It looks like the NSA was a little cosier with Silicon Valley companies than we previously realised. Newly declassified documents show that the spy agency (read: taxpayers) paid Google, Facebook, Yahoo and others millions of dollars to cover the costs associated with PRISM.
In a way, the high cost of compliance is the NSA’s own fault. Back in 2011, a secret FISA court ruled that the NSA’s inability to separate foreign from domestic intelligence violated the Fourth Amendment. According to documents obtained by The Guardian, this led to a new certification process for the technology companies that were helping out. According to the law, the onus fell on the US government to cover the associated costs. The millions of taxpayer dollars’ worth of costs.
What’s especially interesting about this latest revelation is that it provides proof that Facebook, Google and friends maintained a closer relationship with the NSA than they’ve admitted. After the initial series of stories connected to Edward Snowden’s leak hit the press, all of these companies distanced themselves from PRISM, and many claimed not to have a direct relationship with the spy agency. But we knew then that they were lying, and some suspected that money was changing hands.
The Guardian reached out to Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Yahoo, all of whom either denied the financial relationship or declined to comment. At this point, however, nobody’s really counting on anybody to tell the truth. Fortunately, declassified documents will probably just doing it for them. [The Guardian]