[IP] Law Fights to Keep Pace With Tech
Begin forwarded message:
From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: September 9, 2004 9:36:44 AM EDT
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <dewayne-net@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] Law Fights to Keep Pace With Tech
Reply-To: dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Law Fights to Keep Pace With Tech
By Michael Grebb
Story location:
<http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,64887,00.html>
02:00 AM Sep. 09, 2004 PT
WASHINGTON -- Government and industry officials butted heads Wednesday
over whether a 10-year-old law governing electronic surveillance is
working -- and whether industries are meeting their obligations to help
authorities catch criminals and terrorists in the internet age.
Lawmakers are considering whether to update the Communications
Assistance for Law Enforcement Act of 1994, or CALEA, to address the
recent explosion of technologies such as packet-switched data.
In testimony before the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and
the Internet, representatives from the Justice Department and the FBI
said many companies still fail to comply with CALEA.
"We are trying to work with the companies, and some companies are more
difficult to work with than others," said Laura Parsky, deputy
assistant attorney general in the Justice Department. "We are 10 years
out on CALEA, and the technology has moved."
CALEA requires telecommunications carriers to design systems to meet
wiretapping standards set by the government, but the law has long
exempted "information services," which now include certain
voice-over-internet protocol, or VOIP, services.
In August, however, acting upon an earlier request by Justice
Department agencies, the Federal Communications Commission proposed
applying CALEA to VOIP services.
The FCC has already classified cable-modem service as a
"telecommunications service," bringing it under CALEA's umbrella.
Richard Green, president and CEO of Cable Television Laboratories (the
cable industry's research arm), noted that the FBI this week endorsed
its PacketCable Electronic Surveillance Specification (.pdf), which
addresses the FBI's earlier concerns over CALEA compliance for VOIP
services provided directly by cable operators.
That standard, however, has no effect on independently offered VOIP
services such as those offered by companies like Skype Technologies and
pulver.com.
Green told lawmakers that he believes all cable operators are now in
compliance, but Parsky said some have failed to comply with
court-ordered wiretaps because of technical limitations.
Several lawmakers asked Parsky to name names, but she said any public
airing of violators would tip off criminals to weaknesses.
"It's something that's extremely sensitive for law enforcement," she
said, noting that any such disclosure to Congress would have to be
classified.
Parsky also argued that "information services" were never intended to
include the transmission of data over the internet and said many
companies are confused about that issue.
In fact, ambiguity over CALEA's application to the internet continues
to spur considerable debate.
"Congress was very clear that it wasn't intended for the internet,"
said James Dempsey, executive director of the Center for Democracy and
Technology.
In fact, the FBI has won new CALEA powers in recent years through
lobbying at the FCC, despite limiting its requests for powers when
Congress was drafting the law, charged Stewart Baker, an outside
counsel for the Telecommunications Industry Association.
He said the FBI has little understanding of how regulations burden the
affected industries.
"If they make a decision that's too regulatory, it doesn't cost them
anything," he said. "They just want more."
But others told lawmakers that it's unclear whether Congress truly
foresaw the convergence of packet-switched and circuit-switched
networks when it drafted CALEA.
"It was not envisioned at the time that the internet was going to be
used as a means to make phone calls," said Julius Knapp, deputy chief
of the FCC's Office of Engineering and Technology.
Several lawmakers echoed that sentiment at the hearing.
"We thought everything was going to be about voice," said Rep. Steve
Buyer (R-Indiana). "We got it wrong. It's about data. That's the
power."
At the same time, Rep. Chris Cox (R-California) warned that
overregulation under CALEA could stifle innovation and enable foreign
firms not subject to U.S. law to get the upper hand on American
companies.
"As information services and telecommunications services morph into
each other, we're going to have some tough calls to make," he said. "I
think we have to be very cautious about everything in this area."
Said Marcus Thomas, deputy assistant director of the FBI's
investigative technologies division: "(CALEA) didn't have as much
agility as we need in the internet environment. It's going to have to
be tweaked."
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