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In June 2016, Apple announced the acquisition of Data Siphon,

In June 2016, Apple announced the acquisition of Data Siphon, which collects and stores user data on up to 400 million individuals. The news of Data Siphon's acquisition prompted a wave of concern from privacy advocates and other privacy experts, according to The Wall Street Journal.

"It's a big deal," said James Rosenblum, director of the Center for Democracy and Technology at the University of Connecticut. "This is a major deal. This is more important than ever. It's a big risk."

In the first week of the year, the US government started collecting phone records of millions of Americans. In January, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) began collecting phone records of 7.3 million Americans. The US government has been collecting phone records of over 300 million Americans for decades. The OPM also does its own surveillance on millions of Americans, including those of the US Supreme Court.

"It's absolutely outrageous that the US government has the power to collect Americans' telephone and other data for the purposes of surveillance," said Chris Voss, a lawyer and former assistant attorney general of the US attorney general, which oversees the Office of the General Counsel. "It is absurd, and I'm sure this administration will have to take action."

"What is going on here is a deliberate, coordinated effort to keep Americans from accessing sensitive information about them," wrote Michael Lederman, director of the Center for Democracy and Technology at Fordham University. "Why should we trust the government in the first place?"

The government is attempting to keep us from having a choice between the information that we want and those that are not.

"These are big security risks for everyone involved," said Bill Schuster, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley. "What we want is to build the infrastructure and tools to handle the massive amount of data that's being collected by the federal government — it's a big problem."

In May, the US government sent FBI Special Agent in Charge of the Counterterrorism Division (CTC) Adam Lanza, who was charged with murder with the intent to kill, to federal court. The FBI, which has already investigated the case, is still trying its hand at keeping the details of the case private. But the focus of the investigation should largely have been on the FBI's efforts to keep the information private. It appears that the DOJ has been able to pull back on the efforts to keep it secret.

In a statement to FoxNews.com, the FBI noted that

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