It expands the definition of “electronic communication service provider”—the entities which the government can compel to assist in surveillance, such as an email service—to include any “equipment that is being or may be used to transmit or store such communications.”

“Any business that has access to ‘equipment’ on which communications are stored and transmitted would be fair game,” the organizations’ joint statement reads. “That means hotels, libraries, coffee shops, and other businesses that provide wifi could be compelled to serve as surrogate spies, structuring their systems so that they can give the government access to entire communications streams. Conscripting U.S. business into intelligence agencies’ service was a feature of the 2007 Protect America Act; Congress explicitly and appropriately rejected this feature one year later when it passed Section 702.”

  • Grimble [he/him,they/them]@hexbear.net
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    7 months ago

    Nice to have a Democracy with an absolute 0% satisfaction rate. Just zero beneficial decisions ever, with no outside public input, and you learn about every decision once it’s already passed. This is exactly what “winning the Cold War” with no future goal in mind except starting new ones looks like. Anyone who claims to love this system is definitely telling the truth and surely not hiding anything.

    And this will definitely last another century unopposed, because we all know European ships are unsinkable. Nothing ominous about the number 250.