Deutsche Telekom Secretly Tracked Phone Calls 83
Dekortage writes "German telephone giant Deutsche Telekom has admitted to secretly tracking the phone calls between board members and journalists, in an effort to identify media leaks about internal affairs. As noted by the German Journalists' Association, 'This company has special access to the records of its customers.... That means it has a special obligation to be trustworthy.' DT denies having eavesdropped; it merely tracked the calls dialed."
double-edged (Score:0, Interesting)
Summary incorrect (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't think Germany even has laws that are adequate for crimes of this scale. After all, data is knowledge, knowledge is power, power is abusable. More data means more knowledge means more abuse. It is time for lawmakers to react.
Actually... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Actually... (Score:1, Interesting)
Lots of people, since everyone knows that the evil Bush/Cheney/Haliburton/Rove conspiracy has been demolishing privacy rights in the USA while progressive Europeans are protected by their benevolent governments.
There was a case a few years back when a bunch of senior people at Canadian investment bank were planning to jump ship, set up a competing firm, and steal clients. The bankers were doing the planning on their company blackberries...
Re:This just in! (Score:5, Interesting)
The people in our company who handle this data are very aware of what they're handling, and in addition to their contract had to sign numerous papers saying they'll never break those laws, not even under a direct order from a superior. We have not one but two departments handling regulation and compliance.
That is why this is such a big scandal in Germany right now: Pulling this stunt off means that there is massive corruption at all levels within T-Com.