A court permitted the NSA to collect information about governments in 193 countries and foreign institutions like the World Bank, according to a secret document
the Washington Post published Monday. The certification issued by a
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court in 2010 shows the NSA has the
authority to "intercept through U.S. companies not just the communications of its overseas targets,
but any communications about its targets as well," according to the
Post's report. Only four countries in the world — Britain, Canada,
Australia and New Zealand — were exempt from the agreement, due to
existing no-spying agreements that the Post highlights in this document
about the group of countries, known as "Five Eyes" with the U.S.
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