The
Obama Administration has denied allegations of 'unilaterally'
collecting information from internet companies, as being reported in the
media, which has resulted in outrage in the country.
The
Director of National Intelligence (DNI), James Clapper, yesterday
declassified a portion of its information related to the secretive
'PRISM' in this regard, and strongly denied that it 'unilaterally'
obtains information from the servers of US Internet companies.
In
a statement, Clapper said internet companies provide user data to the
National Security Agency only after receiving an order approved by a
secret FISA court.
"PRISM is not an
undisclosed collection or data mining programme. It is an internal
government computer system used to facilitate the government's
statutorily authorised collection of foreign intelligence information
from electronic communication service providers under court supervision,
as authorised by Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA)," a DNI fact sheet said.
This
authority was created by the Congress and has been widely known and
publicly discussed since its inception in 2008, it said, adding that
under Section 702 of FISA, the US Government does not unilaterally
obtain information from the servers of US electronic communication
service providers.
"All such information is
obtained with FISA Court approval and with the knowledge of the provider
based upon a written directive from the Attorney General and the
Director of National Intelligence," it said.
"In
short, Section 702 facilitates the targeted acquisition of foreign
intelligence information concerning foreign targets located outside the
United States under court oversight.
Service providers supply information to the Government when they are lawfully required to do so," the DNI said.
No comments:
Post a Comment