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<font color="#FFFFFF">"intentional
or bad-faith violations" were found. The document said only that the missteps
resulted in the "automated tools operating in a manner that was not
completely consistent with the specific terms of the court's order." Additional
safeguards were subsequently ordered by the surveillance court.Intelligence
officials stressed at a Senate committee hearing on Wednesday that the program
still does not let them look at content unless there is a
reasonable suspicion that the material might be related to terror groups.Some
lawmakers have come down hard on the NSA over these programs, pushing
to force the agency to release more information and potentially rein in
the program itself.One of the documents, though, adamantly defended the
rationale for collecting massive quantities of "metadata" on phone calls
-- like the date, time and duration of calls."The more metadata NSA
has access to, the more likely it is that NSA can identify
or discover the network of contacts linked to targeted numbers or addresses,"
the document says.Declassified order on phone data collection
</font>