Majority Oppose Forced AI Surveillance Talk of a “clean reauthorization” of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) is growing on Capitol Hill. But as Washington starts to dream of an easy vote that includes no surveillance reforms, the American people are not having it. FISA Section 702 is an authority enacted by Congress to enable the surveillance of foreign threats on foreign soil, but it has often been used by the FBI in recent years to spy on the communications of millions of Americans. Included in that debate is concern over the way in which a dozen federal agencies – ranging from the FBI to the IRS – are purchasing Americans’ personal information from shady third-party data brokers. A new poll commissioned by Demand Progress shows that Americans are paying attention to this threat to privacy – and they don’t like what they see.
The poll also shows that the recent dust-up between the Pentagon and AI company Anthropic is focusing the public’s attention on the potential for the government to use artificial intelligence to drive the surveillance of the American people to unprecedented levels. This is especially true as the administration works to dismantle long-standing information silos and remove safeguards that once limited the sharing of Americans’ private data between agencies – from the Department of Homeland Security to the FBI and the IRS. AI surveillance, with data collected under Section 702, could allow government employees across the federal bureaucracy to run warrantless searches of Americans’ private communications. Combined with the vast amounts of Americans’ personal data that federal agencies purchase from third-party data brokers, AI-run surveillance programs will have truly frightening reach. The poll also shows that Americans are watching the AI debate and that a majority see it as a threat to privacy.
Before Congress embraces a comfortable conformity on a “clean” reauthorization of Section 702 or any other surveillance authority, Members would do well to pay attention to the rising alarm over surveillance among their constituents. Comments are closed.
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