You010 Archivesnow read about how the CIA uses the data it has gathered on Americans.
The agency on Wednesday published its rules for data collection on American citizens, updating them for the digital age and making them readily available for the first time.
SEE ALSO: Donald Trump trusts WikiLeaks more than the CIA or FBIThe CIA collects information in huge swaths that are perhaps impossible to comb through. The agency's guidelines lay out plans to ensure that the agency only holds onto U.S. citizen data it believes it needs to keep.
"...specifically designated officials must document the purpose of the collection activity, how the data was acquired, what steps were taken to limit the collection to the smallest subset containing the information necessary to achieve the purpose of the collection, and further determine how sensitive the acquired data is so that appropriate controls regarding access, querying, and retention may be imposed," the guidelines say.
The rules also outline, in vague terms, the limits on who has access to some of the citizen data stored by the CIA. Any CIA agent requests for "data subject to exceptional handling requirements" must be related to the agency's "authorized intelligence activities," meaning folks at the agency can't just ask for stuff off the cuff. They'll also be required to provide a statement that lays out the reason they need the information they're looking for.
"Electronic communications" that are of particular interest to the agency (for example, any emails that they think are "exceptional") have to be destroyed after five years, a rule that did not previously exist. Less extraordinary bits of communication, however, can be kept for 25 years.
Topics Cybersecurity Privacy
Wizards of the CoastWhat We’re Loving: Real Struggle, Real Soul, Real TennisThose who attack Elon Musk's space tweet have made a new Twitter memeThe Morning News Roundup for May 23, 2014The (Midfield) Engine That CouldCoaching, Portuguese StyleThe Morning News Roundup for June 4, 2014Glossary of Wiltshire WordsThe Sabbathday Lake Community and Early Shaker SpiritualsAmazon Echo sale: Save Up to 42% on speakers, smart displays, and moreRecap of Canto 30 of Dante’s “Inferno”DoorDash nudges users who don't leave tipsWordle today: Here's the answer and hints for August 13Insect scientists want your help renaming bugs with racist namesThe Morning News Roundup for June 4, 2014A Professor’s Strange Quest for Busts of Alexander PopeAnnouncing Issue 209!What's a robot manicure really like? Quick, cheap, and guiltWhat is Clubhouse? Good luck getting invited to the social app.Olivia Rodrigo visits White House to encourage young people to get vaccinated Coco Gauff Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live tennis for free The 15 best K Drew Afualo is more vulnerable than ever in her debut book 'Loud' 1,500m final Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live athletics for free Canada basketball Paris 2024 livestream: Watch Canada for free Team USA's women's gymnastics gold medal win sparks lots of online love Football Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live football for free How to install iOS 18.1 developer beta — try Apple Intelligence now NYT Strands hints, answers for July 31 Best Amazon deal: The SodaStream Terra starter kit is 40% off at Amazon Best Keurig deal: Save 22% off the Keurig K Best speaker deal: Get the Ultimate Ears Wonderboom 4 for 20% off Best travel deal: The AirFly Duo wireless Bluetooth transmitter is down to $29.99 at Amazon Samsung Galaxy Buds FE deal: $20 off at Amazon Djokovic Paris 2024 livestream: Watch Novak Djokovic for free Josh Kerr Paris 2024 livestream: Watch 1500m for free Apple's AI features will be late, report claims DOJ accuses TikTok of collecting and sharing users' personal views, as the app fights a ban Tesla recalls 1.8 million cars over hood issue 'Marvel Spider
1.9641s , 10108.5234375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2010 Archives】,Miracle Information Network