Cloud Companies Unite on NSA Transparency in Letter to Congress
    Big U.S. tech companies are setting  their rivalries aside to unite against a common problem -- the ongoing damage  revelations about the U.S. National Security Agency are doing to their reputation  for keeping customers' cloud data private and secure.
On Thursday, AOL, Apple,  Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Yahoo co-signed a letter to the sponsors of  the USA Freedom Act calling for greater government transparency about legal  demands for the companies' customer and user information and greater  accountability for government surveillance. 
Dozens of lawmakers sponsored  the USA Freedom Act, which was written by Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-VT, chairman of  the Senate Judiciary Committee and original Patriot Act author Rep. James  Sensenbrenner, R-WI. The bill, with 16 Senate co-sponsors and more than 70 House  of Representatives co-sponsors, was introduced on Tuesday.
The legislation is aimed at  limiting the phone record collection program and other government surveillance  programs unveiled by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden over the last five  months.
The tech companies, which  were all signatories of an open letter to the Obama administration in July, as  well, wrote to "applaud the sponsors of the USA Freedom Act for making an  important contribution."
They urged the sponsors to  ensure the legislation include several key provisions.
"Allowing companies to  be transparent about the number and nature of requests will help the public  better understand the facts about the governments' authority to compel  technology companies to disclose user data and how technology companies respond  to the targeted legal demands we receive," the letter stated.
While the letter called  transparency a critical first step, it went on: "Our companies believe  that government surveillance practices should also be reformed to include  substantial enhancements to privacy protections and appropriate oversight and  accountability mechanisms for those programs."
The Leahy-Sensenbrenner bill  is expected to encounter heavy resistance from the White House and from members  of the House and Senate Intelligence committees.
A copy of the letter posted  by IDG News Service is available on Scribd.
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	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 04, 2013