Details On 2001 Wiretaps 7
gjhart writes with this excerpt from a New York Times article: "...a report issued in late May sheds some light on who, in fact, ought to be worried that someone is listening in on the line ... Despite government concerns about the use of encryption technology by criminals, it was encountered in only 16 cases last year, and in each instance, investigators were able to decode the communication."
Encryption not in Patriot Act (Score:3, Interesting)
My two cents.
More details available at Politech... (Score:3, Interesting)
And this is the interesting bit:
Re:More details available at Politech... (Score:2, Interesting)
Here are the raw numbers: 1,491 wiretap applications were authorized, each intercepting an average of 1,565 conversations. No judge anywhere in the United States denied a police wiretap request. State courts authorized 67 percent of wiretaps. The average length was about two months, and 68 percent of taps were on "portable" devices, such as pagers and cell phones.
I don't know if I should be upset that so many conversations are listened to, or amused that they spent as much time listening to "how much for a dime bag" as they did. I wonder what's up with the sixteen people using encryption? Was it pig latin or omethingsay?
Re:More details available at Politech... (Score:3, Interesting)
This week's figures do not include all U.S. Customs surveillance --
some of their records were lost in the destruction of the World Trade
Center
Hasnt anyone in america heard of off site backups?
Re:More details available at Politech... (Score:2, Funny)
Offsite for Tower one means Tower two and vice-versa right? :)