A
piece of legislation that permits US agencies to snoop on foreign
nationals by hacking into cloud servers of Google and Apple, has sent
alarm bells ringing among privacy campaigners, a British media report
says.
The renewal of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA), would grant the US government the right to spy
on anyone using the internet storage facilities provided by Google and
Apple.
One of the most disquieting provisions
of the FISA justifies snooping even without the fig leaf of a threat to
national security. Officials could pry into foreign individuals' cloud
data for purely political reasons as well.
Simply
stated, it means that any non-US citizen who stores data on the cloud
services operated by Amazon, Google and Apple, could open themselves up
to a probe by US authorities, the Daily Mail reports.
Google,
responding to media requests, said: "It is possible for the US
government (and European governments) to access certain types of data
via their law enforcement agencies. We think this kind of access to data
merits serious discussion and more transparency."
Cloud
computing allows internet users to store their information and data in
an network server as opposed to a physical memory stick or tangible
location on their hard drive or on their smartphones.
FISA
was actually put into place under President George W Bush in 2008, and
it was quietly renewed in December 2012 under President Barack Obama's
purview.
The legislation permits organs of the
US government, the CIA, the FBI, and Pentagon's National Security
Agency to look at any information they would like that is saved on cloud
servers.
The blogsite Slate quoted Caspar
Bowden, who co-wrote the report which is now being examined by the
European Union, as saying that the legislation has been so gravely
ignored by European government officials.
"It's like putting a mind control drug in the water supply, which only affects non-Americans," he said.
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