NSA will stop illegally collecting American emails

The NSA is attempting to adhere to a 2011 ruling by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court that found this particular “about the target” email collection program violated the Fourth Amendment. Some internet companies packaged and processed emails in bundles, and if one message contained a foreign target’s email address, the entire group was swept up in the NSA sweep. This meant the NSA was intercepting domestic communications, resulting in illegal searches.

FISC allowed the surveillance to continue, but with a new safeguard in place: The NSA proposed a program where it would keep these bundled emails in a separate repository where analysts would not be able to see them.

In 2016, the NSA reported the new program was not going as planned and analysts were, in fact, still searching the sequestered documents, The New York Times reports. FISC delayed renewing the agency’s warrantless surveillance program until it promised to cancel the entire “about the target” collection process.

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