RINF.COM: АЛТЕРНАТИВА ПОСЛЕДНИЕ НОВОСТИ
|
|
ПОСЛЕДНИЕ НОВОСТИ |
SYNDICATION |
Новая отечественная спутниковая система Surveillance
Четверг 9-ое апреля 2008
Планы для отдела обеспеченности Homeland для того чтобы запустить новую спутниковую систему surveillance приходят под новый критицизм на конгрессе США. Последняя неделя, секретарша Майкл Chertoff сказала спутниковая система surveillance будет скоро готова пойти. Но теперь Уолл-Стрит джорнэл демократы рапортов угрожают выключить программу если отдел не сделать больше для того чтобы адресовать заботы уединения. Спутниковая программа конструирована для того чтобы обеспечить федеральное, положение и служащих местного органа управления с обширным доступом к скульптуре шпионки спутниковой к assist с реакцией аварийной ситуации и другими потребностями внутренней безопасности. Но критики говорят администрация кустика не создавала правовые гарантии для того чтобы обеспечить что программа не будет использована для отечественный шпионить. - Народовластие теперь Страхи уединения угрожают спутниковой программы Госпожа Keehner said the office hadn’t been launched, but that DHS “continues to take preparatory steps so that we can stand up to the NAO once the congressional requirements have been met.” The clash is the latest in a series of conflicts between Democrats on Capitol Hill and the administration over privacy issues stemming from intelligence and national-security programs. As recently as last week, Mr. Chertoff said the program would soon be ready to go. “We’ve fully addressed anybody’s concerns,” he said. The department has already begun to post job openings; one of the first people they are seeking to hire for the satellite program is a lawyer. The plan ran into resistance on Capitol Hill shortly after it was announced in August, as lawmakers asked for a legal framework and details of how the program would operate to ensure Americans’ privacy. Homeland officials promised not to begin the program until they answered lawmakers’ concerns. For months, the department worked on a document it called the new program’s charter. That document got hung up within the administration last winter because agencies, including the Director of National Intelligence, expressed concerns that it did not untangle legal issues such as how to ensure that state and local privacy guidelines were followed. Plans to provide imagery from the satellite program to state and local law-enforcement officials have been put on hold until legal and privacy issues are resolved. (See the charter.) The charter creates a working group to handle policy and legal issues and lists which privacy-related laws will govern the work of the new spy satellite office. It also clarifies that the satellites won’t be used to intercept communications. Democratic lawmakers said the charter doesn’t address the requirements they have written into law. Congress said it wouldn’t provide money in 2008 for the program until the department certified that it adhered to privacy laws and the Government Accountability Office reviewed it. Homeland Security hasn’t yet sent GAO a certification for review. Rep. Thompson, along with Democratic Reps. Jane Harman of California and Christopher P. Carney of Pennsylvania, wrote to Mr. Chertoff to ask he stop further work until he addresses their concerns. “We are disappointed by [the department’s] continuing pattern of putting the cart before the horse,” they wrote. Rep. Thompson said he wants to see, in writing, how existing laws will be applied to safeguard civil liberties and privacy. The charter describes at what points in the process lawyers will evaluate the legality of a request for data from the office, but it doesn’t explain how they will make their determinations. Rep. Harold Rogers of Kentucky, the top Republican on the subcommittee that doles out the Homeland Security department’s money, called the spy satellite program “an important tool for domestic counterterrorism operations” and said he will work to ensure the department will meet congressional requirements. Homeland Security’s inspector general concluded in a report released last week that the department needs to revise its assessment of the new office’s impact on privacy and civil liberties before launching the spy-satellite program. The department said it has done that. See More:Big Brother Technology USA NewsHave Your Say: New Domestic Satellite Surveillance System Please note, only selected comments will be published. This entry was posted on Wednesday, April 9th, 2008 at 5:14 am and is filed under Science & Technology News, Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. |
Translations![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Free Newsletter
Related News
Latest Headlines
More Breaking News Archive |
The views expressed in the RINF news wire and newsletter are the sole responsibility of the author (s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the webmaster. RINF.COM: Breaking News & Alternative Media is Copyleft - Copy & Distribute Freely. |