Sen. Patrick Leahy on Wednesday called for the U.S. Congress and President Bush to convene a conference on privacy, in the wake of recent reports that federal agencies spied on U.S. citizens and monitored protesters of the Iraqi war.Without a new direction from the government, the United States is in danger of turning into a “micro-monitoring” state, where the everyday actions of normal citizens are routinely tracked, Leahy said at the Association for Computing Machinery’s Life, Liberty and Digital Rights conference in Washington, D.C.“If this continues, it won’t be long before we think of privacy as a quaint 20th-century idea,” said Leahy, a Vermont Democrat. “Our government has no business spying on law-abiding citizens.”Leahy called on Congress and the Bush administration to convene a high-level summit, with U.S. citizens included, where participants could debate the balance between security and privacy. “Let the American people be part of this dialog,” he said. Leahy targeted the Bush administration, saying officials continue to refuse to release information about the domestic wiretapping program run by the National Security Agency. Leahy also questioned why the FBI and Department of Homeland Security have been monitoring war protesters such as members of the Quaker religion in recent years.“If you want to find somebody protesting the war in Iraq, you don’t have to send out a surveillance crew,” he said. “Turn on C-SPAN; I do it on the Senate floor all the time.” Some of the surveillance is aided by new technologies, but policies are the culprit for privacy concerns, Leahy said. It’s Congress’ job to check the actions of law-enforcement agencies, and Congress needs to do a better job, he added.“The technologies available today offer tools that are better, faster, smarter with scales of magnitude that are unprecedented,” he said. “It changes the way we understand privacy. It’s easier to delve more deeply into our private lives.”-Grant Gross, IDG News ServiceCheck out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content feature 7 ways to spot hidden IT talent within your ranks Your organization has hidden IT superstars in the making — both within and outside IT. Here’s how to find and elevate them for maximum impact. By John Edwards Jun 07, 2023 8 mins Staff Management feature The NBA’s digital transformation is a game-changer The National Basketball Association’s move to Azure cloud is helping improve fan experience and in-game performance due to analytics- and AI-assisted tools aimed at unlocking data’s full potential. By Paula Rooney Jun 07, 2023 9 mins Microsoft Azure Media and Entertainment Industry Digital Transformation case study How Palladium targets tech to better serve the business Palladium Hotel Group has prioritized strategies surrounding its digital transformation, with a focus on two primary objectives: to improve the business and better customize the customer experience. By Nuria Cordon Jun 07, 2023 4 mins CIO Travel and Hospitality Industry Digital Transformation Saudi Vision 2030: Why the Kingdom is becoming a hub in EdTech education By Andrea Benito Jun 07, 2023 5 mins Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe