From Freedom of the Press Foundation <[email protected]>
Subject Stop this horrifying mass surveillance bill
Date April 17, 2024 7:14 PM
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Legislation could make Americans spy on journalists and each other

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Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

Here are some of the most important stories we’re following from the U.S. and around the world. If you enjoy reading this newsletter, please forward it to friends and family. If someone has forwarded you this newsletter, please subscribe here ([link removed]) .

Illustration by the Electronic Frontier Foundation. (CC BY 2.0 DEED) ([link removed])

Don’t let the government turn citizens into spies

The House has slipped a horrifying amendment into its bill ([link removed]) extending intelligence agencies’ already expansive ([link removed]) spying powers under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Anyone who values press freedom — or their own freedom — needs to tell their senators TODAY to VOTE NO on the Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act, or RISAA, by calling 202-899-8938. You can also use the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Action Center ([link removed]) or email your senators using this Brennan Center tool ([link removed]) .

Otherwise, you may soon live in a full-fledged surveillance state where Americans are forced to spy on journalists, as well as their customers and neighbors. As our Advocacy Director Seth Stern and our founding Board Member John Cusack wrote in the Chicago Sun-Times ([link removed]) , the bill “means virtually any vendor who enters your home, or any business you visit, could be forced to become an involuntary government agent. That should chill you to the bone.”

That may sound alarmist, but here’s how Sen. Ron Wyden explained it ([link removed]) : “If this provision is enacted, the government could deputize any one of these people against their will, and force them to become an agent for Big Brother. For example, by forcing an employee to insert a USB thumb drive into a server at an office they clean or guard at night.”

Section 702 currently allows the government to compel Big Tech corporations to turn over user information, but as our deputy advocacy director, Caitlin Vogus, wrote in The Guardian ([link removed]) , those companies “command armies of lawyers, receive Section 702 orders frequently, and have a commercial incentive to at least appear to care about their customers’ privacy concerns. But what hope could a news organization have that its cleaning crew, for instance, will want to take on the federal government on its behalf?”

And any surveillance power given to the government will inevitably be used to snoop on journalists. As Stern told Rolling Stone ([link removed]) , the bill “would let intelligence agencies commandeer countless American businesses and individuals to spy on journalists and their sources on the government’s behalf.”

The bill would even put people’s personal safety in harm’s way. Google and Verizon can turn over user information from the comfort of their corporate offices, but the plumber conscripted to install a thumb drive in a customer’s home could be threatened, assaulted, or worse if caught.

We’re doing our part to get the word out about this awful, dystopian bill, as are plenty of other civil liberties organizations ([link removed]) that have sounded the alarm. Please do your part by emailing ([link removed]) or calling your senators at 202-899-8938 and telling them to VOTE NO on RISAA.
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