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- Roughly 50,000 requests to spy on Postal Service metadata — the names, return addresses, and postmark locations on the outside of envelopes sent to a particular location or individual — were granted by the United States Postal Service in 2013 alone, The New York Times points out today. That’s up from an average of just 8,000 requests per year between 2001 and 2012. This increase happened with essentially no explanation as to why it was necessary, or with any added mechanisms to protect such a program from abuse.
The number of requests, contained in a little-noticed 2014 audit of the surveillance program by the Postal Service’s inspector general, shows that the surveillance program is more extensive than previously disclosed and that oversight protecting Americans from potential abuses is lax.
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organicAnt · 3676 days ago · link ·
More importantly, what happened to innocent before proven guilty safeguard of the law? It feels like we've all suddenly become suspects without our own consent. How is this massive concentration of power in secret, unaccountable hands going to save us or national security from terrorism, I don't know. This whole apparatus seems more likely to be an organized machine of espionage for those already behind the wheels of concentrated financial and military power.