President Obama finally weighed in on where the line should be drawn between surveillance and privacy in a speech today. The New York Times reports: the president "will require intelligence agencies to obtain permission from a secret court before tapping into a vast storehouse of telephone data, and will ultimately move that data out of the hands of the government."
The president also said surveillance of foreign leaders will be curtailed.
The president also suggested the creation of a "panel of advocates on privacy and technology issues who would appear before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance court." The Times reports that the advocates would only appear in novel cases, but it's unclear who would decide which cases are novel.