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Yahoo to Feds: You Explain That Email-Scanning Order

Yahoo's General Counsel sent a letter to the Director of National Intelligence urging him to clarify the matter.

 & Angela Moscaritolo Managing Editor, Consumer Electronics

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People have been rightly asking Yahoo a heap of questions ever since news broke earlier this month that it scanned customers' incoming emails for the feds. Now, Yahoo wants the government to speak up about the issue.

Yahoo General Counsel Ron Bell on Wednesday sent a letter [PDF] to the Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper urging his office to clarify the matter. Bell specifically wants Clapper and his office to confirm whether the order was issued, and, if so, to declassify it and "make a sufficiently detailed public and contextual comment to clarify the alleged facts and circumstances."

The note follows an Oct. 4 Reuters report claiming that Yahoo, at the request of US intelligence officials, built a custom software program last year to search its customers' incoming emails for specific information. According to the report, the program was designed to "siphon off messages containing the character string the spies sought and store them for remote retrieval."

Yahoo initially didn't confirm or deny the claims, but later pushed back on the Reuters report, calling it "misleading."

In his letter to the government this week, Yahoo's Bell suggested that the public doesn't know the whole story of what went down.

"Yahoo was mentioned specifically in these reports and we find ourselves unable to respond in detail," he wrote. "US laws significantly constrain — and severely punish — companies' ability to speak for themselves about national security related orders even in ways that do not compromise U.S. government investigations."

"We trust that the US government recognizes the importance of clarifying the record in this case," Bell added.

A spokesman in Clapper's office told PCMag that they have received the letter and "will respond to Yahoo directly."

The issue reportedly led to the resignation of Yahoo's former Chief Information Security Officer Alex Stamos, who now works at Facebook. Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer and Bell reportedly left Stamos and the security team in the dark about decision, instead asking the company's email engineers to write and deploy the program.

The issue over how much tech companies can reveal when it comes to government requests has been in the news since the Snowden revelations. After much back and forth, the Department of Justice in 2014 announced that tech firms can publish information about the national security-related requests for data they receive separate from other law enforcement data reports, but restrictions remain.

About Our Expert

Angela Moscaritolo

Angela Moscaritolo

Managing Editor, Consumer Electronics

My Experience

I'm PCMag's managing editor for consumer electronics, overseeing an experienced team of analysts covering smart home, home entertainment, wearables, fitness and health tech, and various other product categories. I have been with PCMag for more than 10 years, and in that time have written more than 6,000 articles and reviews for the site. I previously served as an analyst focused on smart home and wearable devices, and before that I was a reporter covering consumer tech news. I'm also a yoga instructor, and have been actively teaching group and private classes for nearly a decade. 

Prior to joining PCMag, I was a reporter for SC Magazine, focusing on hackers and computer security. I earned a BS in journalism from West Virginia University, and started my career writing for newspapers in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.

The Technology I Use

My little Florida beach bungalow is brimming with smart home tech. I have a smart speaker or display in every room, allowing me to control other connected devices by voice. The Nest Hub on my bedside table lets me set wake-up alarms, control my smart light bulbs, and set the temperature on my smart thermostat. I use the Amazon Echo Show 8 on my kitchen counter to browse recipes, reorder protein powder, check the weather, and watch the news while I do dishes. 

Because I suffer from allergies, air purifiers are essential. My favorite model is the Dyson Purifier Cool TP07, which doubles as a fan and continuously sends indoor pollution data to its companion mobile app. 

My pitbull Bradley sheds, so a good robot vacuum is a must. I currently use a premium Ecovacs Deebot that can both vacuum and mop, empty its own dustbin, and wash its own mop cloth. 

For fitness, I like to mix up my routine with cycling, indoor rowing, running, and strength training in addition to yoga. I take classes on the Tonal 2 smart strength training machine, I row indoors on an Aviron machine, and track my beach runs with an Apple Watch while listening to music on my Apple AirPods Pro. On the weekends, I love riding e-bikes like the rugged, beach-friendly Aventon Aventure for fun and fitness.

My job involves a lot of virtual meetings, so a quality webcam, microphone, and ring light are important. I use the Jabra PanaCast 20 webcam, the Elgato Wave: 3 microphone, and a Yesker tripod ring light. 

As for my preferred phone platform, I'm an iPhone person, but I've also extensively used Android for product testing.

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