In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jason H olt writes: > >[...] > >I had the same question about the NSA when some friends were interviewing >there. Apparently investigators will just show up at your house and want to >know all sorts of things about your friends, who you may or may not know to be >in the process of looking for work there. > >As I understand it, the investigators don't even carry NSA badges; they're DSS >or private investigators.
In all seriousness, background investigations have been outsourced... I had a similar experience a few years ago. I was supposed to visit the --- agency. Someone I had *not* been dealing with called to ask for my social security number and birthdate. I declined, on the grounds that I had no idea who he was. "But if I'm not legitimate, how do I know you're going to visit tomorrow?" My reply was "you're from --- and you don't think people can learn things they're not supposed to know?" He was livid -- "if you don't tell me, you can't visit". I told him that that was fine with me, and he should get my usual contact to call me. "But he's unavailable today!". I indicated that I was still unconcerned -- and 10 minutes later, this unavailable person called me... On the other hand, when my broker called last week and asked for some confidential info, he was very understanding and co-operative when I declined to give out that information over the phone when he had called me. So it's not completely hopeless. --Steve Bellovin, http://www.research.att.com/~smb --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Cryptography Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]