USA Today: Google challenges U.S. gag order in NSA flap

USA Today: Google challenges U.S. gag order in NSA flap by Byron Acohido and Jon Swartz:

Taking yet another step in its struggle to distance itself from the National Security Administration’s controversial PRISM data-mining program, Google this afternoon asked the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to relax gag orders over data requests it makes.

Claudia Rast, a privacy attorney at Butzel Long, says the move may gain the search giant public relations benefits. But the court is not likely to amend the standing gag order, she says.

The legal filing cites the First Amendment’s guarantee of free speech. Among the nine tech companies shown by whistle-blower Edward Snowden to have been handing over consumer data to the government, Google has been the most aggressive in attempts to cast itself as cooperating the least.

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