This from "Bill of Rights."  Pass it on.

As you read this, you will note that they collect electronic transmissions
that contain "key" words they are looking for.  This means that they have
to "flag" the communication for subsequent review by a human being.

If you are an activist (and many of you are) then you can spend a few
moments/minutes of each communication and deliberately use words such as
Uni-Bomber, fertilizer, Oklahoma City World Trade Center, IRS, FBI ...  you
get the message.  This action will force them to use more resources to
store and review your communication.  Another technique used to drive them
crazy, is to use these words in a voice communication to attract their
attention and then switch to a phony nonexistent language and talk
gibberish for a while.  They will try to determine what the language is and
then get a translator for it.  Of course, you guys from the south already
do this naturally<g>.

BOR OVERETO, Italy--It felt like there was a new Cold War developing at a
conference here last week on computers, networks and international
security, only this time the adversaries are the United States and Europe
and the field of conflict is cyberspace.  The revelation last year about
the collaborative electronic eavesdropping system developed by the
U.S.  National Security Agency and British intelligence agencies, a system
known as Echelon, has become a huge topic of discussion in Europe.  The
Echelon system can and does intercept "all e-mail, telephone and fax
communications" in Europe, according to a report delivered last year to the
European Parliament, and further investigations revealed that this
capability also covers Australia, New Zealand and other countries.  The
report's author, Steve Wright, director of Omega Foundation, a British
human rights group, was here last week and summarized his investigation
into Echelon.  "The Echelon system forms part of the U.K.-U.S.A.  system
but unlike many of the electronic spy systems developed during the Cold
War, Echelon is designed for primarily nonmilitary targets: governments,
organizations and businesses in virtually every country," states Wright's
report, "An Appraisal of Technologies of Political Control," (available on
the Web at http://cryptome.org/stoa-atpc.htm).  The report was prepared for
the European Parliament's Scientific and Technological Options Assessment
(STOA) group.  Its release in early 1998 shocked European government leaders.

* * *
The chief piece of news that angered European politicians and business
executives was the allegation that Echelon data intercepts are used for
economic intelligence, and that the U.S.  and British governments pass on
this information to private companies for competitive advantage in trade
talks, financial deals or contract negotiations, Simon Davies, head of
Privacy International in London and another participant in the conference,
wrote in an Aug.  4 commentary piece in The Times.  This is a particularly
sensitive and explosive allegation, as Britain is a member of the European
Union and therefore must abide by EU laws and treaties, one of which, the
Maastricht Treaty, is specifically aimed at leveling the playing field in
EU commerce.  Also worrisome is that the "special relationship" between the
U.S. and British governments could allow each country's intelligence agency
to rely on the other to circumvent national privacy laws, according to Marc
Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center
in Washington.  When the National Security Agency is prohibited from
certain kinds of domestic surveillance, it may get the information from its
British counterparts, and vice versa. The STOA report produced a firestorm
of controversy in Europe, but got very little attention in the United
States, something Wright attributes to the fact that throughout 1998 the
U.S.  news media was saturated with the scandal in the White House.  The
European Parliament took the unprecedented step of holding hearings on
Echelon in September of last year, just about the time our impeachment
hearings were getting underway.

* * *
A common response among many people confronted with the news about Echelon
is incredulity--how on earth could any organization intercept all the
telephone calls, e-mail and faxes of several hundred million people?  How
could that volume of information be processed or analyzed?

***
Immense banks of intelligence agency supercomputers search for keywords
that are part of electronic "dictionaries," according to reports on
Echelon.  These dictionaries include words or phrases that are of interest
to intelligence analysts, and are used to filter the Niagara-like flow of
data into the system.  Of particular concern to civil liberties and privacy
activists is that these digital dictionaries reportedly contain the names
of organizations such as Amnesty International and Greenpeace.  A great
deal about Echelon and electronic surveillance in Europe is unknown,
because the NSA is one of the most secretive organizations in the world--it
was once known as "No Such Agency." The British government, with its
Official State Secrets Act, has even more powers of secrecy than the
U.S.  government.  Consequently, the European Parliament and individual
European governments are demanding that U.S.  and British intelligence
agencies hand over information about Echelon and implement mechanisms of
accountability.  In the U.S., an investigation into Echelon has been
initiated by an unexpected critic: Rep.  Bob Barr (R-Ga.), one of the
congressional leaders of the impeachment movement against President
Clinton.  Barr is apparently such a foe of the federal government that he
is taking on the federal intelligence agencies, organizations not
accustomed to being challenged by Republicans.  A member of the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Barr arranged for the panel to
demand information on Echelon from the NSA, which, for the first time in
its history, refused to turn over information and documents, citing
attorney-client privilege.  Barr is expected to initiate hearings on
Echelon sometime in the near future.  Ironically enough, Barr's extreme
conservative views and his well-known style of fiery rhetoric have
alienated longtime advocates of civil liberties who might otherwise be
supporters of this investigation.

* * *
The prospect that all e-mail, faxes and telephone calls in Europe may be
under surveillance has led to a significant increase in the market here for
digital encryption products.  But the U.S.  government still seems intent
on limiting the export of the strongest encryption techniques
available.  Both the House Intelligence Committee and the House Armed
Services Committee recently reversed a trend toward relaxing encryption
export controls and revised such legislation already passed in other House
committees.  Thus from a European point of view, the U.S.  government
appears to be committed to spying on European citizens, companies and
organizations, but is also bent on preventing Europeans from buying strong
protections against such spying.  Organizations such as the NSA and
Britain's MI5 were set up to provide intelligence on military adversaries,
but there are relatively few of those left.  The new domain of cyberspace
has unlimited potential for surveillance and intelligence gathering, unless
citizens intervene and demand democratic accountability of institutions
left around from the Cold War.

* * *
Gary Chapman is director of the 21st Century Project at the University of
Texas at Austin.  He can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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