[IP] Internet phone wiretapping ("Psst! The FBI is Having Trouble on the Line", Aug. 15)
Begin forwarded message:
From: Seth David Schoen <schoen@xxxxxxx>
Date: September 5, 2005 6:10:02 PM EDT
To: David Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Donna Wentworth <donna@xxxxxxx>, eff-priv@xxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [E-PRV] Internet phone wiretapping ("Psst! The FBI is
Having Trouble on the Line", Aug. 15)
David Farber writes:
Can I get a copy for IP
The original article is at
http://www.time.com/time/archive/preview/0,10987,1090908,00.html
(subscription required)
Here's the letter we sent:
Your account of FBI efforts to embed wiretapping into the design of
new Internet communication technologies ("Psst! The FBI is Having
Trouble on the Line," Notebook, August 15) is in error.
You claim that police "can't tap into [Internet] conversations or
identify the location of callers, even with court orders."
That is false. Internet service providers and VoIP companies have
consistently responded to such orders and turned over information
in their possession. There is no evidence that law enforcement is
having any trouble obtaining compliance.
But more disturbingly, you omit entirely any reference to the
grave threat these FBI initiatives pose to the personal privacy
and security of innocent Americans. The technologies currently
used to create wiretap-friendly computer networks make the people
on those networks more pregnable to attackers who want to steal
their data or personal information. And at a time when many of our
most fundamental consititutional rights are being stripped away in
the name of fighting terrorism, you implicitly endorse opening yet
another channel for potential government abuse.
The legislative history of the Communications Assistance for Law
Enforcement Act (CALEA) shows that Congress recognized the danger
of giving law enforcement this kind of surveillance power "in the
face of increasingly powerful and personally revealing
technologies"
(H.R. Rep. No. 103-827, 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3489, 3493 [1994] [House
Report]). The law explicitly exempts so-called information
services;
law enforcement repeatedly assured civil libertarians that the
Internet would be excluded. Yet the FBI and FCC have now betrayed
that promise and stepped beyond the law, demanding that Internet
software be redesigned to facilitate eavesdropping. In the coming
months, we expect the federal courts to rein in these dangerously
expansive legal intepretations.
--
Seth Schoen
Staff Technologist schoen@xxxxxxx
Electronic Frontier Foundation http://www.eff.org/
454 Shotwell Street, San Francisco, CA 94110 1 415 436 9333 x107
-------------------------------------
You are subscribed as roessler@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To manage your subscription, go to
http://v2.listbox.com/member/?listname=ip
Archives at: http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/