Reflections on a Decade of Snowden's Impact on Surveillance.

This week marks the 10th anniversary of Edward Snowden's initial leaks about the US government's surveillance of American citizens' communications. Since then, there have been reforms, including the end of bulk collection of Americans' phone records and the sunsetting of Section 215 of the Patriot Act. The Freedom Act required the federal government to declassify and release "significant" opinions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and authorized the appointment of independent amici. However, the Snowden leaks revealed that America's "ordinary system of checks and balances doesn't work very well for secret national security programs," and there is still concern about what other rights-violating activities have been taking place in secret.
- 10 Years After Snowden's First Leak, What Have We Learned? Slashdot
- ‘No regrets,’ says Edward Snowden, after 10 years in exile The Guardian US
- Did Edward Snowden’s Revelations Change Anything? The Atlantic
- The Coming Fight Over American Surveillance Foreign Affairs Magazine
- Snowden, MI5 and me: how the leak of the century came to be published The Guardian US
Reading Insights
0
0
3 min
vs 4 min read
85%
747 → 110 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on Slashdot