THE UNITED STATES Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled on Thursday that the bulk collection of phone metadata by the NSA was illegal under federal law.
Rather than address the constitutionality of the program, the court took a much simpler tack. The decision concludes that the practice is beyond the scope of what the US Congress had in mind when it passed section 215 of the Patriot Act after September 11, 2001.
The case was brought by the American Civil Liberties Union and had been dismissed in 2013 by a lower court. Today's ruling vacates that decision, and could pave the way for a full legal challenge of NSA collection methods, which were first brought to light by Edward Snowden.
Also at: The Intercept, EFF, El Reg, BBC, NYT.
(Score: 2) by Joe Desertrat on Friday May 08 2015, @02:10AM
The frustration doesn't come from this specific event, but from the fact that, even if we end up winning this particular battle, there will be an endless number of battles to come.
That seems to be the case whenever battling the forces of money and lust for power. There is rarely if ever a complete and final victory. Stop unprecedented government spying now, they'll soon try again in the same or other ways. Those who advocate for civil rights or for the environment or for anything else that stands in the way of greed and lust for power never really win, they only gain temporary holds and have to be vigilant, well, forever, as it only takes a minor change at the top to bring all these threats back in full force. Once lost, these things are usually gone forever. In this "Age of Information", there is another front as the public relations battle is always going on. There is a constant smear campaign, with fake bogeymen and plenty of lies, and the biggest efforts are directed against those who most oppose greed.