In the supersecret world of the nation's spy agencies, an unassuming librarian like Kirsten Clark at the University of Minnesota might seem like an unlikely mark.
But recent revelations about National Security Agency (NSA) surveillance of phone and Internet traffic have raised concerns among librarians and put them in the front ranks of efforts to curb government bulk data collection operations.
In an alliance that stretches all the political clichés about "strange bedfellows," librarians and civil libertarians are on the same side as gun activists and Internet giants Facebook and Google in backing bipartisan legislation in Congress that would roll back the federal government's authority to snoop on Americans. In the past year, their agenda has taken on a global dimension with the revelations of fugitive NSA leaker Edward Snowden.
"When someone posts information to social media, they make the choice in the level of privacy they want to give to others," said Clark, the Intellectual Committee Chair of the Minnesota Library Association.
"With mass collection of private data, whether library records or cellphone activity, the decision on privacy has been taken away from the individual. The potential harm comes from not knowing what has been collected or how it will be used," she said.
A federal judge in New York ruled Friday that the massive collection of telephone and Internet data is legal and doesn't violate the Constitution. The decision was in conflict with another court ruling, in which another federal judge in Washington ruled that some of the NSA's tactics are likely unconstitutional. That judge, Richard Leon, called some of the government's snooping operations "almost Orwellian." He also challenged government assertions that the NSA's tactics had helped thwart terrorist attacks.
The conflicting rulings raised the prospect of the issue heading to the Supreme Court.
A White House advisory panel gave fresh impetus to reform efforts earlier this month when it recommended sweeping changes to NSA collection of "metadata" on Internet activity and bulk data on Americans' phone records.