Surveillance laws are being rewritten post-Snowden, but what will really change?
For anyone still in doubt about the impact of Edward Snowden's revelations, it might be instructive to review what has been going on in the US Congress over the last few months, with legislators grappling with bills aimed at curbing the surveillance capabilities of the NSA and other federal agencies. In the end, in a classic congressional farce, there was a brief intermission in the NSA's data-gathering capabilities, after which the Senate passed a bill to end the agency's bulk collection of the phone records of millions of Americans.
At one level it's a significant moment: one in which - as a Guardian leader writer put it - "an outlaw rewrites the law". And in a few other countries, notably Germany, Snowden's revelations do seem to be having a demonstrable impact - as witnessed, for example, by the Bundestag's inquiry into NSA surveillance within the Federal Republic.
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