US spy agency abandons controversial surveillance technique


  • TECH
  • Tuesday, 02 May 2017

Digital privacy remains a contentious issue across the globe following the 2013 disclosures of broad NSA spying activity. Pictured is the NSA datacentre.

WASHINGTON: The US National Security Agency said on Friday it had stopped a form of surveillance that allowed it to collect without a warrant the digital communications of Americans who mentioned a foreign intelligence target in their messages, marking an unexpected triumph for privacy advocates long critical of the practice. 

The decision to stop the once-secret activity, which involved messages sent to or received from people believed to be living overseas, came despite the insistence of US officials in recent years that it was both lawful and vital to national security.

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