Lawmakers from both parties are pressing to tighten surveillance rules as artificial-intelligence tools make it easier for the government to analyze vast troves of communications and commercially sourced data. The debate centers on Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which authorizes warrantless collection of foreigners’ communications and incidentally captures Americans’ messages. With the authority nearing expiration, House Speaker Mike Johnson proposed a three-year extension that adds some safeguards but no blanket warrant requirement for U.S.-person searches—drawing opposition from privacy advocates and a bipartisan group seeking stricter limits.
Backers in the intelligence community say Section 702 is heavily overseen and vital to national security; the CIA cited disrupted plots as evidence of its value. Critics counter that AI could supercharge queries of both 702 databases and information purchased from data brokers—such as location and browsing records—heightening risks to civil liberties. Sen. Ron Wyden and other reformers want new rules to curb warrantless searches and restrict government purchases of Americans’ data. Tech firms are also under scrutiny: Google and Anthropic acknowledged concerns, with Anthropic allowing limited use of its models for foreign-intelligence analysis that may include incidentally collected U.S.-person data. A short-term extension has set the stage for a high-stakes fight over privacy and security in the AI era.
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