The Obama Administration was braced for a torrent of hostile questions yesterday following the apparent revelation that the National Security Agency has been data-mining the phone records of tens of millions of ordinary Americans.
Not to be confused with eavesdropping, or bugging the phones of those suspected of conspiring to commit a terrorist or criminal offence, a top-secret court order published by the Guardian appears to show that the NSA has been trawling the anonymous "metadata" of potentially billions of phone calls.
Americans might take comfort that the "internals" of their phone conversations - ie the voices themselves - are not being routinely recorded, but it seems from this leak that potentially everyone with a phone is under some surveillance in the US.
Studies have shown that while anonymous, the "metadata" - records of location data, call duration, unique identifiers - can provide a surprising amount of information very quickly when zeroed in on by investigators.