FCC Giving Veto Power to FBI Over VoIP? 289
An anonymous reader writes "In this article, the FCC reveals that if you're using VoIP products at your own behest then you may have personal legal requirements to provide the FBI with access to information they might want to intercept. Or to put it another way, using encryption with VoIP can prevent the FBI from implementing wire taps."
Loop (Score:5, Funny)
20 Read the existing slashdot comments here
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/28/1
30 Repost Comments here
welcome to (Score:2, Funny)
Re:welcome to (Score:2)
erhhh... wait
You have wrong... (Score:2, Funny)
I propose: "The People's Unified Democratic Republican Co-Prosperity Realm of America"
Re:welcome to (Score:2)
Re:Loop (Score:2)
20 Read the existing slashdot comments here
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/28/19 [slashdot.org] 30221&tid=158&tid=215
30 Repost Comments here
excellent! a dupe trifecta. There's something quite wrong, when you have 3 dupes in a row... and the duped articles are at most a day old...
Woot! (Score:3)
Re:Woot! (Score:2, Informative)
Are you sure this is a dupe? I cant find a previous version of this article anywhere. Want to post a link?
Until then, I guess we can say that "this post of yours is a dupe", right? I mean, you posted the wrong link
Re:Woot! (Score:2)
Yes, he is right. 3 dupes in a row. Congrats, Cowboy Neal!
See this one [slashdot.org] with the exact same article.
Another great day for Slashdot!
Dup city (Score:2)
(I was the Original Poster of the article that this is a dup of.)
Re:Loop (Score:2, Insightful)
In other words (Score:5, Funny)
no comment (Score:2, Troll)
"Subject to the needs of law enforcement" (Score:3, Insightful)
But what if you don't obey? (Score:5, Interesting)
Suppose I'm an evil person intent on doing evil things and I decide to communicate with my evil minions around the country using some sort of encrypted VOIP-type of thing that I had one of my evil minions put together.
Suppose further that the US Government gets wind of one of my nefarious schemes, goes to the appropriate judge, and gets a warrant to tap my Internet connection. They then discover that I'm using this encrypted VOIP thing.
What are they gonna do? Arrest me? On what charge? Using a service which is not "subject to the needs of law enforcement"? What's the penalty for that?
Are they going to drop me a note saying, "Hey, we can't understand what you're sending. Stop doing that."? Do they have the ISPs shut off the ports? What if I'm using port 80? Does the ISP drop me as a customer? Will there be some sort of federal "Do not let this guy use the Internet" list that ISPs have to check? What about "public" places, like Internet Cafes?
This is what I don't understand. What is "subject to the needs of law enforcement"? Can the Government decide that I don't need to use a service? If so, how do they block it? Again, if I assemble it myself, how will the government block it unless they stumble across it during an investigation? And if they block it afterwards, don't they think I'll suspect something?
This sounds like the FCC is trying to play both sides of the street. Yes, you can use whatever service you like, unless the cops don't like it. If they don't like it, something may or may not happen to you.
FCC 05-151 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:FCC 05-151 (Score:2)
Amazing what happens when the government says the cops can decide what progams my computer can run.
The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privacy. (Score:5, Informative)
So just let them search your house and tap your phone, its not like you can stop them and its not like anyone cares about the constitution anymore or privacy. For all the talk I hear on slashdot, none of you actually care about privacy or the constitution. If you do, then prove it and defend the constitution.
See for yourself how you can defend the constitution if you actually care about it. Save the constitution [defconamerica.org]
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:5, Insightful)
The idea seems to be that the courts should be able to authorize wiretapping of any media regardless of whether it is a traditional phone system or a VOIP connection over a public network.
Or how about someone using VOIP on a corporate intranet via a VPN? I would assume that these are explitly not covered? Especially if we are talking IPSec/GRE tunnels with traffic running through them. All law enforcement would know by tapping your broadband provider is that you are logged into the corporate VPN and that there is traffic going back and forth. You would not even know where the call was going or even that it was a call.
The second question is far more tricky.... Imagine that someone sets up some VOIP termination servers in a non-extradition country like Belize. These require IPSec/GRE tunnels and have a client that will set things up for you. The goal is to have a free worldwide and secure system. It seems to me that this would be well beyond the FCC's juristiction. But this might well be the way that things develop.
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:2)
That's asinine (not you, their idea).
I believe I've heard it compared to the old law, "every horse-less carriage must be preceded by a person on foot holding a lantern to light the way." Yes, it worked in its time and aided society and our growth as a country. But if we tried to enforce that law today (if it's ev
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:2)
Plenty of people who would define themselves as moderates or liberals seem to be willing to give up much of their freedom if the request is phrased the right way.
Very few people seem to be concerned with losing their freedoms - though most don't realize what's possible just under current law.
And if you bring the subject up in public,
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:5, Interesting)
The first Supreme Court case tested wire taps in 1928 in fact found in favor of wire tapping, because
Here is a particularly important part on wire tapping. Justice Louis D. Brandeis was writing in the dissent in Olmstead v. United States (1928). His view would ultimately prevail years later and is now in grievous danger of being overturned again by a rising tide of Fascism in the U.S. :
"Whenever a telephone line is tapped, the privacy of the persons at both ends of the line is invaded, and all conversations between them on any subject, and although proper, confidential, and privileged, may be overheard. . . .
The makers of our Constitution undertook to secure conditions favorable to the pursuit of happiness. They recognized the significance of man's spiritual nature, of his feelings, and of his intellect. They knew that only a part of the pain, pleasure, and satisfactions of life are to be found in material things. They sought to protect Americans in their beliefs, their thoughts, their emotions and their sensations. They conferred, as against the Government, the right to be let alone - the most comprehensive of rights and the one most valued by civilized men. To protect that right, every unjustifiable intrusion by the Government upon the privacy of the individual, whatever the means employed, must be deemed a violation of the Fourth Amendment."
Its important to read this stuff these days. The right to privacy was the cornerstone of the confirmation hearing of our new Chief Justice Roberts, names like Olmstead and Griswold. There is a suspicion Judge Roberts appointment is designed to overturn all the cases affirming right to privacy, a right to not have your phone tapped, a right to abortions, a right to access birth control.
Religious fundamentalists banned birth control in Connecticut in the 19th century. When this law was challenged in 1965 in Griswold
J. Edgar Hoover used wire taps and his control of the FBI to accumulate vast amounts of dirt on anyone and everyone, and insured he held an iron grip on the helm of the FBI and in fact the U.S. in general for decades. No one would challenge him because he had dirt on everyone. He was the ultimate defiler of the right to privacy. With modern techology and the collapse of our right to privacy thanks to fear mongering politicians the potential is great for the rise of new J. Edgars who are even more powerful and more dangerous. A leading candidate is George W's new National Intelligen Director, John Negroponte. He doesn't control the FBI he controls the CIA, the NSA and every spying resource the U.S. has now. Negroponte was infamous for supporting right wing death squads in Central America that did Fascism proud.
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:2)
I don't see how that deserves a "wait for it". I really don't see how a person owns the eletrons on a line once it leaves his or her property. And frankly, given today's access to encryption, that sort of ruling makes a lot more sense today than it did back then.
It's like communication on the
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:3, Insightful)
Do I stop owning the atoms in a piece of paper when the mail carrier picks it up? Does ownership have any bearing on the expected privacy of the content? Why should my message be any different whether I pay a mail carrier to pick it up and carry it to its destination, or a phone company, or an ISP?
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:5, Informative)
How about this for a deal, I'll learn to read if you learn to write.
This statement is best described as ambiguous. You might be saying if I knew how to read I would understand that there is no right to privacy, or you might be saying if I could read I would know there is an indisputable right to privacy.
If you read the link I provided or you watched the confirmation hearing for Chief Justice Roberts on CSPAN, you would understand there is a huge debate over whether there is a right to privacy and what its bounds are. The Supreme Court has decided both ways on whether wire tapping violates our Constitution or our right to privacy, ergo there IS a debate.
Me personally I hope there is such a right and our courts will uphold it and slap down all the politicians, law enforcement officers and bureaucrats who want to usurp it using fear mongering. Unfortunately we live in a complex society. There are no inalienable rights that we can take as a given. The only rights we have are the ones we successfully fight to preserve. If we let a group of people seize control of the White House and Congress who have no regard for the rights of individuals and who are power mad, they can stack the courts to their liking and they can do whatever they feel like with our rights.
"Next overrated troll."
Next anonymous coward who can't make a coherent argument and who resorts to ad hominem attacks instead. Why don't you try making a coherent argument next time.
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:3, Interesting)
Authoritarian capitalism, police state, no due process, dominated by one party which suffocates all opposition. It maintains a facade of capitalism which differentiates it from Communism and authoritarian socialism. However rather than free markets the government and the party dominates all aspects of economic life that matter, and in particular intervene in economic affairs whenever it benefits and enriches favored party members.
A penchant for militarism
Re: (Score:2)
Re:The FBI now owns us. We have no right to privac (Score:2)
Here's another group [constitutionparty.com] that's trying to restore government according to the Constitution.
The supposedly "Constitution Party" looses it when as part of their beliefs they include "restore American jurisprudence to its original Biblical common-law foundations." Sticking religion into politics is a deal breaker. I much prefer the Libertarian Party [lp.org] who leaves religion up to each individual. If people want religion in politics they should try saying "In Buddha We Trust" or "In Goddess
With or Without a Warrant? (Score:5, Insightful)
If its *without* then we have a privacy/rights problem that needs to be taken to the supreme court.
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:3, Funny)
> If its *without* then we have a privacy/rights problem that needs to be taken to the supreme court.
SING IT!
She's my FBI!
Tappin my phone, FCC's surprised,
FCC make the VOIP lines die,
Sweet FBI!
But seriously, what do 80s hair metal bands [warrantweb.net] have to do with it?
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:2, Interesting)
There is nothing in the Constitution that authorizes the government to compell a person to testify against themselves. That includes providing encyption keys.
If the a policeman can prove to a judge that a search is needed, they can search. There is nothing in our Constitution that says that search must be successful, and much that says individuals have the absolute right to deny success by denying information.
Yet another reason our government is a cancer on the Constitution.
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:3, Interesting)
Can someone not be prosecuted for obstruction of justice in their own case? (I do realize you were talking about the Constitution..)
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:2)
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:2)
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:2)
Basically, the FBI is saying that it can't hack the encryption (or at least shouldn't have to). Basically, I don't think that we should have to trust that the government will use this power only for good. There is always
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:3, Insightful)
Habib: Hello? Hello? This is Mr. Smith.
Achmed: Good evening, Mr. Smith. This is Mr. Jones. The finger is in the apple pie, and the panties are blue. Again, the panties are
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:2)
A far better way is to pick normal sounding expressions:
Terrorist A: Hello?
Terrorist B: Hey Joe! Me and the guys were going to go to the movies tonight?
(translation: our terrorist cell has been activated - had the intent been to arrange a movie night the phrase "go to a show" would have been used)
Terrorist A: OK, what and when?
Terrorist B: That new
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:2)
Regardless, the Feds are using the looming threat of terrorism to frighten us into accepting further erosion of our civil liberties and allowing unlimited wiretapping. Actually, it's pretty much just being rammed down our collective throats. What I was trying to point out was that simply listening to a conversation doesn't implicitly grant understanding, and that one would expect these people to take steps to avoid det
Re:With or Without a Warrant? (Score:2)
What rights on-line? (Score:5, Insightful)
Since I'm bored (Score:3, Insightful)
If you are using them to describe a situation of social permissivness, then it would be liberal. Liberal social laws would be ones where people have the most freedoms possible, whereas conservative ones would be the least freedoms possible.
If you are suing them to describe legal changes, then conservative. A liberal view would be a progressive one, that laws sh
Re:Since I'm bored (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What rights on-line? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What rights on-line? (Score:2)
sounds worse than that.
sounds like they are heading in a direction where using a program across state lines could be illegal. I'm conservative enought that I'm usualy considered a Nazi on /. and this seems like seriously spooky shit to me.
Re:What rights on-line? (Score:2)
Last week's Court or next week's Court?
To phrase it in succinct Neocon: "Where does the Constitution talk about VoIP?"
In our new conservatism, we don't want an "activist court" that writes in freedoms to technology the founding fathers wouldn't have envisoned, now do we? So in all such things, I assume we are now so screwed.
Two Things (Score:5, Funny)
2) Very apropos quote at bottom of the page:
"Increased knowledge will help you now. Have mate's phone bugged."
3) I have trouble with limits.
Re:Two Things (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, it runs on Veto Power(tm).
Some links to get you started (Score:5, Informative)
IPSec Howto (for transparently encrypted VPNs to secure your private VOIP system) [ipsec-howto.org]
How Come This Only Applies To Voice? (Score:2, Insightful)
Why is VOIP different than other kinds of data? It is sent over the same medium.
Re:How Come This Only Applies To Voice? (Score:2)
Indeed, in the US, telephone service and data service are regulated very differently. At the present time, the FCC appears to me to be making its distinctions based on some basic attributes of the service that is being sold: if the service uses numbers from the North American numbering plan for telephone service (eg, 303.555.1212) or some other country's telephone numbering plan, and interconnects with the publi
It makes sense (Score:2, Insightful)
Did they have the FBI PR guy give the "if you haven't done anything wrong, then you should have nothing to hide" defense yet?
Re:It makes sense (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, this is generally the extreme view on the whole privacy issue, which (unfortunately) makes your point impotent.
If given the option would the FBI monitor all calls made by everyone in the US? That's absurd. There isn't enough man-power to do that. Even if you have computers monitoring calls, there'd still be enough data from that digested version to drown-out any effort.
People's reaction to this
Re:It makes sense (Score:2)
No. Without even getting into the fact that the FBI spends almost none of its time dealing with the three crimes the US government is Constitutionally allowed to investigate (counterfeiting, piracy, and treason), I would rather that they have to break encryption to listen in on phone calls. One of the "rules" they now have about wiretaps is that if the
What the fuck? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What the fuck? (Score:3, Interesting)
Nothing. People are, by and large, subservient cowards who will stand by and let fellow citizens be abused, allow themselves to be frightened by power-hungry governments, and well, just bloody well do what they're told. The American Revolution was a long time ago, and nobody particular remembers or cares to remember what got those guys so up in arms. Nearly half of America
Re:What the fuck? (Score:5, Insightful)
Paying attention and recognizing bullshit/corruption. And they need to quit thinking the enemy is "the other party," instead of the people in their own party that are taking advantage of them.
Re:What the fuck? (Score:2)
How? Vote for Clown A or Clown B in the next election? Print up flyers? Preach on soapboxes? Write our Congressmen? Telephone our Representative? Show up on the steps of the White House and protest?
We've all been doing that for decades. Here's a sad truth: We do not have the Government for our adversary. We have for our adversary the 51% who cruise along in their cushy lives in blissful ignorance of anything wrong.
Irony (Score:2, Insightful)
We have the right to know everything... We have the obligation to reveal Nothing.
It's for your own good!
(Your name is being added to a List)
Don't worry about it....
It's a pity eBay bought Skype (Score:2)
Re:It's a pity eBay bought Skype (Score:2)
Re:It's a pity eBay bought Skype (Score:2)
Um... waitaminute... (Score:2)
Can someone please explain to me exactly WHEN the FCC became a law-creation body?
I can't honestly believe that Congress would outsource THAT
Re:Um... waitaminute... (Score:2)
When the supreme court and congress started abusing the interstate commerce clause.
Re:Um... waitaminute... (Score:4, Informative)
1934. FDR outsourced a lot of Congress's job.
Bad apples (Score:5, Insightful)
I think that many of the laws that are put in place because of this are really overreaching, but on the other hand, if you were doing something illegal and found out that, starting the next day your phone was going to be tapped, you were going to be followed, and your every move was going to be scrutinized because law enforcement *thought* that you were doing someting illegal, you would most likely, overnight, come up with a game plan to make it look like you were just an ordinary law abiding citizen.
Sure there are people who abuse their power, and that is where the problem lies - it isn't necessarily with the law itself, its with the people who enforce the law thats the problem.
We in the US battle over whether its constitutional to have "under god" in the pledge of allegiance and whether "free speach" really means free speach.
Another analogy - corporations will (well, okay, they should) put a lot of time and effort into network security because it only takes one person on the inside, who has inside knowledge, to steal company data (whether it be customer data such as SSNs and credit card info or other confidential data). If everyone were trustworthy, there would be no need for network monitoring for threats. Likewise, if everyone were trustworthy and always obeyed the law and never did anything illegal, we wouldn't have all of these laws that dictate basically that we have no privacy anymore.
The problem is, how do you know before something bad happens who the bad people are?
great! (Score:2)
(yes, i know that's not really what it's about, but it's how all the summaries read)
And in news to hand ... (Score:4, Funny)
"We cannot bug all the backyard fences in America, so we'll just have to outlaw talking to the neighbors that way. Only authorised communication over interceptable devices can be permitted in a free society."
Fortunately, sociologists have confirmed that the universal failure of American couples to communicate, or even talk, during sex means that procreative activity will not have to be banned as well. The CIA confirmed that terrorists do their murderous acts because they are prevented from looking at wholesome bikini-clad girls - those secretive burqas hiding the female form are the true cause of extremism. "This is why our army in Iraq was trying to show the captured Iraqis that nakedness is good. I guess they just took it the wrong way", suggested an Army spokesperson.
"Only a terrorist would want free speech", added an FBI agent. "Encrypted VOIP is like wearing a burqa to hide a bomb."
And that's all the news (you're allowed to hear) from the Land of the Free.
What about POTS encryption? (Score:2)
Does anyone know off the top of their heads?
Re:What about POTS encryption? (Score:4, Informative)
Finally, the war on terror is won! (Score:5, Funny)
(Al Zawahri walks briskly into the cave where Osama Bin Laden is playing solitaire. Al is holding a printout from a CNet web page.)
Al: Osama! Look what the infidels have done! We cannot encrypt the holy warrior communication as planned. We must allow the cursed FBI to listen to our blessed instructions. What shall we do??
Osama: You make me sad this day. Allah has chosen to test us. Since we cannot possibly violate FCC regulation, we have no choice but to resort to manual couriers to communicate jihad instructions to our soldiers of freedom. Praise Allah, we will get our messages through.
Al: But do you not remember our cost estimates? We can't find enough holy warriors to handle all of our communication. We used the money to install air conditioning in the cave. We are doomed.
Osama: (After thinking). We have no choice but to shut down our operations once and for all. Curse the FBI and their unholy ways! Our jihad is over. (Raises fist in the air). Curse you George Bush! Curse you!
(Osama and Al pull off their robes and fake beards and put on business suits. Osama holds up a stuffed elephant and holds it up.)
Osama: They may have won the War On Terror with their infernal FCC regulations, but they will lose the War on Cheap Toy Imports! In America, big business is never regulated!
Al: Allah has shown us the way!
Pinch me - I'm dreaming!!! (Score:5, Funny)
#NB: For obvious reasons, the first option is ENABLED by default - remember to turn off if you are NOT responding to a dupe
[X] Another: [X] Dupe [ ] Slashvertisment [X] WTF [X] $editor is a dork [X] dupe trifecta is now in operation
[ ] Frist psot [ ] $link_to_GNAA [ ] $link_to_goatse [ ] $random_drivel
[ ] I Haven't RTFA, but... $random_opinionated_comment
[ ] Slashdotted already!. I bet their server runs on $topic_item too
[ ] Soul_sucking registration required
[ ] Mod Parent [ ] up [ ] Down
[ ] Fsck: [ ] SCO [ ] Micro$oft [ ] DMCA [ ] DRM [ ] MPAA [ ] RIAA [ ] Google [ ] Bush [ ] You all
[ ] I for one welcome our new $topic_item overlords
[ ] Imagine a beowulf cluster of those
[ ] In Soviet Russia, $topic_item owns you!
[X] Meh!
[ ] You must be new here!
[ ] Netcraft confirms $topic_item is: [ ] dead [ ] dying
[ ] But have the inventors thought of what will happen if $random_amateur_insight
[ ] Once again the USA is clamping down on my [ ] Amendment rights.
[ ] You insensitive clod
[ ] But people who download music from P2P networks are more likely to buy the
album
[ ] Cue DVD Jon-type crack in 3..2..1
[ ] Torrent, anyone?
[ ] Here's a link to a patch: $random_linux_distro_url
[ ] "Yeah, but does it run Linux?"; if($summary has 'linux') add "Oh, wait..."
[ ] Profit!!
[ ] Tinfoil hat at the ready
[ ] Still no cure for cancer
[ ] "()*%£^" No Carrier
Re:Pinch me - I'm dreaming!!! (Score:2)
Usable, but clumsy. Now, a PHP app that auto-generates a Slashdot reply to cut-n-paste would go well here. The unselected options in this form would clutter up the post.
pry my pgp from my dead hands (Score:2, Insightful)
We don't need no encryption (Score:2, Insightful)
Really, they can go in your house when you are not at home and leave no sign they were there, without any reason or warrant ("Patriot" Act)
Do you really think they will not leave a key stroke logger?
To much to try and track... so... (Score:2)
Tinfoil hat.... (Score:4, Funny)
consider the source (Score:3, Insightful)
So far, there is not even the slightest indication that the FCC either has the authority or the ability of regulating what you do on your PC. So, while the FCC may really intend something stupid with this rule, it probably doesn't matter; they might as well try to make and enforce FCC regulations against radio emissions from the sun.
Re:consider the source (Score:2)
"No person... shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself...."
Yes, they're proposing (and presently seeking comment) requiring VOIP providers with links to POTS lines to permit tapping of calls just as the landline folks do, but they're using the POTS interface as a separator between "big companies" and "little guys" and the little guys won't be required to comply. (At least that's wh
No Taxation without--er, sort of (Score:2, Insightful)
WHY SO COMPLICATED? (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps i should get an extra baby monitor for the FBI office, he seems to be sending me coded messages
If they really need a tap can't they just break in and put a bug in the handset or something? It wouldn't seem to matter what protocol it uses then. Don't they have like a 99+% chance of approval for a warrent if they ask? Of course i guess it would be much easier to have someone else do the legwork and listen to the tape at their convenience.
Why would the REALLY bad guys care if their comm program is approved? Make this a capital offense maybe so they would rather be busted for bombmaking?
The boys in DC bored this week or what?
Can you say: Power Trip?
Doesn't anybody see... (Score:3, Insightful)
What can you do:
1) Completely prevent the police from listening in on communication, which would probably have severe consequences for law enforcement?
2) Demand that users hand over their own encryption keys, thus informing them that they are under surveilance?
3) Demand that software adds a backdoor for police, with all the problems of jurisdiction and possiblities of abuse?
4) Demand that software adds a backdoor for themselves, so they can hand it over to the police? Even bigger possibilities for abuse.
5) Some sort of two-part system where session keys are kept in escrow. For example the police has the decryption key, the company the encrypted keys. Requires some for for central server to hodl the keys.
6) Outlaw encryption. Read: Impossible.
3), 4) and 5) don't work with OSS solutions. 5) doesn't work with a completely decentralized structure, maybe something like Skype can use it negotiating keys but not with software connecting peers directly. Also, this isn't new to VoIP, they have just a big problem finding out if someone trades kiddie porn over SFTP as they do with someone talking to their drug dealer using VoIP.
Kjella
Re:Doesn't anybody see... (Score:2)
How about (Score:2)
Of course you're still screwed if the people involved are talking Klingon or Tolkenese or something
Say goodbye to US Based VOIP software (Score:2)
Unless the US implements a 'great firewall', this will never work for catching people that really don't want to be caught.
Yeah right (Score:2)
I will damn any government representative that wants to spend my tax dollars building super-clusters to monitor my voice conversations... Besides that, they don't ha
Which is from the totalitarian regime? (Score:5, Insightful)
"consumers are entitled to run applications and use services of their choice, subject to the needs of law enforcement"
Old Joke (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Old Joke (Score:3, Funny)
I think you'd better switch to strong encryption, I understood the last part even though it was encrypted...
Re:Yet another wet-dream... (Score:5, Informative)
please. i know or have known lots of cops, and not one fits your mold. most cops would rather lock up criminals and leave the innocents alone. they've got a genuinely difficult job to do, and are competing with ever-increasingly advanced criminals. i think the wiretapping laws in the states are significantly more onerous than they should be, but painting cops as a bunch of fascists does absolutely nothing to help that problem, and in fact makes having an intelligent conversation about the issues more difficult. this certainly doesn't qualify as "Insightful".
Re:Yet another wet-dream... (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't believe anyone here is saying that most or even many cops would abuse this. The problem is that we're also enabling those few who _will_ be abusing this power.
Re:Yet another wet-dream... (Score:2, Insightful)
The minority I'm thinking of, and I'm sure there is at least one cop who fits this description (Oh, I donno, J Edgar Hoover comes to mind for some reason) will take any action they wish to. If the action is illegal, at least we can kick them in the ass when we find out. If there's no limit o
Re:Yet another wet-dream... (Score:4, Interesting)
Thats not generally a flaw in most people, but the prejudices involved do affect they way they do thier job.
However, the real question is, do you know or have known lots of cops *in a professional capacity"? Because let me tell you, the way cops act when they're "on the job" is totally different from what they'll do hanging out at a bar. Especially when they think you're a criminal. Cops tend to trust thier gut feeling about this sort of thing, which is notoriously unreliable, and since oversight of police is pretty much non existant except in major cases, people just let stuff like illegal or unfounded stops or searches go. Insisting on your rights to a cop who stops you, by the way, is a great way to spend a night in jail. I don't think cops are neccesarily bad people, but they are human, and the circumstances of the job lend themselves to that sort of petty powermongering, just like DMV clerks. Which is why we need extensive oversight, more money and support, including therapy, for officers, and systemic work to try to break up the club atmosphere that forms that "blue wall". The military has exactly the same problem, but it doesn't affect citizens as much because the military isn't used as a policing force very often. Of course, if current trends continue, that may change. And can I take an aside to point out how ridiculous that someone calling themselves a conservative is even *thinking* about having the military take a larger roll in civilian affairs?
Re:Yet another wet-dream... (Score:2)
Yeah, and it doesn't help that they're generally dumb as a chair.
Re:Land of the Free? (Score:2, Interesting)
What so proudly we hailed at human rights last gleaming?
Whose broad stripes and and bright stars, will burn in the night,
O'er ramparts unwatched, were so tragically leaking?
Re:Great... (Score:3, Insightful)
the only downside is, is that the US and UK passed 1984 about 50 years ago.
to assume we're approaching it is to assume that MS will one day soon use their monopoly power to do illegal things.
Re:Great... (Score:3, Funny)
-Tez
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Re:No what they should do is just search our house (Score:2)
Re:No what they should do is just search our house (Score:2)
I agree completely. Hand 'em over the computer, tell them you once had consensual anal sex with your wife, that you actually taped the Janet Jackson nipple reveal, that you smoked a joint in college, that you actually said something less than flattering about the President, th
Re:The times, they ain't a changing (Score:2)