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Obama meets new five-member panel reviewing surveillance programs

U.S. President Barack Obama met last Tuesday of a five-member team, he was appointed to review the privacy issues involved in the monitoring plan with the U.S. government, the White House said the leak rebuild public trust in the efforts by former spy agency as part of contractor .
Obama faced criticism because Edward Snowden, contractor for the U.S. National Security Agency, the United States monitor telephone and e-mail to reporters reveal classified information, improve privacy and civil liberties concerns.
The Panel is expanded oversight program, Obama has defended necessary to protect national security efforts.
Its members are former counterterrorism adviser Richard Clarke, the Clinton and Bush White House former CIA deputy director Michael Morell, Peter Swire, who worked in the Clinton administration Obama and technical problems; Jeffrey Stone, professor of constitutional law at the University of Chicago, Obama's job before entering politics and Cass Sunstein, Obama's former regulatory czar who is married Samantha power, the U.S. ambassador to the UN.
The team will submit interim findings within 60 days to the Director of National Intelligence, the White House said. They are expected by the end of Barack Obama to give a final report and recommendations.
Earlier this month, Obama also said he would work with Congress to reform dominated collect phone records, and review the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of law.
He also said he hoped to provide more information to the public monitoring program to restore trust.



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