
The NSA collects mobile location data under an executive order issued by the Reagan White House in 1981, reports The Hill. The news follows The Washington Post's report revealing how the agency tracks the locations of hundreds of millions of citizens around the world, supported by documents leaked by Edward Snowden.
'We cannot track the location of every cell phone'
The security agency told The Hill that it operates under Executive Order 12333, which governs how the intelligence community conducts its surveillance activities abroad, while also asserting that the collection does not violate the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. An NSA spokesperson stated that the data tracking is 'outward-facing,' reiterating the previous claim made in the Post that data gathered by the NSA program is 'incidental' as opposed to intentional. 'We are not intentionally acquiring domestic information through this capability,' she said. In addition, while the agency tries to avoid American location data, if any records are acquired from a stateside mobile device, analysts employ 'minimization procedures' or destroy the records outright. However, the spokesperson said that the agency 'does not know or cannot track the location of every cell phone.'
This is not the first time the NSA has argued that it operates within the confines of the law. A previous statement issued on October 31st also stated that its collection practices fall under Executive Order 12333, and are in accordance with all applicable laws, regulations, and policies. However, that a 32-year-old executive order with the force of law should help govern how the NSA operates might also help galvanize its most ardent critics.
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