from Statista.com
— this post authored by Niall McCarthy
The U.S. National Security Agency has drastically increased the number of phone records it collects.
Please share this article – Go to very top of page, right hand side, for social media buttons.
An intelligence agency report released recently revealed that the organization harvested over 534 million call and text records in 2017. That’s a sharp rise on 2016 when the NSA collected just over 151 million records from providers such as AT&T and Verizon. The increase is notable as it comes in the second full year of a new surveillance system which was established to limit the NSA collecting such data in bulk.
That was implemented in the wake of Edward Snowden’s leaks in 2013. They prompted a massive U.S. debate about privacy and surveillance, resulting in Congress introducing the USA Freedom Act in 2015 which was designed to overhaul NSA access to data from domestic telecommunications companies. Under the old system, the NSA was able to collect billions of American phone records every day.
Even though the amount of data collected by the NSA in 2017 is still minuscule compared to the billions of records gathered in the pre-Snowden era, it has still resulted in privacy advocates voicing their concern about the extent of government intrusion into the lives of ordinary citizens. Under the new system, the records collected by the NSA are just “call detail records” – telecom metadata that logs phone numbers and call times without revealing any content.
You will find more infographics at Statista.