NSA promises to delete old records

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Federal intelligence officials are promising to delete old records picked up under a controversial National Security Agency (NSA) program that was overhauled earlier in 2015. Once the NSA ends its bulk collection and storage of tens of millions of Americans’ phone records later in 2015, it will also eliminate analysts’ access to the five years’ worth of old data, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) said on July 27. The decision forestalls what would have been certain outrage from privacy advocates had the NSA decided to keep the old data, which one top court has ruled was gathered illegally. The change was prompted by the passage of the USA Freedom Act in June, which ended the NSA’s bulk collection of Americans’ phone “metadata.”

Before, the agency collected millions of people’s metadata -- which includes the phone numbers involved in a call, the time the call occurred and how long it lasted, but not the actual conversation -- and kept it for five years. Soon, the spy agency will have to request a narrow set of records from private phone companies, and only after obtaining a court order. While the five years of “historic” data collected by the NSA will be off-limits to analysts, “technical personnel” will be able to access it for another three months “to verify the records produced” under the new system, the ODNI said. Additionally, ongoing court cases surrounding the program have required the NSA to hold on to the data until the cases are finalized, it said. The NSA will keep the phone data for those cases and it “will not be used or accessed for any other purpose.” The NSA promised to destroy those records “as soon as possible” after the court requirements end.


NSA promises to delete old records