Pay To Have Your Phone Tapped 387
An anonymous reader writes "The Globe and Mail is running an interesting story over who should carry the cost of wiretapping (registration may be required): 'Canada's police chiefs propose a surcharge of about 25 cents on monthly telephone and Internet bills to cover the cost of tapping into the communications of terrorists and other criminals.'"
Har (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Har (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Har (Score:5, Insightful)
Patriotism sucks.
Re:Har (Score:2)
Re:Har (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, but they're probably afraid that if they make it that easy to find where the money comes from, we might want them to make it as easy to find out where it goes.
Re:Har (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Har (Score:2)
Do you seriously think that John Kerry would be any less of a jackass? Don't get me wrong, I don't like George Bush, but John Kerry would likely be just as much of a jackass.
I've ALREADY paid for this! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Har (Score:5, Interesting)
Wiretap? Have fun.
Tax? Try me.
Re:Har (Score:2)
Re:Har (Score:3, Insightful)
If you use strong crypto only for some connections, this is would reveal your communication patterns. This may show who your fellow terrorists are. That way homeland security could place a bug in their office. Or just send all of you Guantanamo just to be on the safe side.
Re:Har (Score:3, Interesting)
Or they just pick up you and all your contacts anyway, on suspicion of terrorst activity, because that's all they seem to need. Certainly that was all that was necessary when my son and his friend were stopped twice, for having a video camera in hand while waiting to board a cruise ship. They were accuse
Re:Har (Score:3, Insightful)
Errrr (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Errrr (Score:2)
Re:Errrr (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Errrr (Score:5, Funny)
Monthly Phone bill for XXX-XXX-XXXX
Basic service: $10.00
Digital Dialing: $5.00
Emergency Services Provision Tax: $1.00
Police Wiretap on this telephone line: $0.25
Optional services $3.50
Re:Errrr (Score:4, Interesting)
So, for the roughly 30million people in Canada, this raises CDN$7.5million/month. If my estimate of $5/minute of tape is close, then thats 1.5million minutes of listening in on your phonesex calls.
Re:Har (Score:2)
You're going to pay somewhere (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You're going to pay somewhere (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You're going to pay somewhere (Score:2, Informative)
You misunderstand the regular meaning of "progressive tax". A so-called "progressive tax" charges the wealthy a higher percentage, so they pay a higher rate. Most income taxes are like this. Most rich people pay much more income tax than the poor. Many poor people pay no income tax.
Flat taxes charge everyone the same rate - sales taxes and property taxes are usually like this. The wealthy still pay more th
Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones (Score:3, Insightful)
It's wrong for "successful" people to pretend that they are that way only on their own merits and efforts. Everyone benefits from a stable society. Those with more, benefit more -- and probably disproportionately. Since they have more to lose, a stable society is more valuable to them. Therefore they should pay more.
Oh, wait. No one seems to be a believer in "capitalism" when confronted with the idea of taxes as payment for so
Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones (Score:5, Insightful)
I think that's the most idiotic argument for a "progressive" tax system that I've ever heard.
By your logic, the poor should be paying more for medicare and social security since obviously, they have the most to lose if those go down.
Taxes are not a way to "keep society stable". Taxes are a way for citizens to pay for what the government does for the common good. It's debatable what any persons "fair share" in this is but pretending that it is somehow proportional to what they have to lose is preposterous.
Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones (Score:4, Funny)
Nonsense. Political power and the government is NOT in the hands of "the wealthy classes". Political power is squarely in the hands of ALL the people. Some people might be too stupid to exercise their political power but to pretend that it is in the hands of the wealthy in a democracy is a travesty of the truth.
Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones (Score:5, Interesting)
No longer will I assume that lobbiests funnel money to our representatives to buy influence. I now realize that they simply want to be friendly.
No longer shall I think negative thoughts when Dick C. invites energy companies into private meetings to write energy bills. They were probably just playing Risk or Dungeons & Dragons.
No longer will I assume that George was skipping National Guard duty in Texas rather than slogging through the jungles of Vietnam because of his family connections. It was probably just the luck of the draw.
I will recognize that the DMCA was for the benefit of all citizens of our great country and not a cynical manuever to extend Mickey Mouse's value. I feel better knowing that my copyrights are now protected for decades after I die.
I will rejoice that the grassroots efforts of the voters of California managed to unseat a lawfully elected govenor without the influence of outside money. Jeb next, anyone?
From now on the great words of the commie freak Arlo will echo in my ears: "This Land is YOUR Land; This Land if MY Land!" Assuming, of course, that this is considered "fair use" under the current law.
This land is your land (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Progressive taxes are worse than regular ones (Score:3, Insightful)
Voting is not the be all and end all of democracy. Lobbying can matter far more than voting. Especially somewhere like the US where the 2 major political parties agree on many issues.
And? WHO is wealthy? (Score:2)
Do you really believe that the people who controlled substantial chunks of $$ in 1997 are the same as in 2004?
When you start talking about "classes" the distinction is less noticeable, after all you can define a "wealthy class" as ones who control more than X% of the economy, and then your statement will become true BY DEFINITION, but it says absolutely nothing abo
Re:You're going to pay somewhere (Score:2)
Re:You're going to pay somewhere (Score:5, Insightful)
The world is changing. The government can't control your electronic communications. They still have the power to tell you "do not walk on grass", but YOU have the power to do whatever you want online.
Use Freenet. Use GPG. Use OpenBSD. YOU are in control, not them. Don't pay their taxes. If they want you to use something easily traceable, they should pay YOU!
Take a look here:
http://ciphersaber.gurus.com/ [gurus.com]
You will always have encryption if you learn the contents of this page. Nobody can ever take it away. Think about that power.
Re:You're going to pay somewhere (Score:2)
Hmmmm...it used to just be the soviet russians, but it looks like it's the canadians now too, eh?
Re:You're going to pay somewhere (Score:2)
Police Corruption to Blame (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You're going to pay somewhere (Score:2)
In which case, perhaps better on the phone bill. At least it's there and line-itemed, reminding people that the government is in fact tapping phone lines, etc. Otherwise it will just get hidden in the general fund.
On the other hand, as someone else pointed out, this is regressive. Maybe funding through income taxes would be better. It's a toss-up to me.
Re:You're going to pay somewhere (Score:5, Insightful)
We are already paying for police investigations through our taxes. We do have to pay somewhere- but do we have to pay to sustain numerous bureaucracies? If people don't mind, maybe we should tax dental care to promote dental hygiene, and condoms for sex education? Or, in the same vein, taxing internet access to fund internet surveillance?
To create another special tax just creates more inefficiency in an already complex system, not to mention that consumption taxes are the most regressive of all. We have a tax system that needs fixing, not more regressive, byzantine jerry-rigging.
The police/RCMP/CSIS are already conducting surveillance, and paying for it with their respective budgets. Is this a thinly veiled way of increasing their wiretapping budget and legitimating this practice, and the need for corporate communication? What does this entail for new communications technology -- will all companies be required to create easy backdoors for snooping [boingboing.net]?
Finally, the very assumption that we'll have to pay is offensive. If we had to pay, it should be done through taxes. But do we need to, and how much should we spend on this priority? I'd like that decision to be made where it ought to be- in the budget debate in our elected parliament. Such a decision ought to be made knowing full well what stupid things our intel services have seen fit to investigate over the years, and whether we ought to trust them to actually recognize a threat without undue harm to civil liberties and privacy. E.g. see Whose national security? [btlbooks.com]
Better idea (Score:2)
And? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:And? (Score:2)
Re:And? (Score:2)
Taxes (Score:2)
Re:Taxes (Score:2, Insightful)
Hey cool! I hate money anyway. (Score:5, Funny)
Free iKicks... (Score:2)
Get enough people to signup, and it's free!
misc phone charges (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:misc phone charges (Score:2, Informative)
Because if you had, you would know that the phone company doesn't want to "jack up prices" to cover the costs. Or the "supposed" costs as you say (you doubt that there are real costs involved?).
But the country's largest phone company believes that telecommunications firms and law-enforcement agencies, not subscribers, should split the costs.
"We think there should be more of a partnership between the agencies and us, rather than getting the public to pay for i
Re:misc phone charges (Score:5, Insightful)
wages? - already paid for
training? - already paid for
phone lines? - already paid for
equipment? - already paid for
what the fuck needs paying for that the police don't already do/have?
is "police uniform tax" going to turn up on all my clothes next?
"police car" tax on cars?
"police car petrol" tax on petrol?
wiretapping has been going on for decades without needing a special tax. now the police have more powers than ever so it should be even cheaper. this is bullshit.
Not a chance (Score:5, Insightful)
BS. Law enforcement is publically funded. If it's not funded enough, fine; we the voters will think about giving you more money. But making an end run around the process just because law enforcement in the new millenium is sooo expensive, thereby giving them a cash flow that actually encouragesthem to wiretap frivolously, is not an appropriate solution.
Re:Not a chance (Score:5, Interesting)
If it's not funded enough, fine; we the voters will think about giving you more money.
The common response to this is that it's way too expensive to take this route, because building all of the wiretapping infrastructure will cost hundreds of millions of dollars. We'd have to double the law enforcement budgets if they had to pay to build this infrastructure themselves.
However, that just raises the question of whether or not wiretapping infrastructure is a good way to spend our law enforcement dollars. All privacy, etc., issues aside, wouldn't we be better off taking the same amount of money and using it to hire more/better cops?
Re:Not a chance (Score:4, Insightful)
Who should pay? (Score:2, Insightful)
This has already happened to the airline industry, guess who is paying for the security tax7?
A no-registration version (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A no-registration version (Score:2)
This policy makes more sense than all the other news sites make you register just to read one article even though you'll probably never read their site again. Fortunate for those, there is bugmenot.com [bugmenot.com].
Bent over a barrel AND being charged barrel rent (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Chinese bullets (Score:2)
And that's what's so wonderful about Western-style socialism, as opposed to Chinese socialism! In Western socialist nations, everyone shares the cost!
From the article:
Taxpayers pay anyway (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Taxpayers pay anyway (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Taxpayers pay anyway (Score:2)
at least they're being honest about it (Score:5, Insightful)
And with a burden shared equivalently by all carriers in this age of record corporate profits, who is going to pay for that? You will, but there will be no line-item on your bill letting you know. Just an across-the-board price hike.
OT and in reference to your sig (Score:2)
Did the author of that page (or you) ever consider the president BEFORE the one who posted all those gains? 4 years makes a difference, but not a huge one. We're still seeing backlash from things Clinton and even the first Bush did. Get a clue.
This reminds me of China (Score:4, Funny)
On the other hand, who am I to talk, as the Netherlands is the country with the most wiretaps in the world annually, or at least the most open about the amount they wiretap.
In Canada, we pay for everything (Score:5, Informative)
On top of this, there is also a $2.95 Telus long distance administration charge. This charge I'm told is for using Telus's long distance service, regardless if I make any long distance calls. I hear that if I switch long distance carriers, this administration charge increases.
They could easily add a $0.25 "security enhancement" charge to my phone bill.
Re:In Canada, we pay for everything (Score:2)
Re:In Canada, we pay for everything (Score:2)
Here's Your Receipt (Score:4, Funny)
MRS. BUTTLE: Thank you. And this is my receipt for your receipt.
(sigh)
Blockwars [blockwars.com]: free, multiplayer, Tetris like game
Hey, uh, I've got a surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
Duh.
Free? (Score:2)
Brazil (Score:3, Funny)
that's exactly what I thought (Score:3, Insightful)
User pays system (Score:5, Funny)
That actually happend.. (Score:2, Informative)
Some customers of the mobile phone provider "O2" got bills with a lot of "outgoing voicemail" connections to one certain telephone number.
That number was used by the authorities to record the customers calls - so warning the suspects that they were under observation.
According to some spokesperson of "O2" the reason was an erroneous software update.
Two year old (german)article [heise.de] at heise.de and a follow up [heise.de].
Waste-not-want-not (Score:4, Funny)
The cost may keep the number of taps down. (Score:5, Insightful)
Big deal - no real news. (Score:5, Funny)
This is very nice for the authorities, as they could have a system built to their spec but not pay a single cent for it.
What is interesting is that some time ago, a large German telco made a mistake and billed several customers for the wiretapping (their detailed phonebill showed lots of connections to a number where the calls were presumably forwarded to).
Obviously, the authorities were not amused at all.
It has not happened again since
Rainer
Isn't it obvious? (Score:3, Funny)
Fire Grue as the spokesmen (Score:2, Interesting)
"We're thinking, amongst ourselves, 25 cents. Whether that would cover off all the costs, we don't know. We haven't done the analysis on it," Supt. Grue said.
What a maroon.
ridiculous (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't see why i should have to buy anything but what I want to buy... which is commmunication with family, friends, government, and businesses. Telcom's should not be forced to offer 'services' like this at all, they should only be motivated to offer services that benefit and attract customers.
If the country thinks they should be using wire taps that is totally separate, and the budget certainly does exist.
Secure VoIP (Score:5, Insightful)
Really?
Allow me to post something that I wrote last time Slashdot ran a "tapping VoIP" article:
Whoever thinks that they are going to wiretap all VoIP networks at the FBI is living in dreamland. Let's take a brief look at a quick VoIP system that I'm going to design. I'll even publish the source code, right here on Slashdot. It will take me a few seconds to write:
#!/bin/bash
# smallvoip.sh
# VoIP software capable of bypassing FBI wiretap regulations.
# Warning: use or posession of this software may be a federal crime in the United States of America. Download this software at your own risk.
# Copyright 2004, 0x0d0a, released under the GPL
# Usage: smallvoip remote-username remote-ip-address
# You must have a shell account on the remote machine.
# Run on each of the two machines involved in the call.
# Duplex audio support required.
# TODO: pass through lame or oggenc for better bandwidth usage. This will make the second line slightly longer.
# LIMITATIONS: only one user per host at once
# I recommend setting up public-key ssh authentication with this software.
nc -l -p 7001 >/dev/dsp &
ssh -R 7000:`hostname`:7001 $1@$2 "cat
Hmm. My high-security, encrypted Internet phone doing VoIP.
Now, I have to ask the people in charge of Homeland Security: do you really, truly, honestly think that you have *any* hope of keeping anyone from writing such a two-line program? Any *IX user with a bit of experience could write this piece of software and distribute it to the world. In addition, the fact that it contains voice data is essentially undetectable to the outside world, so there is no practical way to "catch" someone using such a system.
It is true that this is a very simple program, but it can also be very easily extended into a full-blown encrypted voice communication program, without the minor limitations here that make this annoying for day-to-day use. In addition, there are a vast number of extant Internet systems for communicating that cannot be wiretapped by the FBI -- PGP/GPG contains no back doors to allow wiretapping of email communications. Frost (on the Freenet platform) can disguise the very fact that an association exists between two users. These systems are rarely used, but they are also not hard to deploy, and if the FBI insists on forcing conventional voice communication to be breakable, there is little incentive not to use systems such as the one that I have demonstrated here.
Re:Secure VoIP (Score:3, Insightful)
Prosecutor: "Your Honor, the prosecution enters into evidence this encrypted VoIP stream, which originated from the defendant's computer, at the date and time of foo."
Judge: "So entered."
Prosecutor: "Mr. Defendant, what is your encryption key?"
You: "Um....."
Judge: "I'll remind you that not disclosing it instantly lands
At least they're telling you up front (Score:2)
An individual line item for $0.25 on your bill --- "Security Surcharge - $0.25"
or
"Due to increased operating costs, we're changing the base rate for standard phone service from $18.45 to $18.70"
or
"Police budget will increase this year by $600,000 dollars. Most of this increase will be used to create two new officer position, specifically targeted at electronic crime prevention. The rest will be used for their network infrastructure."
Doublespeak (Score:5, Insightful)
The company -- Bell Canada -- is doing a nice job of saying that it's concerned for the customer. Doesn't want to increase costs covered by the customer,
But what they mean is that (a) they don't want the customer to see this charge as part of their Bell Canada (TM) phone bill; AND (b) they don't want to cover the costs for processing that charge...
But mostly Bell Canada doesn't want to be seen as the SOURCE of this cost. Which is completely understandable AND completely fair. This is not a charge related to upgrading their network or switches or
Grue doesn't want to have to justify the costs to the public and so that's why he wants to just pass it onto them under the auspices of the phone company, always an easy villian (behemoth,
As every
At least the phone company says it's willing to split the costs: half coming from LE, half from the phoneco itself; whereas LE just wants to charge everyone a quarter b/c, as Grue says, that seems about right (next breath he says that he hadn't done the analysis on those numbers yet--whatever).
Wasn't this in the movie Brazil... (Score:2)
Oh, no, there you just paid for your own police interrogation.
Ideal vs. Reality (Score:2)
So, who has been paying for phone taps all along? (Score:2)
What the article does not say is that the costs at issue really concern access to Internet email and services from an attempt to modernize wiretapping regulations (the Liberal governement originally proposed these changes two years ago). There must already exist an infrastructure for tapping wireline and wireless phone calls since police have been doing this fo
User pays (Score:3, Funny)
To be fair, they should only add the levy to the phone bills of people who are being wiretapped.
"Future Jail Surcharge" (Score:5, Insightful)
The next thing you know we'll start seeing a "Future Jail Surcharge" explicitly on your taxes -- viewed as an investment in "your possible future incarceration."
Beware the Bureacracy Factor (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't think it could happen? More than once, a friend of mine who compiles crime statistics was pressured by his female boss to massage the numbers for domestic violence cases because that is her pet peeve. She couldn't flat out say to change the numbers but it was clear what she wanted, especially after several years of this. He ended up reclassifying certain types of cases that had never been counted under DV before. Presumably she wanted to show an increased need for funding either for her own satisfaction or as a political favor to the director of that program.
I guarantee you that if someone can bump up their headcount or budget by doing more wiretaps then more and more wiretaps will get performed regardless of the true need. Peace. Big Brother loves you.
Fun with the news (Score:3, Funny)
It is about 10:45 in the morning in an undisclosed city. The apartment is worn down and the furniture mostly consists of milk crates and things found outside of construction sites, much like your typical bachelor pad. A man stands in the midst of the room, knee deep in his shag carpet with a bill in one hand and a phone in the other pressed tightly up against his ear. He appears to be in his late twenties with about five days growth of beard, he taps his foot impatiently as he stands staring hard at the bill, as if that would make the inscrutable charges vanish. The line picks up...
Operator: Hello, this is [phone company x], how can we help you?
Man: Yes, I have a question about an item on my phone bill.
Operator: I'm sure that you do sir, or else you wouldn't be calling us. Could you tell me what the item is?
Man: Yeah, it's a twenty-five cent surcharge with the code WT next to it.
Operator (Pauses for a moment): According to our records, that's supposed to be there.
Man: (Confused) But what is it, I'm looking at last month's bill and it isn't there.
Operator (again pauses, some typing can be heard): Yes, the charge was added this month.
Man (a little upset): Yes, but for what.
Operator (pausing once again, and letting out a loud sigh): For the wiretap sir.
Man (really upset): The wiretap?
Operator: Yes sir, the wiretap that the Feds put on your phone last month to monitor you.
The man then hangs up the phone, tossing it casually onto the couch. He then goes into the kitchen and grabs a bite to eat.
Of course that's a bit of an exaggeration, the phone company is never that helpful. All right, so this was mostly a joke, deal.
Here's what I wrote my Member of Parliament (Score:4, Insightful)
I recently read the following article online in the Globe & Mail web site and am quite concerned.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servle
I believe that funding for wiretapping costs should be provided according to the cost-sharing plan that Bell Canada and others propose. There are a number of reasons why I feel their proposal is attractive:
While I sometimes don't agree with some of your stances, I did vote for you in the last election because I felt that, in spite of the scandals the Liberals have had recently, Liberal policy was better than the alternatives available. I hope you will seriously consider this input from one of your constituents.
Sincerely yours,
Paul-Andre Panon
Hey I know (Score:3, Insightful)
More reason to build a free encrypted internet based voice network. With surcharges, taxes, roaming fees, etc. It will either provide some much needed competition for the telecoms or at least give people an alternatives.
Though personally I think it should be designed with async in mind since its much more efficient to communicate asynchronously, IMO. Kinda like instant voice messaging..
And if it were p2p/distributed it would be more difficult for a central authority to request the ability to tap the connections, demand taxes/fees, etc. But governments will get away with anything they want as long as their citizens let them.
Where's the news? (Score:4, Insightful)
In the end, the consumer will always pay for being tapped. Some way or another....
I would prefer to have the costs explicitly listed on the bill. In that case consumers would see what enormous costs the tapping is causing and how little (compared to the costs) results we're getting.
Canada's police chiefs propose a surcharge of about 25 cents on monthly telephone and Internet bills to cover the cost of tapping into the communications of terrorists and other criminals
Allow me to laugh. We're not talking about 25 cents. Perhaps this are the costs the police needs to do the actual tapping. Currently providing the capability of tapping makes up 15% of your telco bill. Perhaps it is less for large telcos but for the averade city carrier (in germany) this figure is correct.
These costs will drive the concentration process in the telco and ISP business. New regulation in germany require ISPs to have email tapping equipment ready for use which must comply certain standards. Those costs 100.000+ $.
Regards, Martin
Fight back (Score:3, Interesting)
Armed with this information, use OpenBSD to set up firewalls with ALTQ packet prioritizing, PF stateful filtering and IPsec secure VPNs between all endpoints.
Setup Asterisk PBX' behind the firewalls and network them over the VPNs.
Now let them try to monitor your calls.
(No, this doesn't help with calls you terminate with an insecure 3rd party, like a VoIP provider gatewaying your calls out to the PSTN. The "P" in PSTN is for "Public", so you need to treat it as completely insecure and act accordingly.)
Re:nothing new (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What is this? (Score:5, Insightful)
oh that would be great if people would plan ahead and there would be a cheap way to exclude those not paying from getting the benefits(don't want to pay for keeping the roads in good shape? well, lose your ability to receive any goods transferred on those roads.. the point being that a system like that would ultimately suck because people are short sighted and can't see the connections between things that make their daily life possible).
Re:What is this? (Score:2)
If no one payed for social security disability, or food stamps, or he
Re:What is this? (Score:2)
Those programs are inefficient pyrmaid schemes which take more money from the taxpayers than they give back to the needy. By eliminating them we'd actually be doing society and the economy a favor by putting the money back in the hands of the locales that need it most. No long
Re:What is this? (Score:2)
As someone who actually grew up in the SOVIET RUSSIA, I would rather opt-out of this plan, really. The thinking that "society" has "rights", while "individual" only has "responsibilities" is a very dangerous (and *logically* totally unsupported!) proposition.
Paul B.
Re:What is this? (Score:2)
well something to that extend can already be done if you wish just by switching into a lesser giving lesser taking country, and paying the 50% you save in taxes directly for private health care, security, education and s