This revelation should end, once and for all, the government's long-discredited secrecy claims about its dragnet domestic surveillance programs.
It should spur Congress and the American people to make the President finally tell the truth about the government's spying on innocent Americans.
Items of interest will be located, identified, monitored, and remotely controlled through technologies such as radio-frequency identification, sensor networks, tiny embedded servers, and energy harvesters - all connected to the next-generation internet using abundant, low-cost, and high-power computing."
It's time to start a national dialogue about our rights in the digital age. And it's time to end the NSA's unconstitutional domestic surveillance program.
We've certainly seen the government increasingly strain the bounds of 'relevance' to collect large numbers of records at once - everyone at one or two degrees of separation from a target - but vacuuming all metadata up indiscriminately would be an extraordinary repudiation of any pretense of constraint or particularized suspicion.
You can't have 100% security and then also have 100% privacy and zero inconvenience. You know, we're going to have to make some choices as a society.
The judicial order that was disclosed in the press is used to support a sensitive intelligence collection operation, on which members of Congress have been fully and repeatedly briefed.
The classified program has been authorized by all three branches of the Government.
Although this program has been properly classified, the leak of one order, without any context, has created a misleading impression of how it operates.