Electronic Frontier Foundation aims to expose covert surveillance
Shaun Nichols in California, vnunet.com15 Sep 2006
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The
Electronic
Frontier Foundation (EFF) has launched a campaign to shed light on the US
government's electronic surveillance programmes.
The EFF is using the
Freedom
Of Information Act (FOIA) as a springboard to introduce information requests
and litigation that it hopes will show the extent of government monitoring of
web, email and other electronic communications.
"The first step is initialising our very early requests and in the first
month we might be filing some lawsuits based on lack of response," he told
vnunet.com.
The EFF aims to uncover surveillance, database and data mining activities by
the US government in recent years.
"It is a fairly wide variety, particularly in a post 9/11 world where the
government is interested in collecting and analysing large amounts of
information," said Sobel.
Passed by congress in 1966, the Freedom Of Information Act calls for the
public availability of all records kept by government agencies.
The legislation allows for exemptions such as trade secrets, matters of
national security and individuals' private information.
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