-Caveat Lector-

(Sellout ISP tracks customers web browsing......
Dump em' now, make them feel the K-Mart squeeze.)

Comcast Tracks Users' Web Browsing
By TED BRIDIS Associated Press Writer
February 12, 2002, 11:07 PM EST

WASHINGTON -- Comcast Corp., the nation's third-largest cable company, has begun 
recording the Web browsing activities of its 1 million high-speed Internet subscribers 
without notifying them of the change.

Comcast said Tuesday the recording of each Web page a subscriber visits was part of a 
technology overhaul designed to save money and improve the speed of cable Internet 
service to its customers and was not intended to infringe on privacy. The company said 
it believes the recording was permitted by language in their service agreement with 
subscribers.

Technology experts cautioned that the data could be subpoenaed by law enforcement 
agencies or lawyers in civil cases, and they questioned whether Comcast's move 
reflects a more cavalier attitude toward online privacy in the aftermath of the Sept. 
11 terrorist attacks.

"Once you're sitting on it, you're really inviting all kinds of requests," said David 
Sobel of the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center. "If they can't 
identify a need to be collecting it, they should take the necessary steps to eliminate 
it."

The company that sold Comcast the technology acknowledged the cable company is 
collecting more information about the online activities of customers than is necessary 
for the technology enhancements.

"It's not needed," said Steve Russell, a vice president for Inktomi Corp. Russell said 
Inktomi's software also records other information from Comcast subscribers, such as 
passwords for Web sites and credit-card numbers under limited circumstances.

Russell discounted privacy concerns, saying engineers are using the information to 
improve Comcast performance.

Comcast Executive Vice President Dave Watson said that while the company records 
information about each customer's Web browsing, it does not use the information to 
build customer profiles.

"Comcast absolutely does not share personal information about our customers, and we 
have the utmost respect for our customers' privacy," Watson said.

Watson also said Comcast was recording no more information about its customers than is 
common throughout the industry and no more than it needs to optimize its network.

Two of the nation's largest Internet providers, America Online and Earthlink, said, 
however, that they do not record the Web browsing of their combined 35 million 
subscribers.

"We definitely would have no interest in doing that at all," said Earthlink's chief 
privacy officer, Les Seagraves. "We don't want to have customer records about where 
they've visited."

AOL uses performance-enhancing technology, similar to that introduced by Comcast, on 
its network. But AOL spokesman Nicholas Graham said, "We do not track the personal Web 
activity of our members for privacy reasons."

Comcast spokesman Tim Fitzpatrick said Web browsing was already being recorded for its 
subscribers in Detroit and in parts of Delaware and Virginia, and would be extended 
across the nation by the end of this week.

Fitzpatrick acknowledged customers weren't notified separately of any 
behind-the-scenes recording. But he said the company's existing subscriber and privacy 
agreements, available on its Web site, tell customers that Comcast collects 
information "about where you go on the service or on the Web."

Fitzpatrick said Comcast, using the Inktomi software, is recording the numeric 
Internet address uniquely assigned to each subscriber, along with the Internet address 
of each requested Web page. Comcast stores the information for days before it's 
deleted, but it won't say for exactly how long. Watson, the Comcast executive vice 
president, also said the company does not match a subscriber's actual identity to the 
Internet address they're using online.

Comcast's recording is part of an overhaul using behind-the-scenes "proxy" computers, 
which funnel Web surfing through powerful, centralized computers. Customers previously 
could volunteer to use these proxy computers, but they are automatically activated 
now. The proxy computers track the most popular Web sites to determine which ones 
should be copied to its central computers.

Industry experts said there was no need to match Web surfing back to the specific 
Internet addresses of subscribers.

"I'm furious," said George Imburgia, an Internet security expert in Dover, Del., and a 
Comcast customer. "They're monitoring and logging everybody's activities." Imburgia 
compared it to the surveillance software the FBI uses: "It's an evil, Carnivore-type 
thing."

Outfitted with high-tech eavesdropping tools and a court order, the FBI can secretly 
record what a person does online -- but only after agents identify the target and 
install monitoring equipment.

Police and the FBI are increasingly turning to computer evidence in criminal and 
terrorist investigations. Just last month, the FBI warned that al-Qaida members had 
sought information about dangerous insecticides from Internet sites. Since Sept. 11, 
some Internet providers have been served with warrants for subscriber information 
under a powerful 1978 anti-terrorism law.

Copyright © 2002, The Associated Press
-end article-
---------------------
-InfoWarz
"Soon it will be possible to assert almost continuous surveillance over every citizen 
and maintain up-to-date complete files containing even the most personal information 
about the citizen. These files will be subject to instantaneous retrieval by the 
authorities"
-Zbigniew Brezinsky, Traitor, Scumbag, NWO minion, Advisor to Jimmy Carter

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