By Steve Holland and Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON, Dec 17 (Reuters) - Technology company executives pressed President Barack Obama on Tuesday to rein in the U.S. government's electronic spying after a court dealt a blow to the administration's surveillance practices.
Top executives from Apple Inc, Google Inc, Yahoo Inc, Netflix Inc, Comcast Corp , AT&T Inc, Microsoft Corp, Twitter Inc , Facebook Inc and other companies met privately for more than two hours with Obama and top White House aides.
The session came as Obama and his national security team decide what recommendations to adopt from an outside panel's review on constraining the activities of the National Security Agency without compromising U.S. national security.
The White House had trumpeted the meeting as a chance to talk up progress made in repairing the government's healthcare website after its botched rollout generated a political firestorm and sent Obama's job approval rating tumbling.
But in a brief statement released after the session, the tech companies focused solely on government surveillance, not healthcare.
"We appreciated the opportunity to share directly with the president our principles on government surveillance that we released last week and we urge him to move aggressively on reform," the technology companies said in their statement.
The NSA's practices essentially made the companies partners in sweeping government surveillance efforts against private citizens.
Separately, Obama's nominee to be chief legal counsel to the Central Intelligence Agency said on Tuesday she disagreed with a judge's ruling that the NSA surveillance programs are likely unlawful, citing a 1979 case often used as precedent in privacy cases.
"I have a different view about the Fourth Amendment," nominee Caroline Krass said at a Senate hearing. "I think that under Smith v. Maryland, which I still consider to be good law, there is not a reasonable expectation of privacy in telephony metadata."
A federal judge ruled on Monday that the U.S. government's gathering of Americans' phone records is likely unlawful.
PROTECT PRIVACY
Eight tech companies launched a campaign a week ago asking for governments to reform surveillance practices to protect privacy, writing an open letter to Obama and Congress on the issue.
They said revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden had highlighted an urgent need to reform government surveillance practices worldwide.
A representative from one of the companies, who asked not to be identified, said the White House had wanted to meet to discuss the HealthCare.gov website. The invitations were sent before the White House received the tech companies' letter.