-Caveat Lector-

forwarded...

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.ioa.com/~davehart

CONTENTS:
 (1) FCC Mandates New Telephone Surveillance Features
 (2) Turning Cell Phones Into Tracking Devices; Other Features
 (3) Packet Switching - CALEA's Sleeper Issue
 (4) CDT Examines Appeal
 (5) Subscription Information
 (6) About the Center for Democracy and Technology

 ** This document may be redistributed freely with this banner intact **
 Excerpts may be re-posted with permission of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 This document is also available at:
 http://www.cdt.org/publications/pp_5.21.html
 _______________________________________________________________________

 (1) FCC MANDATES NEW TELEPHONE SURVEILLANCE FEATURES

 On Friday, August 27, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
ordered
 the nation's telephone companies to modify their switching equipment to
 provide more information to government agencies conducting electronic
 surveillance.  The Commission largely rejected privacy concerns and
aligned
 with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which had sought the enhanced
 monitoring capabilities under the 1994 Communications Assistance for
Law
 Enforcement Act (CALEA).

 The decision was the latest step in a long-running struggle over the
 surveillance potential of communications technology. CALEA was enacted
in
 1994 after the FBI complained to Congress that new digital technology
and
 other advanced services would soon make it impossible to carry out
wiretaps
 and other electronic surveillance.  The FBI originally sought direct
 control over phone system design.  Congress refused to grant the Bureau
 that kind of power, but adopted CALEA with the intent of balancing law
 enforcement, privacy and industry interests.  Congress made it clear
that
 CALEA was intended to preserve but not enhance government monitoring
 capabilities.  The Act left design decisions to the telephone
industry,
 subject to FCC review.

 However, soon after CALEA was enacted, the FBI began insisting on very
 specific surveillance features, including some never before available
to
 the government.  After industry worked with law enforcement agencies to
 draft technical standards to put CALEA into effect, the FBI claimed the
 industry plans did not go far enough and petitioned the FCC to order
 additional, specific surveillance features.  CDT claimed that the
industry
 plan failed to protect privacy and opposed the FBI's add-ons.
 _________________________________________________________________

 (2) TURNING CELL PHONES INTO TRACKING DEVICES; OTHER FEATURES

 The most immediately disturbing element of the FCC's ruling was its
 requirement that cellular and other wireless phone companies provide
the
 capability to identify where their customers are at the beginning and
end
 of every call, effectively turning wireless phones into tracking
devices.
 In 1994, FBI Director Louis Freeh testified twice before Congress that
 CALEA did not cover this kind of location information.  While many
cellular
 systems already have some ability to locate callers, CDT argued to the
FCC
 that this should not be a mandatory element of system design.  CDT was
 concerned that, as the technology evolves, the FBI is likely to seek
more
 and more precise location information.  The FCC ignored the legislative
 history and rejected CDT's concerns

 In addition, for both wireline and wireless systems, the FCC ruled that
 six other specific surveillance features sought by the FBI were
required by
 CALEA. One of the six requires carriers to ensure that the government
will
 be able to continue listening to those on a conference call after the
 criminal suspect has dropped off the call. Another add-on guarantees
the
 government access to credit card numbers and bank account data
generated
 when a user punches numbers on a telephone. Other add-ons ensure
government
 access to the detailed signaling information generated in connection
with
 calls, information that law enforcement would obtain under a legal
standard
 lower than the one required to conduct a wiretap. CDT and the telephone
 industry had argued that none of these items was required by CALEA.

 Carriers are currently required to comply with most aspects of CALEA,
 including the location mandate, by June 30, 2000.  The other features
 required by the FCC last week must be available to the government by
 September 30, 2001.

 _________________________________________________________________

 (3) PACKET SWITCHING - CALEA'S SLEEPER ISSUE

 One CALEA issue of immense importance has received little press
attention:
 how to conduct electronic surveillance in packet environments.  Packet
 technology, until recently used mainly on the Internet, breaks
 communication into many small packets, each consisting of some
addressing
 information and some content.  For efficiency's sake, the packets may
be
 transported by various routes, and are reassembled at their intended
 destination to create a coherent communication.  Packet technology is
 becoming increasingly important for voice communications, posing the
risk
 that the government will obtain access to the content portion of
packets
 when it has only satisfied the lower legal standard for intercepting
the
 call routing or addressing information.

 CDT argued that CALEA imposes on carriers an affirmative obligation to
 design their equipment, to the extent  technically reasonable, to
withhold
 content from the government when the government has not met the legal
 standard to intercept it.  Industry responded that carriers should be
 allowed to disclose everything to law enforcement, including content,
and
 rely on the government not to read (or listen to) what it is has no
 authority to intercept.

 The FCC declined to require carriers to protect the privacy of packet
 communications that the government is not authorized to intercept.
 Instead, the FCC requested the industry to report on what steps can be
 taken to protect the privacy of packet communications.  Last Fall, the
 Commission asked the same question and industry said that protecting
 privacy was too hard.  This leaves it to CDT to prove to the industry
that
 the technology can be designed to protect privacy.

 ______________________________________________________________

 (4)  CDT EXAMINES APPEAL

 CDT had believed that CALEA was a balanced statute.  We had accepted
the
 FBI Director's assurances that the statute would not be used as a
mandate
 for cell phone tracking, and we had believed that the FCC would resist
any
 FBI efforts to dictate surveillance enhancements. Yet on all the issues
 that mattered, the Commission ruled against privacy and in favor of
 expanded law enforcement surveillance.   The ability of the FBI to turn
 CALEA on its head does not generate confidence in government claims to
be
 seeking balanced solutions on other issues such as encryption.

 CDT is deciding whether to appeal the decision of the FCC to the
federal
 Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia.

 As of August 31, the full text of the FCC's order has not been
released.
 The only official description of the FCC's action comes in the form of
FCC
 press releases, which are available at
 http://www.cdt.org/digi_tele/fccpress0899.shtml

 For background on CALEA, go to http://www.cdt.org/digi_tele/.

 ___________

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to