuesday.

The obvious answer to doing something that doesn't work is to do more of that something.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Kromagv0 on Thursday November 19 2015, @03:41PM

    by Kromagv0 (1825) on Thursday November 19 2015, @03:41PM (#265369) Homepage

    Show us concrete evidence of all the cases where this method, and this method alone, prevented something from happening. For real. Not some hypothetical crap like "you know, this could have happened".

    They can't, they have previously admitted that bulk surveillance hasn't done jack [washingtontimes.com].

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