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EU justice chief seeks answers on U.S. data spying

EU officials have sent a letter to Chief Justice U.S. Attorney General, demanding an explanation, through its prism spy program for foreign data collection.
Reuters reported that the EU Commission's justice and fundamental rights, Vivian saw a letter saying that she had serious concerns about the possibility that the U.S. authorities have access to the large-scale data of European citizens.
Reading stronger privacy rules in Europe in her task has been difficult to push. In 2012, she tried to take steps to set up obstacles to foreign judicial authorities to access data on European citizens.
But EU officials said the dilution of her peers, the European Commission, the EU's executive Commission's recommendations, for fear such a law would tense relations with the U.S., the EU and Washington to prepare a free trade agreement negotiations.
"I will ask you to provide me with a prism plan, other U.S. program, which involves data collection and search, the program may authorize legal interpretation and clarification," Redding wrote to Attorney General Eric Holder.
U.S. officials have confirmed that the data drawn from the Internet presence of a secret plan, code named prism, which according to documents leaked to the Washington Post and the UK Guardian "newspaper has given them companies such as Google, Facebook on and Skype for data access.
Reading had tried to make it harder to think that the U.S. authorities access to data from the European telecommunications and technology companies, through the introduction of more stringent requirements, such as judicial authorities.
"Internal people do not want to create any possible tension with the U.S., EU officials said, Reading recommendations opposition within the European Commission in 2012.
Hold and Reading will be held in Dublin on Friday at the scheduled ministerial meeting.
Detailed questions
Reading In her letter, requiring the holder to explain whether the citizens of the EU countries targeted prism, how to access the data in a wide range of U.S. and the EU would have been businesses and citizens can appeal to monitor their private correspondence.
EU officials have for several years, asked the United States to interpret the law, such as the "Patriot Act" and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Amendments of "how they affect EU citizens and businesses. European Parliament, in particular, has become a vocal restrict data sharing and protection of privacy.
Since 2011, the European Commission has been trying to negotiate transatlantic data protection agreement to limit U.S. access to the European data.
Negotiations have stalled EU citizens the right to have any part of the United States on this issue, the Commission official told Reuters earlier this week.
EU officials are also discussing whether to include data protection in the European Union and the United States free trade agreement negotiations, is expected to begin formal talks next month.
European companies have warned that there is no legal certainty, such as cloud computing, data protection technology dependence will not be able to grow in Europe.
Companies considering using cloud technology is still cited security as their biggest concern and European officials say they are aware, the European cloud computing market depends privacy.
"The data is stored in the foreign service and the associated legal uncertainty constitutes a real obstacle," a Commission official said.
Lobby groups in Brussels say they need to know what legal setting - the EU or the United States legislation - they should be followed.
 



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