UPI en Español  |   UPI Asia  |   About UPI  |   My Account
Search:
Go

New leak: NSA keeps Web users' metadata for year

  |
 
A woman checks her Facebook page at her apartment's computer room in Washington, DC. (UPI/Billie Jean Shaw)
A woman checks her Facebook page at her apartment's computer room in Washington, DC. (UPI/Billie Jean Shaw) 
License photo
Published: Oct. 1, 2013 at 2:30 AM

FORT MEADE, Md., Oct. 1 (UPI) -- The U.S. National Security Agency keeps millions of Web users' metadata for a year, even if the users are not suspected of wrongdoing, a leaked paper indicates.

The Obama administration insists the NSA keeps only the content of messages and communications of people it is intentionally targeting.

The metadata stored by the NSA provides a record of almost everything a person does online, including tracking browsing history, email activity and some account passwords, the top-secret document leaked to British newspaper The Guardian by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden indicates.

The leaked document is an introductory guide to digital network intelligence for NSA field agents, The Guardian said.

Any computer metadata picked up by NSA collection systems is routed to the agency's metadata repository, code-named Marina, the guide explains.

Phone metadata is sent to a separate system called Nucleon.

"The Marina metadata application tracks a user's browser experience, gathers contact information/content and develops summaries of target," the guide says in Tuesday's Guardian report.

"Of the more distinguishing features, Marina has the ability to look back on the last 365 days' worth of DNI metadata seen by the SIGINT collection system, regardless whether or not it was tasked for collection," the guide says, referring in the capitalized initials to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and to signals intelligence.

Looking back on a person's 365-day history can let the spy agency find information about someone who later becomes a target, The Guardian said.

But having this ability depends on keeping personal information of millions of Internet users who never will be of interest to the U.S. intelligence community, the newspaper said.

The Guardian asked the NSA to explain the 365-day storage of untargeted people's data and to estimate how much U.S. citizens' metadata was kept in its repositories.

The NSA didn't address the questions in its response, focusing instead on its foreign intelligence activities.

"NSA is a foreign intelligence agency," the statement said. "NSA's foreign intelligence activities are conducted pursuant to procedures approved by the U.S. attorney general and the secretary of defense, and, where applicable, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, to protect the privacy interests of Americans.

"These interests must be addressed in the collection, retention and dissemination of any information," the spy agency said. "Moreover, all queries of lawfully collected data must be conducted for a foreign intelligence purpose.

"We know there is a false perception out there that NSA listens to the phone calls and reads the email of everyday Americans, aiming to unlawfully monitor or profile US citizens. It's just not the case.

"NSA's activities are directed against foreign intelligence targets in response to requirements from U.S. leaders in order to protect the nation and its interests from threats such as terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction."

Topics: Barack Obama
© 2013 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Order reprints
Join the conversation
Most Popular Collections
New York Fashion Week 2013 U.S. Open 2013 50th anniversary of the March on Washington
Celebrity families of 2013 MTV VMAs 2013 Style Awards
Additional U.S. News Stories
Video
1 of 17
NLDS St. Louis Cardinals at Pittsburgh Pirates in Pittsburgh
View Caption
St. Louis Cardinals starter Joe Kelly delivers a pitch through the sunlight in the first inning of game 3 of the NLDS against the at PNC Park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on October 6, 2013. The series is tied at one game each. UPI/Pat Benic
fark
Woman lures ex-boyfriend to her bedroom by undressing, striptease; her jealous new lover stabs him...
Tragic accident or not, let's raffle off a gun to raise money for this guy's legal defense. That...
There are horrible, tasteless ways to tease your newscast. And then there's this
Spending over a decade studying and training to attain one of the most respected and valued jobs...
FARK party in Chicago. Monday, October 7. Going to the Art Museum, getting pizza and drinking (OF...
Neighbors say that the arrest of a crack-dealing elderly woman has made their neighborhood a better...