Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)

× Clear Filters
253 Articles
Just Security

Ninth Circuit Upholds 702 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance, But Leaves Open Future Challenges

Yesterday, the Ninth Circuit released its opinion in United States v. Mohamud – a case I described back in January 2015 as a “top national security” case to watch in the…
Just Security

Correcting the Record on Section 702: A Prerequisite for Meaningful Surveillance Reform, Part III

In our previous posts, we’ve argued that the NSA is collecting massive amounts of data about US citizens under conditions that have nothing to do with terrorism or national…
Just Security

Correcting the Record on Section 702: A Prerequisite for Meaningful Surveillance Reform, Part II

Last week, we argued that the public discussion surrounding two of the government’s most controversial mass surveillance programs – PRISM and Upstream – has not sufficiently…
Just Security

Unprecedented and Unlawful: The NSA’s “Upstream” Surveillance

The FISA Amendments Act of 2008 (FAA) — the statute the government uses to engage in warrantless surveillance of Americans’ international communications — is scheduled to…
Just Security

Correcting the Record on Section 702: A Prerequisite for Meaningful Surveillance Reform

The legal authority behind the controversial PRISM and Upstream surveillance programs used by the NSA to collect large swaths of private communications from leading Internet companies…
Just Security

The Vulnerability Equities Process Should Consider More than Intelligence Community Needs

Dave Aitel and Matt Tait’s recent post in Lawfare argued that the U.S. government’s procedure for deciding whether to withhold unknown or little-known vulnerabilities in…
Just Security

A Problematic Pseudo-Category of Surveillance Information and Promising Post-Collection Policy

This week, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence declassified a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review (FISCR) opinion that has important broad implications…
Just Security

It’s Time to Come to Terms With Secret Law: Part II

On Wednesday, I summarized the findings of my recent study of alleged secret law in the three branches of the US government and my conclusion that secret law is a limited but important…
Just Security

It’s Time to Come to Terms With Secret Law: Part I

Secret law. The words are chilling. They evoke Kafka, unaccountable government, liberty subordinated to state security – and to some ears, perhaps simply the paranoid rantings…
Just Security

Beware of the Emergency Exception Loophole in the Email Privacy Act

The Email Privacy Act, which passed the House 419-0, is slated for consideration in the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing this week. The legislation updates the now 30-year old…
Just Security

Recap of Recent Posts on Just Security (May 14–20)

I. Guantánamo & ISIL Detainees Steve Vladeck, Can Detainees Plead Their Way Out of Guantánamo? (Tuesday, May 17) Jonathan Horowitz, The US’ Failure to Plan for ISIL…
Just Security

The 702 Reform Debate Is Just Heating Up

This post is the latest installment of our “Monday Reflections” feature, in which a different Just Security editor examines the big stories from the previous week or looks…
1-12 of 253 items

DON'T MISS A THING. Stay up to date with Just Security curated newsletters: