
Carnivore Comes To India 155
pamri writes: "India is getting its own version of Carnivore. According to this Times of India article,'...after investigations have revealed that Mohammad, alias "Burger," who led the Parliament attack, was in constant touch with his counterparts in Pakistan as well as within India through email ... The Intelligence Bureau (IB) has prepared a list of new keywords that are to be used to intercept mails emanating from IP addresses in India.'"
We'll be ok, (Score:1, Flamebait)
Don't you guys mean (Score:1)
Re:you don't know shit (Score:1)
This sounds like... (Score:3, Interesting)
Firstly, it's been directly stated by terrorists themselves (watch the video!) that transmissions to the lower-level parties involved which *contain instructions* usually don't occur until mere hours before the terrorist act. It isn't as if the terrorists know that they'll be bombing a specific target for months, they find out shortly before. This means that any flagged transmissions will have to be analyzed, which I guarrentee takes a longer amount of time than it does for some terrorist to prepare, ready himself, and carry out the final attack.
Secondly, these things are going to be spammed or encrypted into oblivion. See point one about time constraints, and then realize that India has a large population. If you scan every email for content and come up with 5 million emails per day that are flagged by the server, how long will it take to process that data? How long do they have?
Yikes. They'd have better luck issueing a statement like, "Mr. Terrorist? Please stop it. We'll give you penguin dolls."
Re:This sounds like... (Score:1)
As someone else mentioned, its probably a good assumption that the terrorists encode their email. So how exactly is this filter supposed to work on that email? Maybe the gov't has a backdoor they're not telling us about? Although I doubt that, i wouldn't be surprised with anything these days.
imho this will just be a big waste of time, and another excuse to use carnivore
Could be done, especially if good NLP is used (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd imagine it might be based on Cyc [cyc.com] or a similar dark project, and might achieve a 97% or better success rate at identifying questionable messages, with very few false negatives.
Assuming a billion emails a day, and five million of them being questionable, I'd suspect such a system could cull that number down to a few thousand—if the target messages were truly that few in number. As a matter of fact, I'd suggest that if sufficient computing power were available, to skip the keyword-scanning filter entirely, since such communications might be carried on with an alternate vocabulary substituted for hotbutton terms. Finding those messages requires more language processing intelligence than Carnivore would seem to have currently.
Re:Could be done, especially if good NLP is used (Score:1)
Re:Could be done, especially if good NLP is used (Score:1)
Re:This sounds like... (Score:3, Insightful)
Darwin in action (Score:1)
Whats going to happen when they learn how to encrypt the stuff?
Don't you all feel so much safer knowing that the various governments have started tracking emails. At the very least it will weed out the more stupid terrorists who don't know how encrypt their emails.
Just leaving the smart ones, kind of Darwinian selection.
OK, carnivore, feeding time: Burger attack.
is this a joke? (Score:1)
umm.. jeez... you could pretty much use ROT-13 on those words and get past the mail filter!! then again... they use a different language... and eventually the government will catch on... heh... can't we all just GPG?
Happy Holidays to all
Wait! This could be a good thing! (Score:5, Funny)
Interesting choice of filters. (Score:1)
ownership of data pipelines (Score:1)
Re:ownership of data pipelines (Score:1)
Re:ownership of data pipelines (Score:1)
Amusing that they would try something like this (Score:1)
Now, counterpoint to all the crypto-related flaws: There are chances where snooping would cause a situation where the actual criminal were to slip and send an unencrypted email msg. It's very possible. A point that I agree with is that the crypto -will- hurt efforts because of the need to have the computer power to crack the crypto, which based on some technologies this could be a very time-consuming task that wouldn't help on timely matters.
Ho hum -- in India I'm sure they don't have the US rights the US people all love and enjoy, so the Indians are going to just have to deal with it.
Re:Amusing that they would try something like this (Score:1)
Re:Amusing that they would try something like this (Score:1)
(Sorry for the "me too" post)
Re:Amusing that they would try something like this (Score:3, Insightful)
in India I'm sure they don't have the US rights the US people all love and enjoy, so the Indians are going to just have to deal with it.
All i would say dear sir is that It would be better if you were to read the Indian Constitution and the Indian Penal Code.
US and relative freedom (Score:2)
My experience is that the US is not really freer than a lot of other countries, and it is selective in which "freedoms" are really available. The US probably has as much or more economic freedom than most any other first-world place - that is, lower taxes and fewer bureaucratic obstacles to doing business. But in other freedoms, the US lags behind. The Sklyarov case is a good indication of that, as is the war on drugs and the rights that the police have to sieze property they even suspect is related to it, without so much as a court order. In much of Europe, small-scale drug use and possession is tolerated openly. In most other countries, there is more freedom of speech when such freedom threatens corporate "property".
I guess you're talking about procedural protections for people suspected of a crime; in that regard, the US has, or at least used to have, a number of safeguards that most other countries lacked. But that's changing.
Re:US and relative freedom (Score:1)
Unfortuately, since I'm stuck in the US, it gets difficult to aquire other legal texts outside the US... and I'm too lazy to search Google
The simplest solutions... (Score:1)
Why not use Unicode to write in some obscure language (like Elven?
Re:The simplest solutions... (Score:1)
Totalitarian future (Score:1, Interesting)
Code Words (Score:4, Insightful)
How are they going to find that message, or understand its significance? The NSA intercepted and decrypted a large number of Soviet diplomatic/intelligence messages in the 1940s (VENONA [nsa.gov]). Despite a large amount of work, the identities of many of the agents referred to in the messages are unknown.
Re:Breaking codewords (Score:2)
An attack was planned on our military in which we intercepted some messages. We were not sure of the target because it was referred to by a code word. We had the suspected target send a plain text message indicating the water desalination plant failed and needed parts. When the oposition reported the failure, we confirmed the codeword as equating to that base. Does anybody have the details on that incident? I think it was WW2 and one of the small Pacific Islands.
Re:Breaking codewords (Score:2)
Re:Breaking codewords (Score:2)
Priorities: India, Kashmir and the Internet (Score:1, Interesting)
Keep in mind that India is the country with a right-wing fundamentalist Hindu nationalist government that practises a form of legalized Apartheid called the Caste system.
India has coveted Kashmir for decades and is carrying out a brutal military occupation against the majority Muslim Kashmiri population that is well-documented by international human rights groups and in violation of UN Security Council Resolutions.
Considering that both India and Pakistan have their military forces on high alert as I write this, with inflammatory rhetoric flying and threats of nuclear war, you can be sure to view anything that India's spy agency says to the press as probable propaganda and posturing.
That said, India should stick to doing more important things like feeding and housing its people. The number of people who don't even have a meal far outstrip -- by orders of magnitude -- those who use the Internet in that impoverished and backwards country. I'd be very surprised if many average people know what the Internet is, let alone have knowledge of subjects like digital privacy rights and the like.
Still, small details like those never stopped any country from finding new ways to spy on its citizens.
Re:Priorities: India, Kashmir and the Internet (Score:3, Insightful)
Interesting.
Your comment about finding new ways to spy on citizens is true although we probably will never know how much surveillance has gone on by various govenments against their citizens through the ages.
The fact that the current political climate is giving rise to privacy violations such as these should be of concern to Indians in particular and freedom-loving people everywhere.
However a country that miltarily occupies another nation usually isn't too concerned about minor things such as Internet privacy rights.
I believe you are correct that most Indians will not even know about these measures and that they can do something about them (even if they aren't affected at this point in time) due to more basic issues such as survival.
Indian Human Rights Abuses / Digital Rights Abuses (Score:1, Informative)
Someone was asking for evidence of this - I know its somewhat off-topic but here's some info from Human Rights Watch's report on India's "secret army" in Kashmir:
Indian security forces have intensified their efforts against militant groups, stepping up cordon-and-search operations and summarily executing captured militant leaders. Alongside them, operating as a secret, illegal army, have been state-sponsored paramilitary groups, composed of captured or surrendered former militants described as "renegades" by the Indian government. Many of these groups have been responsible for grave human rights abuses, including summary executions, torture, and illegal detention as well as election-related intimidation of voters.
Again, if India's willing to do this sort of thing, then Digital Rights are of no consequence. That doesn't sound like any kind of democracy to me
Re:Priorities: India, Kashmir and the Internet (Score:3, Interesting)
Dude, we don't exactly live in caves here.
It is not like we are going to let our privacy be taken overnight. There are LUGs around the country which are also active in privacy issues.
But, at this moment, it is more important that we preserve our sovereignity and our integrity.
Benjamin Franklin's quote of those who compromise freedom for safety deserve neither sounds great, but when terrorists are out there waiting to wreck havoc, it isn't exactly that simple.
Democratic nations will preserve the interests of their people. There may be instances when it may seem otherwise, but ultimately the people will win. History has proved this to us, and Argentina is the latest example of this.
You said that a country pre-occupied with a war has little time for concern with such things as Internet privacy. True, but people are not going to keep quiet either. The amount of people involved in IT is *too* high in India to just ignore such troubles.
But anyways, they are not taking our rights just like that, not for now atleast
Re:Priorities: India, Kashmir and the Internet (Score:1)
Most of these comments are ofcourse sadly misguided and completely uninformed. However it is very commendable to see that the slashdot moderation system allowed only one such comment to get to level 3 (which personally I think is too much for it)
Most ot the post on Kashmir is wrong. (Score:3, Informative)
That's a bad load of anti-Indian slander from 'Anonymous Coward'. Just about the only thing right in his post was that India should focus on improving life for her downtrodden.
Here's why the post's wrong: First: India is a constitutionally secular [alfa.nic.in] country, not a Hindu one. (I myself am an Indian Christian, a recent convert from Hinduism). The Caste system is illegal [alfa.nic.in], and practising it prosecuted under Indian law. The implementation of these laws, however, is not thorough [dalits.org] -- inefficiency and corruption plague the Indian administration and justice systems. (Though recently, things have been improving faster)
Secondy, as far as coveting Kashmir goes, the state of Jammu and Kashmir legally merged with India sometime in 1948. A UN resolution passed then, required Pakistan to withdraw it's forces, and let Kashmir come under complete *Indian* control. India was then to host a plebiscite over the entire state. However Pakistan never withdrew... and the rest is history. You can verify this here [un.org] (see page 11).
Lastly, getting down to the main topic -- I think using a Carnivore-like system to promiscuously trawl for information without a court order is wrong. An analogy would be a policeman habitually entering into people's homes to check for thieves. And I also think that the spook (it must be one of ours) who released this to our media was simply indulging in wishful thinking (fundamental rights are -- we don't have that many supercomputers.
Re:Most ot the post on Kashmir is wrong. (Score:1)
Maybe. But what's going to stop all the right-wing Hindu politicians from passing laws that hurt non-Hindus? Like you said "inefficiency and corruption plague the Indian administration and justice systems". And given this ineffectiveness of making the caste system illegal, one could argue it's just a token law to shift blame when the shit hits the fan. Particularly here [cnn.com], here [yahoo.com], here [worthynews.com], and here [fwbo.org], all courtesy of google [google.com].
Re:Most ot the post on Kashmir is wrong. (Score:1)
Maybe. But what's going to stop all the right-wing Hindu politicians from passing laws that hurt non-Hindus
The same thing that stops them in other countries - a national constitution. If I remember my civics lessons correctly, changing the Indian constitution requires a 66% majority in parliament, assent from a majority of states, and the assent of the Indian president (the current one - KR Narayanan - is a former 'untouchable')
And given this ineffectiveness of making the caste system illegal, one could argue it's just a token law to shift blame when the shit hits the fan. Particularly here [cnn.com],...
It's easy to knock something done imperfectly (like the abolition of untouchablity in India), but India is in a *much* better state than it was when the British left, thanks to her constitution and hundreds of thousands of honest people who enforce it. Remember George Wallace and Alabama? It's been only a few decades since blacks got the right to vote in the USA -- things changed for the better rapidly once a critical mass for change was reached. India is pretty close to that stage now.
The Google postings on the conversion -- yes, it did happen, but from one false faith, to another.
Re:Most ot the post on Kashmir is wrong. (Score:1)
You're not serious! Those 1948 UN resolutions were especially made to create dissent by dividing ethnic groups and uniting rival ethnic groups.
This was a post-colonial strategy dreamed up in Europe, nothing more.
Stephan
Re:Most ot the post on Kashmir is wrong. (Score:1)
Secondly, 'post-colonial' motives may or may not have been at play in the UN in 1948 (personally I think it's possible, but unlikely... reasons below: _
By end 1948, India had a legal basis to annex Jummu and Kashmir (the treaty of accession signed by it's Maharaja), however thin this may sound. Pakistan did not. The Indian Prime Minister at the time was a from a Hindu family from the Kashmir valley. He had participated in the movement that won freedom for both India and Pakistan, and he and his family had considerable respect in the valley. Virtually no support for joining Pakistan existed in J& K itself -- J&K had more in common in terms of culture and tradition with India than the newly formed Pakistan. J&K political leaders like Sheikh Abdullah (the father of the current J&K chief minister) were also partial to India. Many observers state that a fair plebescite at the time would have been in India's favor (of course it's hard to imagine this now).
All this would have weighed in the minds of the UN delegates when they came up with the resolution they did.
Look at the top of the webpage below for a Paksitani military perspective on their 1948 Kashmir infiltration. It's pretty clear that Pakistan had little to no sympathy in the valley itself -- they wouldn't have had to inject foreign tribals and their own troops surreptitiously -- they could simply incite and arm a local rebellion as they are doing now.
. htm [defencejournal.com]
http://www.defencejournal.com/2001/august/anatomy
Re:Priorities: India, Kashmir and the Internet (Score:1)
This whole thing between India and Pakistan really sucks. When will humanity grow up?
I can't stop laughing! (Score:5, Funny)
Then they put a link at the bottom to email the story to your friends!!!
I can barely catch my breath, I'm laughing so hard!
They're e-mailing the LINK, not the story itself ! (Score:1)
Don't worry, they're just e-mailing the link to the story...not the story itself !
:-)
Carnivore = Meat eater (Score:1)
Maybe Herbivore will do!
Re:Carnivore = Meat eater (Score:1)
Re:Carnivore = Meat eater (Score:1)
I was always under the impression that Hindus aren't homogeneous religion-wise, meaning there's different variaties of "Hinduism". Also, Sihks aren't vegetarian, are they? Not to mention that there may be a minority of Atheists in India, given the increasing level of education the average Indian has.
Could have fooled me but... (Score:1)
India ?. now way man (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
The suspense is killing me. What does it mean?
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:2, Interesting)
I do speak Malayalam. Colloquially speaking, it translates to : "Move along. Stop quarreling for fun.". The "fun" bit is added only because there isnt an exact translation of the idiom. Quarelling for the sake of quarelling is more like it.
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
Adi poli comment!!!!
This is the simple example of how any key word based mail scans will be defeated. You simply cannot write keywords for non standard roman translitatations in more than 15 languages.
raj
PS:"Adi poli comment" means good comment in Malayalam, and only a person from Kerala will be able to understand this!
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
Mallus invade slashdot (Score:1)
arkengilum moderator access undengil oru malayalam postne onnu pokki vidanam
raj
Re:Mallus invade slashdot (Score:2)
Ph'nglui mglw'nafh CmdrTaco R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn. Ia! Ia! CmdrTaco fhtagn. CmdrTaco R'lyeh fhtagn.
(I hate it when Babelfish sprouts tentacles...)
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
Check out Google Malayalam.
Seriously though NLP has a long way to go in cases of Info exchange in diverse language/Script combos such as malayalam in english and possibly vice versa.
And Chomsky is never ever gonna help out IB in this case for sure
he heeee
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
i would like to find out how many mallus read slashdot, and if possible bring them all together for another forum.
mail me back at kodguru@hotmail.com if you are interested.
www.hackorama.com
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
daivam rakshikkatte!
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
i would like to find out how many mallus read slashdot, and if possible bring them all together for another forum.
mail me back at kodguru@hotmail.com if you are interested.
www.hackorama.com
hello encryption? (Score:1)
these sorts of systems would be a joke to would be criminals with half a mind... oh no... i've said too much. they're watching....
perhaps i will speek in elvish....
lasto beth nin, tolo dan na ngalad
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
Malayalam is the language spoken in the state of Kerala [keralatourism.com] located in the south eastern part of India. Kerala was selected as one of the 50 must see places by National Geographic. [nationalgeographic.com] Malayalam is located from +U0D00 to +U0D7F in the Unicode.
In case their are any TeXis here, the TUG 2002 [tug.org.in] will be held in Kerala and is a nice time to come and visit Kerala.
raj
Re:India ?. now way man (Score:1)
i would like to find out how many mallus read slashdot, and if possible bring them all together for another forum.
mail me back at kodguru@hotmail.com if you are interested.
www.hackorama.com
Posted by timothy on Tues Dec 25, @04:24 (Score:1)
This is bullshit (Score:5, Interesting)
Goddammit, I am so fed up with these constant assassinations of Internet privacy anytime it is revealed that a terrorist group used email or cryptography to coordinate their attacks. I bet they also used telephones, cell phones, and snail mail to communicate as well. Why the fuck aren't these sodding politicians calling for monitoring of voice conversations and physical inspection of packages and letters? If they are serious about security why not go the whole nine yards? Speech recognition technology could surely make the former feasible. <sarcasm>After all, only those who are doing something wrong have something to hide.</sarcasm>
That bullshit never happens because most people, whether here in the US or over in India, wouldn't stand for such a blatant invasion of their privacy. Just because technology makes monitoring Internet communications an order of magnitude easier, doesn't fucking make it right! Whether it is listening in on a phone conversation, sniffing a packet, or tearing open a letter the intrusion is still the same.
It takes a nation of millions to wage war, but only a single man to commit terrorism. Until we address the factors that lead people to such desperation that they are willing to give their lives to cold-hearted violence, we will wage this war until we inevitably lose it.
We have always had the means to destroy ourselves - but terrorists have finally given us the motivation to do so. And like the proverbial frog in the pot of water, we are slowly selling out our treasured civil liberties for an illusion of security. And the day we lose this so-called War on Terror is when we have silently replaced the republics of the world with police states that hide behind masks of democracy and pay lip-service to freedom.
It really doesnt matter (Score:1)
moHAMmadBURGER??? (Score:1)
open source fascism (Score:1, Interesting)
I'm intersted in putting together a set of tools that aren't driven by the FBI/CIA/TLA of your choice (and this has the distinct smell of the Justice department's distribution of INSLAW's PROMISE software to thrid world "justice processes").
Idealy, I'd like to see something like Rayeton's Slient Runner, Network Flight Recorder or Carnivore (who makes that software? I forget), but if I must piece together as set of tools using things like the dsniff suite of utilities, that's fine too. Ultimately, the goal is to be able to tap into any communication stream (file sharing, web browsing, instant messaging/IRC, e-mail (including SSL protected web mail), Usenet News, etc.)... NFR and dsniff make it fairly easy to add new protocol parsing/decoding to the survailed stream; however it would be far better if the project/effort were open source so taht an infinate number of monkies could add new protocols (a la Snort).
Some things that I think are missing, however, include things like RADIUS/dhcp/DNS services integration that would allow an authenticated and assigned IP address to be assigned a name by the LDAP lookup of the customer/subject name/ID.
One of the other projects I like is that little utility that apple guy at stanford wrote that grabs
I found it funny when Zimmerman expressed regret for his work on PGP after 911... least he could do is begin work on a project that could undo the potential damage (oh, wait, NA already did that for him...). Well, at least he could start a new project in the opposite direction...
my take on the current situation? open source and facism (and if you only know what that term means from it's connative meaning... look it up; the USA is currently heading straight into the loving arms of mother fascism) are *not* incompatable by any streach of the imagination... In fact, open source would do well to cash in on some of the defensive stock/security product hedging that is happening right now.
So, what do you guys thing? Up for the challenge?
Another way of increasing employment (Score:1)
Forget encryption. Forget the use of substitute words such as "supari" for a "contract". Forget the huge volume of mail.
What are you going to do about the 15 official languages, the different encodings, Indian languages written in roman script and a few others I haven't thought of?
What is the point?? (Score:1)
[begin carnivore bait] I'm going to hi-jack a plane and bomb the whitehouse where those bloody afgans messed up. Bin Laden Rules!!! long live bin laden. Drugs cocaine bomb bombs nuclear plane flight hi-jack attack terrorist allah lord bush force anthrax [end carnivore bait]
Re:What is the point?? (Score:1)
These are just simple ways around the system without even using encryption
Re:What is the point?? (Score:1)
But that wouldn't be its only use. After a terrorist act has taken place, an archive of this information could be used to help identify if there were associates, and possibly even help round them up. And at that task, even with encryption, it could be very effective.
- ordinarius
not that many problems (Score:1)
How do I know all this? Because ive been there about 300x so know the place pretty well, and alot of my relatives are in the gov't so i got an idea of how they think.
Re:not that many problems (Score:1)
Stephan
Not True!! (Score:1)
India has 15 languages, but there is only one webmail provider which provides services to mail in languages other than English, and anyway devnagari scripts are hard to type on your normal 108 key keyboard
The stupid things like lashkar@hotmail.com were probably "intelligent guesses" bye the Times of India reporter, who you must admit is not any dumber than non-tech reporters in the US, or even your ex presideng Al-Gore who thinks he "invented" the internet.
So There!
Close the Supermarkets (Score:1)
Burger??? (Score:2)
Screw Burger, he had his time. [kultspiele.net]
Languages and dialects. (Score:1)
keywords workon plaintext only.... (and Emacs) (Score:1)
what if everyone rot13'd their messages? keyword search that, buddy!
And, Emacs has a "spook" command [gnu.org] (M-x spook) which adds a line of "subversive" text to your email. It was originally to distract the NSA, which would have to work so much harder to throw away your email from the important ones. It's rather dated though: words like "nuclear" "bomb" "kill" and maybe "Reagan". Lots of fun!
Comments from an Indian (Score:1)
BTW, a lot of incorrect facts about India have been bandied about, and being in the heart of it all, (I live and hack in India) I'd like to set facts straight.
a)
Myth: There is only one ISP in India
Fact: There are hundreds of ISPs in India. VSNL was the sole ISP only till 1998. Even the CIA world fact book gets the major ISPs right. There are 48 major ISPs! (read Class A).
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos
I get cable [cyberwaveindia.com] at home in Madras from a gateway in Singapore (singnet). It travels via a dedicated undersea line that is not government controlled. Heck even my DNS lookup goes to Singapore (3000 odd kms.) Mine is a Class B ISP that the CIA page does not even recognise. There are Classes A through E! So, no there isn't one major check point like China.
b)
Myth: Internet penetration in India is low.
Fact:There are millions (literally) of cybercafes in India. Satyam iWay [satyamiway.com] , one of the medium sized chains has some 400 iWays with global profile and roaming facility and they say they have 12.5 million users. And these are only located in the major cities, what about the rest of India. Nin-urban population comprises 85% of India. You are looking at a staggering number of people in the billions.
c)
Myth: Hindi & English are the only languages that are important.
Fact: Hindi & English yes, but India has 2000+ languages, and only 15 official ones. Try any Indian email service even the web based ones like rediff.com and you'll find more than 10 languages in which you can send an email.
d)
Myth: Encryption is not avaialble easily
Fact: Encryption is freely available. Heck ever heard of GPG anyone? or PGP? It's only 5 minutes to download... even in India. Besides we have the largest number of software professionals in the world. Wanna reconsider?
e)
Myth: The government doesn't have mammoth computing resources
Fact: Yes, super computers like the Cray were not allowed into India until recently. So we had to build our own (Param [cdacindia.com]). We built the Like all governments in the world they are still coming to terms with the technology, but they do have tons of cash, so don't put it past them to be on top of things given a while.
Ham? Satellites? Long-distance telephone? (Score:1)
For the ham set, they need only be gauranteed of a connection suitable for some sort of TCP-like functionality. This would be the cheapest alternative. No paper trail, and you can encrypt your transmissions so nobody would be able to make sense of whatever they heard.
For the satellite phone, well, they can use whatever's still available. (Haven't kept any sort of track. I don't even remember if Irridium is still up.) Granted, it can cost a great deal of money per minute, but if you're a terrorist with megabucks at your disposal, this isn't a problem, right? However, this method is very traceable, as paying for a satellite phone is likely to leave a wide paper trail.
And modems are the simplest solution. I have family members that often have to connect to ISPs in America, from Korea. (For commercial reasons, and it counts as a business expense) Paper trails can be almost non-existant. Just buy some prepaid telephone cards from Walgreens in Michigan, and mail 'em!
And, just because I'm a little nervous as to how people would react to my thinking of this, let me point out that security by obscurity won't work against anyone with most of a brain.
Please feed the Carnivore. (Score:2)
If you really want to counter-act such a system, always add some of the keywords on the list to your emails. Not even the government can afford to monitor every single email.
Also remember to encrypt everything. That raises the amount of work the government would have to do even more, reducing the number of messages they could actually monitor. I'd recommend PGP or GnuPG.
India spammers ... (Score:1)
If it helps ..... Why not ??? (Score:1)
Carnivore chasing the Sacred Chao (Score:1)
Re:I think .... (Score:1)