July 1 (Bloomberg) -- We recently learned that the National
Security Agency has a database with the records of almost every
phone call made in the U.S. To address public concerns over its
surveillance activities, the agency has begun to explain how it
uses the metadata -- information including when calls are made,
how long they last and to whom they are placed -- it has
accumulated over the last seven years.
Although Americans deserve this explanation, they shouldn’t
delude themselves. Even if the NSA’s controversial program were
shut down tomorrow, another government agency that is busy
collecting and retaining personal data would keep humming along.
True accountability for the government’s surveillance activities
should also include an airing of -- and tighter restrictions on
-- the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s power to collect and
store substantial amounts of innocuous information about
Americans.