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Jun 18, 2013
06/13
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. >>> sunnyvale based companies said they asked for data between 12 and 13,000 times in six months. yahoo said the most common requests were for foreign and intelligence acts requests. >>> the wax museums are about to become a piece of history. fisherman's wharf has it and they now run the museum which was founded by his grandfather and he said it is time for a change but it is part of their heritage they will always hold deer. >> there are literally millions of visitors. >> the new owner will spend $35,000 renovating it so it can reopen next summer. >>> firefighters battling a fire that started just off of carson's road. about 1600 acres were burned. cal fire said the high winds and tough landscape is making it difficult to put out that fire and so far the cause is unknown. >>> some firefighters are hired to protect just one home instead of a an end -- of an entire community. especially place willings like colorado where the fire danger is high. but they don't coordinate with state and local departments and they are worried that could cause some problems. >> if they got in trouble,
. >>> sunnyvale based companies said they asked for data between 12 and 13,000 times in six months. yahoo said the most common requests were for foreign and intelligence acts requests. >>> the wax museums are about to become a piece of history. fisherman's wharf has it and they now run the museum which was founded by his grandfather and he said it is time for a change but it is part of their heritage they will always hold deer. >> there are literally millions of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 10, 2013
06/13
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SFGTV
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. >> the number of trains we measure daily and we have the ability to get travel time data between travel points and it's somewhat of a manual process. we have been working with our it folks to evaluate that. on the tep or tep pilots, we really need a way to more easily and systematically measure that time. so we'll certainly incorporate that here and welcoming on ways to make that easier in future to report on any given time point neuter. >> if i could recommend or ask, whatever the right word, is that we take a benchmark of mean distance between failure, on-time performance, number of trains into the system on a daily basis and if i may ask west portal to embarcadero and visa versa, which i think is the single most important measure for your average rider and benchmark those to-date and schedule the hearing in the fall, after john has worked the magic with the few wands we have given him, which i realize aren't many and report back. if it's making a dent, we'll stick with that, but if it's not, we need to tell our citizens and riders he needs a bigger bag of tricks and go after those. >
. >> the number of trains we measure daily and we have the ability to get travel time data between travel points and it's somewhat of a manual process. we have been working with our it folks to evaluate that. on the tep or tep pilots, we really need a way to more easily and systematically measure that time. so we'll certainly incorporate that here and welcoming on ways to make that easier in future to report on any given time point neuter. >> if i could recommend or ask, whatever...
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Jun 18, 2013
06/13
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FOXNEWSW
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law enforcement agencies made 13,000 requests for data between december 1, 2012, and may 31, this year. according to yahoo, the most common request involved fraud, murder, kidnapping, and other criminal investigations. it al reports that other requests involved foreign intelligence facebook, microsoft, and apple have already disclosed the number of d requests they received. so not everybody is about terrorism. >> lawmakers in the house taking 'the first and most controversial of four immigration bills now. it's known as safe act. among other things it would allow states to pass their own immigration laws, and enable local police to act as immigration officers. while it's a crime to enter the country illegally this bill would make it a federal crime if somebody stays beyond his or her series sample supporters say it would discourage future illegal immigrants from entering the country in the first place. opponents argue it would turn millions 0 illegal immigrants into criminals overnight, leading to racial profiling. mike, this one -- what is the pitch for this particular bill? how are t
law enforcement agencies made 13,000 requests for data between december 1, 2012, and may 31, this year. according to yahoo, the most common request involved fraud, murder, kidnapping, and other criminal investigations. it al reports that other requests involved foreign intelligence facebook, microsoft, and apple have already disclosed the number of d requests they received. so not everybody is about terrorism. >> lawmakers in the house taking 'the first and most controversial of four...
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Jun 18, 2013
06/13
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says law enforcement in general asked the company for user data between 12 and 13,000 times in the pastix months. those requests, however, include all law enforcement for all reasons, not just national security letters exclusively. yahoo!'s numbers are similar to what facebook and microsoft released over the weekend. they're broad numbers. this frustrates some of the folks at google. google has been pushing hard for government permission to tell you specifically how many times the nsa has asked or taken data under the prison program. those are the numbers that everyone actually cares about. one way of thinking of this is a crime rate. if a city tells you 13,000 crimes were committed but doesn't specify how many of those were parking tickets, you don't have a very clear picture of what's going on. >>> the fed starts that two-day meeting today. we get data on the housing starts as well. last night on the 6:00 news kris sanchez had an in depth report on the excellent growth of construction in the bay area. it's worth watching it's on nbcbayarea.com right on the top of the page. >>> as we r
says law enforcement in general asked the company for user data between 12 and 13,000 times in the pastix months. those requests, however, include all law enforcement for all reasons, not just national security letters exclusively. yahoo!'s numbers are similar to what facebook and microsoft released over the weekend. they're broad numbers. this frustrates some of the folks at google. google has been pushing hard for government permission to tell you specifically how many times the nsa has asked...
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they also use the cruise ship acoustic oceanic data collected between one nine hundred ninety and two thousand and eleven to see how many animals ascended and decent did up and down the elevator the depths of the ocean after analyzing all the data scientists found that oxygen consumption globally is about ten to forty percent of the total amount of oxygen at the deepest depths of the ocean they also found that the deepest depths of the ocean can barely repro to replenish the amount of oxygen consumed by the migration the deep sea creatures so when they move up and down they actually move the waters around and move the oxygen around if global warming and climate change continue to worsen they could affect this elevator like migration of the oceans deep sea creatures the levels of oxygen therefore would be damaged and could wreak havoc on the ocean habitat as a whole bottom line here is that the findings of this study are crucial for understanding more about the deep sea habitat and the negative impacts that climate change could have on our ocean if we do nothing to stop it. just. the g
they also use the cruise ship acoustic oceanic data collected between one nine hundred ninety and two thousand and eleven to see how many animals ascended and decent did up and down the elevator the depths of the ocean after analyzing all the data scientists found that oxygen consumption globally is about ten to forty percent of the total amount of oxygen at the deepest depths of the ocean they also found that the deepest depths of the ocean can barely repro to replenish the amount of oxygen...
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Jun 15, 2013
06/13
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KPIX
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data from the u.s. government. facebook received between 9,000 and 10,000 government orders if the last six months of 2012. subjects ranged from missing children to federal fugitives to terrorist threats. microsoft received between six and 7000 similar orders. both companies are releasing this info now with the government's permission. >>> still ahead this morning, their hawaiian getaway looked amazing when they booked it online. >> it was just a dump. it was a dump. >> wait until you see how things went terribly wrong. >>> and in sesame street's latest version of kids, they're going where no puppet has gone before, to jail. >>> we're starting out with temperatures this morning in the 50s. it's going to be a very nice saturday, a great weekend. we got ideas of things for you to do as you head out the door. first check out that forecast, fog and low clouds hover around the coastline. we'll have the forecast for your weekend after we attend to a few bills. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, >>> we have a warning about a telephone scam hitting customers of pg&e.
data from the u.s. government. facebook received between 9,000 and 10,000 government orders if the last six months of 2012. subjects ranged from missing children to federal fugitives to terrorist threats. microsoft received between six and 7000 similar orders. both companies are releasing this info now with the government's permission. >>> still ahead this morning, their hawaiian getaway looked amazing when they booked it online. >> it was just a dump. it was a dump. >>...
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Jun 7, 2013
06/13
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WUSA
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a massive data snooping deal between tech giants like microsoft, google, facebook. a total of nine companies and the u.s. government. according to the washington post and other papers it allows the fbi to dig through those company's central servers for personal data including e-mails, audio files, photos, videos. the program is called prism established in 2007. apple was among the companies named but they have denied ever taking part. turns out, though, that was just the second piece of disturbing news today on privacy and what you might have thought the legal limits were. a top secret court ordered verizon to turn over to the government the phone record of millions of americans. >> it began this morning with published reports out of britain. >> the government has access to millions of u.s. phone records. the nsa is collecting records from verizon customers under a top secret court order. >> the idea is to track down terrorists and whoever they're talking to in the country. the administration would neither confirm nor deny. >> i don't think this is an appropriate se
a massive data snooping deal between tech giants like microsoft, google, facebook. a total of nine companies and the u.s. government. according to the washington post and other papers it allows the fbi to dig through those company's central servers for personal data including e-mails, audio files, photos, videos. the program is called prism established in 2007. apple was among the companies named but they have denied ever taking part. turns out, though, that was just the second piece of...
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Jun 7, 2013
06/13
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published reports reveal a massive data snooping deal between tech giants like microsoft, google, yahoo and facebook. a totally of nine companies and the u.s. government. clapper says he's declassifying parts of the program in order to allow the american people to better understand it. he says the internet mining program called prism does not allow the government to target american citizens. a court order to the newspaper the guardian is reprehensible. >>> president obama kicks off a two-day summit with chinese' president. cybersecurity will be one of the main topics of discussion. the united states believes the chinese military has a unit of attackers that consistently go after american companies. china denies any state sponsored hacking, however. >>> the first lawsuit has been filed related to that building collapse that killed six people in philadelphia. one of the employees in the salvation army store was pulled from the rubble after 13 hours underneath it. the 54-year-old woman's attorneys are suing the building's owner and demolition company. they believe the proper procedures fol
published reports reveal a massive data snooping deal between tech giants like microsoft, google, yahoo and facebook. a totally of nine companies and the u.s. government. clapper says he's declassifying parts of the program in order to allow the american people to better understand it. he says the internet mining program called prism does not allow the government to target american citizens. a court order to the newspaper the guardian is reprehensible. >>> president obama kicks off a...
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Jun 21, 2013
06/13
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if you look at where the fence went up in the areas of imperial beach, we looked at this data, betweeny saw a reduction of apprehension by over 90% over that 12-year period. now, some say that's due to just more technology, more people being on the border and maybe some of these folks that were trying to cross there cross in another place. but doesn't that statistic impress you that more than, there's a 90% jump in apprehensions just where that border fence went up? doesn't that prove it works? >> it proves that what they did -- and i don't deny there have been many serious attempts put in place to try to deter cross-border crossing by illegal aliens. the question is, why do we need to go all the way towards trying to secure the entire border as a provision to getting this bill passed? it's a kind of conceit i think people have in their mind that if they can believe that the entire 2,000-mile border is somehow secure, they'll feel better about it. but that's never going to happen. i think the efforts they've made have been fairly successful in pushing back against -- jenna: i only have
if you look at where the fence went up in the areas of imperial beach, we looked at this data, betweeny saw a reduction of apprehension by over 90% over that 12-year period. now, some say that's due to just more technology, more people being on the border and maybe some of these folks that were trying to cross there cross in another place. but doesn't that statistic impress you that more than, there's a 90% jump in apprehensions just where that border fence went up? doesn't that prove it works?...
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are there any parallels between what you saw in terms of data gathering and what the n.s.a. and other agencies are dealing. with you see private corporations do an enormous amount of data gathering in order to understand their customers better but there is a very big difference and a big difference is that these private corporations don't have the backing of law and the backing of force behind them so even if a bank gets annoyed with me and trolls through my bad data at most some kind of low level employee in therapy i make my life inconvenience for a while and then i could appeal to the law to stop that who i peel to if the one who is hounding me is the government if you're a journalist and you're being hounded by the government who do you appeal to then so that's the real concern here there's a very big difference between corporations collecting our data and government backed with the force of law and threats of violence collecting this data and using it against its own citizens these types of journal warrants are explicitly prohibited in the constitution and i don't care
are there any parallels between what you saw in terms of data gathering and what the n.s.a. and other agencies are dealing. with you see private corporations do an enormous amount of data gathering in order to understand their customers better but there is a very big difference and a big difference is that these private corporations don't have the backing of law and the backing of force behind them so even if a bank gets annoyed with me and trolls through my bad data at most some kind of low...
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are there any parallels between what you saw in terms of data gathering and what the n.s.a. and other agencies are dealing. well you see private corporations do an enormous amount of data gathering in order to understand their customers better but there's a very big difference and the big difference is that these private corporations don't have the backing of law and the backing of force behind them so even if a bank gets annoyed with me and trolls through my bed of data at most some kind of low level employee in there could make my life inconvenience for a while and then i could appeal to the law to stop that who i peel to if the one who is hounding me is the government if you're a journalist and you're being hounded by the government who do you appeal to then so that's the real concern here there's a very big difference between corporations collecting our data and government backed with the force of law and threats of violence collecting this data and using it against its own citizens these types of journal warrants are explicitly prohibited in the constitution and i don't
are there any parallels between what you saw in terms of data gathering and what the n.s.a. and other agencies are dealing. well you see private corporations do an enormous amount of data gathering in order to understand their customers better but there's a very big difference and the big difference is that these private corporations don't have the backing of law and the backing of force behind them so even if a bank gets annoyed with me and trolls through my bed of data at most some kind of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 10, 2013
06/13
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SFGTV
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as sandra's data indicated there's a comparison between tic conversion >> that's the problem we have with the original legislation. that's the elimination basically of the waiting list and the "x" petted process of converting the tics into condominiums. so what we brought to the table despite the fact that the tenant community has long on the the work and the bypass of the condo cap we brought to the table a significant thing that the tics would go through the process without the lottery. we wanted to have the suspension of the lottery process and the kreeks of a more sustainable rate for the conversion of condos. and since that time we've made many, many provisions but where we craw the line is on future conversions. we need to propose additional conversions. and in 10 years time when the suspension is likely to end the existing - the eviction of the properties that are going to come back on the market we don't need another sales pitch to real estate to ease the process. so we need to keep - there's no reap to provide additional incentives to convert tics >> thank you. >> good after
as sandra's data indicated there's a comparison between tic conversion >> that's the problem we have with the original legislation. that's the elimination basically of the waiting list and the "x" petted process of converting the tics into condominiums. so what we brought to the table despite the fact that the tenant community has long on the the work and the bypass of the condo cap we brought to the table a significant thing that the tics would go through the process without...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 24, 2013
06/13
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SFGTV2
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added a category for "produce," and for the month of february, which is where we have the data shows an estimate between 60 and 100 pieces of produce selling a day. >> wow. >> the other is of purely paper format, so we have a different tracking system. >> i imagine this is a new skill for these new owners to deal with perishible products of this nature and are you coaching them through the business aspects of how to deal with that? >> sure, within the team is an individual scott schaefer who specifically knows produce
added a category for "produce," and for the month of february, which is where we have the data shows an estimate between 60 and 100 pieces of produce selling a day. >> wow. >> the other is of purely paper format, so we have a different tracking system. >> i imagine this is a new skill for these new owners to deal with perishible products of this nature and are you coaching them through the business aspects of how to deal with that? >> sure, within the team is...
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Jun 29, 2013
06/13
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CNNW
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data is not usable. it's the difference between data and information. >> specifically when it comes to matthew, your son,umber one concern is who -- who is having access to this information? >> reporter: inbloom is using the cloud to centralize all the data the school system has including financial information about students' families. some parents worry their child's digital footprint is too personal. >> what's at stake when it comes to that kind of data collection? >> everything. my son's chances of getting into good schools. my son's chances of getting maybe into ivy league colleges. >> reporter: teachers say the data can be very helpful. spurring innovation in the classroom. >> it can be really important parent portals about information about their kids and how much time they spent on a pbs video to learn some content area. >> reporter: a recent town hall in new york addressing data collection and tracking got heated. >> when it comes to our children, how dare they? >> reporter: inbloom says it's just trying to help schools be more efficient. >> inbloom provide a service to the districts which actual
data is not usable. it's the difference between data and information. >> specifically when it comes to matthew, your son,umber one concern is who -- who is having access to this information? >> reporter: inbloom is using the cloud to centralize all the data the school system has including financial information about students' families. some parents worry their child's digital footprint is too personal. >> what's at stake when it comes to that kind of data collection? >>...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 20, 2013
06/13
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SFGTV
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california and maybe in the country to have the department of justice information the data project that was worked out between the mayor's office and we're very happy to prevent the officers from having to go back to the stations at all unless to process arrests. and the academy 1.4 million and seismic upgrades the heart worked better in the summer and the air conditioning worked better in the winter so we'll get that swichdz >> well given san francisco climate that make sense. >> and lake merced and security fences in disrepair we've got leaks. and we're working with the controllers office to reduce fuel and maintenance costs. some of our vehicles are still in place and where it not for a vehicle inspection they wouldn't pass for the green laws. that's not okay so we're going to do what we can. one of the problems with going with a hybrid our vehicles have to be collision certified so we're working on that and trying to switch as many cars as they can and get more miles on the tank. and that concludes my report and i i'll up front to kate howard because i know that was more than 10 >> colleagues sorry any ot
california and maybe in the country to have the department of justice information the data project that was worked out between the mayor's office and we're very happy to prevent the officers from having to go back to the stations at all unless to process arrests. and the academy 1.4 million and seismic upgrades the heart worked better in the summer and the air conditioning worked better in the winter so we'll get that swichdz >> well given san francisco climate that make sense. >>...
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Jun 1, 2013
06/13
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lots of people talk about disconnect between aggregate data and what's happening in the market.re's a million beds left. they are shifting to post-acute care. there's almost a million assisted living beds out there. that's the market offering an alternative to a nursing. it overlaps with a nursing home population. mostly private pay. how does that in terms of aggregate data does that show up? how does that show up? it's about a 30-$40 billion industry and 30-$40 million cost on average. but on the medicaid side, the data might be misleading. assisted living is underplayed except in a few states on the medicaid side. there you are going to only see home health care or personal care services as a medicaid category. medicaid doesn't pay for the home for the housing component, the food stuff, or the energy. so the states patch in, the ssi check, supplement, and then double people up in units. which is now a controversial practice with cms and the proposed rules. that's an area where we might see the housing supplementaries cost to the intermediate kind of care level to have a medica
lots of people talk about disconnect between aggregate data and what's happening in the market.re's a million beds left. they are shifting to post-acute care. there's almost a million assisted living beds out there. that's the market offering an alternative to a nursing. it overlaps with a nursing home population. mostly private pay. how does that in terms of aggregate data does that show up? how does that show up? it's about a 30-$40 billion industry and 30-$40 million cost on average. but on...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 2, 2013
06/13
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government more transparent, what kinds of standards are needed to make sure that data is accessible both within the city, between agencies and also to the private sector and the public. and i think that this person, this data officer really will help us do what many of you in the private sector are already doing well, which is using that information to make better decisions. and that's really what our office is all about. it's really why we need this person to help us understand what data is out there and how do we utilize that in conjunction with the other information that we already have. you can send a tweet. so, we're finalizing the job announcement now. if you're interested, or you know someone who is interested, you can send a tweet to sfmoci and we'll be posting the job announcement there. so, thank you very much. it's my pleasure to introduce the general manager of our rec and park department who has done some great partnerships around open data, phil ginsberg. (applause) >> can you all hear me? i'll talk into the mic. i'm the general manager of your recreation and park department and i really couldn't b
government more transparent, what kinds of standards are needed to make sure that data is accessible both within the city, between agencies and also to the private sector and the public. and i think that this person, this data officer really will help us do what many of you in the private sector are already doing well, which is using that information to make better decisions. and that's really what our office is all about. it's really why we need this person to help us understand what data is...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 29, 2013
06/13
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SFGTV
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added a category for "produce," and for the month of february, which is where we have the data shows an estimate between 60 and 100 pieces of produce selling a day. >> wow. >> the other is of purely paper format, so we have a different tracking system. >> i imagine this is a new skill for these new owners to deal with perishible products of this nature and are you coaching them through the business aspects of how to deal with that? >> sure, within the team is an individual scott schaefer who specifically knows produce extremely well and he is the one working with the food guardians teaching them as they go into the stores. so the food guardians start developing the skills as well. it takes a number of years to develop that skill, but he is teaching them and they are there with him in the store as he is teaching the opener. >> so the food guardians are serving as detailers? >> that is right. >> okay. >> great. commissioner white. >> actually, commissioner dwight asked the question i was going to ask in regards to how many stores were being somewhat funded through the pilot program. going forward though i
added a category for "produce," and for the month of february, which is where we have the data shows an estimate between 60 and 100 pieces of produce selling a day. >> wow. >> the other is of purely paper format, so we have a different tracking system. >> i imagine this is a new skill for these new owners to deal with perishible products of this nature and are you coaching them through the business aspects of how to deal with that? >> sure, within the team is...
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Jun 15, 2013
06/13
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CSPAN2
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information which then breaches trust in the way that data is secured under the fight against terrorism and the fight to maintain security. it's that balance between our security and the need to protect data but a vital balance. the report in the guardian and "the new york times" assures that these companies that required by the nsa to share information for antiterrorism purposes under the visa -- fisa court orders are set to do so and facilitate access to their servers to u.s. intelligence agencies possibly offering the u.s. intelligence community the possibility to send directly to company managed secure on line rooms. they are particularly concerned that generalized access to mass processes of e.u. citizens data for law enforcement or other purposes may have taken place after the responsibility of the above-mentioned companies and the framework of this program in a way that is not compliant with e.u. data protection legislation in force. we are also worried by the absence of an overall framework for ensuring the protection of personal data especially considering negotiations with the umbrella data protection agreement to join the e.u. and u.s.
information which then breaches trust in the way that data is secured under the fight against terrorism and the fight to maintain security. it's that balance between our security and the need to protect data but a vital balance. the report in the guardian and "the new york times" assures that these companies that required by the nsa to share information for antiterrorism purposes under the visa -- fisa court orders are set to do so and facilitate access to their servers to u.s....
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Jun 11, 2013
06/13
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FOXNEWSW
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the data is collected, it's not always used. there's a difference between capability and what we're actually doing. i think -- >> that we know of. again, i mean -- >> right. >> you make this case that if you're playing within the rules. >> i'm talking about people in congress that understand it the best describe it that way, they describe it thusly. if there's probable cause, number that connects to a foreign number, you go through more hurdles, fisa court and others. it is not easy pass for just broad surveillance. he should have had a better answer to the question, though, because it sounds like he is lying. >> when are you going to stop beating your wife kind of question is how he described it. >> it is interesting. i actually had two conversations before this clapper video reemerged that talked about collection being sort of a term of art, legal term of art, in the intelligence world, and said in fact the collection doesn't actually take place until the subsequent thing. they weren't defending clapper, we hadn't yet seen this video. i thought it was sor
the data is collected, it's not always used. there's a difference between capability and what we're actually doing. i think -- >> that we know of. again, i mean -- >> right. >> you make this case that if you're playing within the rules. >> i'm talking about people in congress that understand it the best describe it that way, they describe it thusly. if there's probable cause, number that connects to a foreign number, you go through more hurdles, fisa court and others. it...