Edward
Snowden and
human rights groups slam NSA
bill that's rushing through Congress
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The law that gives the National Security Agency the legal authority to spy on millions of Americans is set to expire at the end of the year.*
That might sound like good news, a chance to perhaps scale back the agency's far-reaching powers and rethink how far its tentacles are allowed to reach into the lives of private citizens across the US.
Not so much. In fact,
Congress is
rushing through a
bill that will expand the NSA's legal authority to collect, analyze, and act on the digital communications of American citizens.
Rep. Devin Nunes is pushing the innocuous-sounding "FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act of 2017,"
based on another bill submitted by Sen. Richard Burr. The
bill looks to maintain and potentially
expand the NSA's powers for the next seven years.
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