ACLU Launches Echelonwatch 77
coldfusion writes "The American Civil Liberties Union in conjunction with EPIC and others has just launched Echelon Watch, a site which tracks developments about the intelligence gathering organization. The site does a good job of collating all of the information that has spread in the last few months. It also contains a 'write to Congress' component." Update: 11/17 09:30 by J : Baccus just informed us that the NSA has applied for a
patent
on Echelon-related (tapping) technology.
Okay (Score:4)
I think I have officially lost my mind. I'll be back in a bit.
Conspiracy (Score:1)
Hey, maybe the end really is near...
/. is falling behind (Score:1)
Re:Why don't they sue? (Score:1)
Also, Congress seems willing to look into putting an end to this, so I'd say it's a little early to be starting a lawsuit, especially given the evidence, or lack thereof.
ACLU's "Write you congressman" (Score:3)
Even so, if you are going to write your reps, I would suggest writing a snail-mail letter as well. The style in which you write it us up to you, and probably depends on the issue at hand. If it personally affects you, hand-written might be preferable. If that's too much of a pain, ACLU's free-fax system is Good Enough - better than doing nothing at all.
Man's unique agony as a species consists in his perpetual conflict between the desire to stand out and the need to blend in.
Re:Okay (Score:2)
a good echelon read.. (Score:3)
you may read the article here [hektik.org]
i hope you enjoy it.
tyler
GOOD! (Score:1)
If you think you know what the hell is really going on you're probably full of shit.
Re:Conspiracy (Score:4)
Throughout history groups of people, especially people in high places, have conspired to obtain power and wealth at the expense of others. Many of these conspiracies were exposed and are now well documented.
Why should that have suddenly stopped in the 1960s?
Now, any particular conspiracy theory may be bogus. But don't be surprised when some of them turn out to be true.
Of COURSE the government spy agencies spy on everybody they can. That's what government spy agencies DO.
Of COURSE corrupt politicians and bureaucrats have given such information to their business cronies. Of COURSE politicians and bureaucrats, corrupt or perhaps otherwise, have given the data to industries in their countries, to give them an advantage over foreign competition. That's government at work.
Of COURSE investigative agencies have targeted politically "troublesome" opposition groups. That's where the trouble comes from, right?
And get ready for the next "Of COURSE" revalations: How investigative and law enforcement organizations have used this information to engage in "dirty trick" campaigns against members of those out groups. "Dirty tricks" that may have turned out to be horrendously damaging and sometimes fatal. Did you think that stuff stopped after COINTELPRO?
Government is a disease masquerading as its own cure.
Well said (Score:1)
I was sorta wondering when they might get into the act.
Kythe
(Remove "x"'s from
When mailing your congressperson... (Score:3)
To The Honorable XXXXXXXXXX,
My friends in the MILITIA are concerned about the government's Echelon monitoring system. While were were making BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS for our JIHAD, OSAMA BIN-LADEN told me about this system. I was so surprised that I almost dropped my WEAPONS-GRADE PLUTONIUM into the vat of ANTHRAX. The government shoud not attempt to monitor the private communications of others, even if they're talking about VINCE FOSTER or HILLARY CLINTON. Thank you for your time.
Re:GOOD! (Score:1)
Re:Is the hot dog rotting? (Score:1)
rock on ACLU... (Score:1)
Re:When mailing your congressperson... (Score:1)
Re:Conspiracy (Score:1)
Re:Why don't they sue? (Score:1)
Don't be ridiculous. If some activity is ilegal for the government to engage in, it is also illegal for it to use data produced by somebody else doing the espionage. Besides, in this case, we're involved, too.
Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:5)
We've almost reached the point where it's less surprising to hear about a government agency that abuses its powers than it is to hear about one that doesn't. It's not just Echelon, either -- abuses abound; for example, CNN is reporting [cnn.com] that politicians of both parties regularly lean on the IRS to force audits of their political opponents. Now, I'm generally a politically liberal kinda guy, but in this kind of atmosphere it's not hard to understand why some people feel compelled to keep a firearm in their homes, just in case the Government decides to come after them.
Of course, stocking up arms for the End Times isn't a productive solution, either. It seems to me that the big problem here is that Americans don't have a clear right to privacy in their communications -- we only have patchwork protections from case law, which provides a legal gray area where the government can fit things like Echelon. So what can we, as citizens, do? Well, maybe we should amend the Fourth Amendment, which currently protects your private property from illegal government seizure, to extend to non-physical personal property (i.e. electronic communications) as well.
Currently, Amendment IV reads as follows:
I'd propose adding a few simple words (which I'll denote in bold):Now, IANAL, and I'm certainly willing to be flexible on the wording, but it seems to me that an addition along these lines could have many salutory effects:
Now, I'm generally not a fan of tinkering with the Constitution, which has worked remarkably well for 200+ years. But I'm simply amazed that something as obtrusive, as invasive, as downright un-American as Echelon isn't unconstitutional on its face. In an age of digital communications and restrictions on hard encryption, when it's orders of magnitude easier for the State to intrude on our privacy then it is for us to protect ourselves, I think that a right to privacy is every bit as important to our freedom as are the other rights we enumerate in the Bill of Rights. And if we have to wrest that right back from the state by enshrining it in the highest law of the land, then maybe it's time to do just that.
-- Jason A. Lefkowitz
Re:Why don't they sue? (Score:1)
My understanding is that no nation spys on its own citizens - they all spy on each others and share the results. Moral? No. Ethical? No. But when have those two concepts had anything to do with the law?
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Re:Conspiracy (Score:1)
: Eric T. F. Bat, DRE #1089 : ** DRE: Trust The Voices In Your Head. ***
Echelon awareness goes mainstream (Score:1)
It warms my heart to see that there are still people out there who actually care and are willing to try to change things. Maybe the world's not falling apart after all. :-)
Spying on own citizens. (Score:2)
Good, but could be better. (Score:2)
Congrats to ACLU for launching the Echelonwatch.
It is a good project, but it could be better.
Two suggestions:
1. Leave a space at the site, whereby visitors to the site can leave a message to those who administrating the site, with suggestions/comments - or at the very least, an email address where people can email them with questions and/or suggestions.
2. The site listed "intelligence" agencies for Europe, USA, Russia, Isreal and China, but it leaves out secret agencies from other equally dreaded countries such as Japan, Syria, Korea, Indonesia, Libya, Myanmar, Malaysia, Brazil, Singapore; And the site also didn't list the secret police (and hired mercs) working for organizations such as the PLO (Palestinian Liberation Organization), or the Talibans of Afghanistan.
The fact that I have to leave suggestions over here, and not over ACLU's site means that the site could use an improvement or two.
My hope is someone from ACLU would read this and pass my suggestions to the people who run the Echelonwatch. The site is too valuable for all, and it can be even more valuable if it is made a little bit more user-friendly, and have a wider-ranging coverage.
Thanks.
Re:When mailing your congressperson... (Score:2)
A couple years ago, I found a document from the heavensgate cult people and I found it so amusing that I posted it to a newsgroup at my college. A year later, they all committed suicide and the Associated Press somehow looked up my parents and called them and asked them if I was still alive, operating under the mistaken assumption that since I posted one of their documents I was obviously a self-castrating suicidal maniac. I can't imagine what the result would have been if I'd also posted something anti-government in the same post..
Anyway, let them intercept my transmissions, then the UK can tell the US about all the porn i've been downloading.
What we *really* need... (Score:1)
So, what we need is even a tiny leak in the system. I mean, the gov. has no respect for your rights, have they any moral right to prevent you? When your constitution is trampled and the 'social contract' has become as one-sided as it is, do you have any obligation to obey? But I guess Big Brother is always right after all, citizen.
But the real problem is why they want to spy. The answer lies in the great Orwellian phrase 'thoughtcrime'. If you start mentioning Iraq, biological weapons, smuggling, whatever, you can bet on someone showing up on your door if Echelon really does (has) take(n) off. Why? Not because you did anything, but because of your thoughts, your expressions. When it becomes illegal to think, which is what the gov. seems to be aiming at, you can bet I'm moving to Antarctica. 'Freedom doesn't exist, it's only what you take'.
I sure hope they capture this with their billion dollar spy setup.
~~~~~~~~~
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:2)
It is wrong to enforce with violence that which can be ensured with intelligence.
The technology (intelligence) to stop ANYONE from imposing on your communication is there already. If you want to be sure that people are not imposing on your communications the choice is yours (see GPG, pgpPhone, etc). Making this a law (violence) can only be harmful, the effort is better spend allowing the technologies to mature and proliferate.
What worries me is when governments like the American attacks the use of intelligence with violence as the have in the Crypto issue.
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We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.
Re:Malaysia and other 'dreaded countries' (Score:1)
But, as my $0.02 worth, don't worry about our 'secret agencies' doing Echelon-type stuff - right now the technology here is so bad our ISPs lose entire server-loads of email for days on end - and I have wet dreams about 99% uptime!
Think about the consequences people... (Score:2)
Everybody seems to hate the government and everybody now seems to think that the NSA is the worst thing since AIDS. Alright, let's have every one and their mother write to their congressman to have the NSA just completely shutdown. Then every slimebag on the planet who hates the US will have absolutely nothing to fear. I mean, hey, the US won't have the slightest idea what will hit them. All the Russians, Iraqs, Cambodians, Chinese, Pakistanis, etc. will just have to go to Radio Shack, buy a digital phone and nobody can hear them. Then, they can sit right outside of the White House, plan a conspiracy against the government, kill the president, bomb and kill a ton on innocent people who have nothing to do with it, and then what are we going to say??? Any guesses...oh yeah, that's right...Where was the NSA??? Pooh hooo hooo. How come we didn't see it coming, how come nobody warned us...Pooh hoo hooo. So let's understand that the NSA is there to protect Americans from threats both foreign and domestic and there job is to spy and break codes.
Let's remember, we wouldn't have won WWII without the NSA and their British counterpart...wasn't something of that nature on
I remember the dishes... (Score:1)
The radomes look exactly like the pictures show, and they're huge. You can see them from very far distances.
The radomes and office buildings were closed off from the rest of the base (with the school, AAFES market, Officers' Club, housing, etc.) but I remember seeing them every day.
It's been ten years since I was last there and I remember so many things about Menwith Hill...it was a great place to live.
Re:I remember the dishes... (Score:1)
Re:Think about the consequences people... (Score:1)
//rdj
Echelon....come on now (Score:1)
There are 3 kinds of people in today's world. The kind that can count and the kind that can't.
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:1)
This is actually quite elitist. I see what you're getting at, but this requires that you go to the effort to make sure that you're communications are private which assumes:
Now, that's two BIG assumptions and very little protection for the vast majority who simply don't think about this sort of thing and who are those at greatest need of protection. Far better to make this sort of thing illegal without very good reason - similar to search warrants in principle.
An interesting question re: whether this could be bypassed by getting foreign intelligence services to do the monitoring though. That's horribly against the spirit of the proposal, but a thought:
The original amendment only covered the US government and their agencies (to my eyes, anyway) simply as there wasn't a practical risk of them calling in (say) the Canadian police and getting them to perform the search. Even if they could legally without being authorised by the US police, at which point they'd come under their jurisdiction and regulations anway?
Anyway, this isn't the case with phones and it certainly isn't the case with the Internet. Could the amended amendment therefore be modified to:
This is getting rather chewy but it's my best effort at covering this one.
DISCLAIMER: I'm British, not a lawyer and don't automatically agree with all of the US constitution and its subsequent amendments. This one does make sense, though. I'm also happy if anyone wants to moan at me for interference in foreign politics, though I'd consider this a proposal for a similar law in the UK if we haven't already got one that I hadn't noticed.
Greg
hmm (Score:1)
Re:Is the hot dog rotting? (Score:1)
The old grey for Ask Slashdot was alright - a bit tricky to read, but not too offensive. But the current YRO and BSD colourschemes (may well be others, these are just the ones I've noticed) are downright offensive and should be pulled ASAP.
IMHO
Greg
Congratulations! (Score:1)
Greg
glad someone distracted the ACLU with this, (Score:1)
Note to eschelon, be scared. The ACLU is on your ass now. Best to just give up now.
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:1)
How does guaranteeing one's right to privacy equate to violence? Americans currently enjoy a range of Constitutional protections against government abuse. Amendment I guarantees that the government can't shut you up based on your viewpoints, and can't prohibit you from worshipping whatever deity you prefer. Amendment II guarantees that you can have the means to defend yourself should the government attempt to illegitimately impose its will upon you. Amendment III guarantees that the government can't seize your property for purposes of national security. Amendment IV guarantees that the government can't seize or search your personal effects without a warrant and probable cause to suspect you of having committing a crime. And on and on and on. These are not your average laws which are aimed at regulating the behavior of Joe Citizen through government sanction -- these are aimed at regulating the behavior of Big Brother by posting for all to see the list of things that he isn't allowed to do!
How does this equate to doing violence? It seems to me that it prevents violence. Don't forget that, in many countries where the citizens don't enjoy specific written protections such as these, the only recourse against government abuse is to take up arms. We have the option of giving the government a good smack upside the head in the court system, which seems like a much more healthy way to run a country to me.
And to presume that "intelligence" can preserve your security against these threats is silly and naive. Do you honestly believe that PGPfone will protect you if the National Security Agency decides they want to listen to your phone calls? Remember, no encryption scheme is perfect and every cypher can be broken given that enough resources (man-hours and computing power) are thrown at it. And the NSA can bring a colossal amount of resources to bear on the problem of getting around the defenses you "intelligently" mount -- a much larger amount than you, as someone who presumably has some job in life other than encrypting all your communications, can muster. Not to mention the snooty elitism of assuming that it's somehow OK if the government listens to private communications as long as it's only those dumb people who don't know how to set up PGP (in other words, about 98% of the population) who are affected.
I know that you're trying to articulate a libertarian viewpoint, but it seems like you're taking it to a ridiculous extreme. If you're truly a libertarian you should love the Bill of Rights. You should memorize the thing! It's not some silly law taking your freedoms away -- it's guaranteeing your freedoms, right there in writing! And how can it be bad, from a libertarian standpoint, to add "privacy" to the list of specificially protected freedoms?
-- Jason A. Lefkowitz
correct Three Letter Agency (TLA)? (Score:1)
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Re:/. is falling behind (Score:2)
Anyone know if you can force Win95 to take the old 3.1 schemes? Or does that take a major tweak? (I'm not a Win guy.)
Re:Think about the consequences people... (Score:1)
Governments, like corporations and individuals, have the reputations they earn by their conduct.
All the Russians, Iraqs, Cambodians, Chinese, Pakistanis, etc. will just have to go to Radio Shack, buy a digital phone and nobody can hear them.
Criminals, by definition, do not obey laws. Laws restricting privacy, by definition, violate only the privacy of law-abiding people. This lesson has been brought to you by the letters "N", "S", and "A".
Let's remember, we wouldn't have won WWII without the NSA
You mean the techcorp in Timeline is really an NSA front?
Let's think as people and as a nation about something as important as national security before everyone goes shooting their mouths off.
I think about something even more important: the Constitution. Lose that, and national security becomes irrelevant; it will matter naught whether the bandits who rule you are based in Washington or elsewhere.
I wrote a letter to my senator and congressmen in support of Echelon and the NSA, and I think you should also.
By all means, write your senators and congressman, pointing out that somebody who doesn't know which one comes one to a district and which one comes two to a state is hardly likely to bother showing up at the polls.
Stupid People Shouldn't Breed
The unintentionally hilarious .sigs are always the best.
/.
We need Big Brother! (Score:1)
Save ourselves (Score:2)
The many various little consumer advocacy/corporate/government watchdog groups are a beginning to this kind of self-defensive reaction, but they will have to cooperate with each other in the same way that the government agencies & the big corporate lobbies do in order to be truly effective.
While it's true that those agencies & lobbies have a LOT more money than any of the advocacy groups, almost by definition there are a LOT more of us "non-rich" people than otherwise, and if there was more cooperation going on, we could provide enough balance to their power to keep them from running amuck.
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:1)
He has been one of the opponents of the CDA since day 1. Perhaps we should bring something from Slashdot to the Senate floor. Wouldn't Taco be proud??
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:2)
I find your idea of what is elitist deeply disturbing. By extension, anything that gives the person willing to think and work towards an end an advantage over he who doesn't is elitist. It figures you are European (disclaimer: so am I) because this is a very Euro-Socialist way of thinking.
Personally, I find your attitude towards this arrogant. I do not presume myself to be any more intelligent than most people, and I don't give myself the right to decide who of the stupid people(sic) is most in need of my forcing protection on them. The "vast majority who do not think about these issues" do so by choice, they are perfectly capable of behaving intelligently regarding issues that are important to them. It is not my place to tell them that privacy should be.
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We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.
Patenting Echelon? (Score:1)
Except maybe "SCO ridicules KDE and GNOME's disagreement about implementation of Microsoft's patented Echelon technology."
Did anyone else notice... (Score:1)
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Patents? Crap (Score:1)
Re:Why don't they sue? (Score:1)
Sometimes the term "legal," especially with respect to issues involving CIVIL matters, is somewhat subjective. Based on legal precedent, there are definite activities or behaviors that we can classify as "illegal" in the sense that they violate someone's rights (discrimination, for example). Here's the deal, though- it's not illegal until it's deemed as such by a court of law. Just because a court hasn't declared Echelon (or certain related activities) illegal, doesn't mean that this is something that will never happen. For one thing, due to Echelon's shroud of secrecy, the courts have never had the opportunity to make any such determination.
Listen up Listen up (Score:1)
What's so believable about terrorists, and so unbelievable about domestic violence (double pun intended).
Have we forgotten the Spanish American War, the Western Expansion, the McCarthy Era, Manzanar, Kent State, the gov't spying on Martin Luther King, NIXON.
You've been watching too much television. You have become a racist and a nationalist. You're the danger not the outside world.
"Computers should be
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:1)
The Constitution is designed as a framework for the Federal government. It explicitly states the powers and responsibilities of said government; the government cannot do anything that is not described therein. The Bill of Rights is tacked on at the end simply to ensure that no possible interpretation of the constitution could ever possibly infringe upon certain rights; but, those rights are not necessarily the only ones we have.
IIRC many of the signers of the constitution were strongly against having a Bill of Rights at all, because they knew that people would eventually acquire the meme that the Bill was an absolute statement of what rights they possess, instead of an assertion to a set of principles of which the Bill was a mere subset. Witness the people who claim the second amendment as an impediment to gun control for an excellent example of people who just don't "get" America.
In my first paragraph I say 'should be' instead of 'is' necessary because so many of these people exist. It may in the future become necessary to place more of the individual freedoms that seemed so apparent to our forefathers into concrete, to prevent people who subconsciously or consciously attack freedom from succeeding.
Scudder
Re:GOOD! (Score:1)
If you think you know what the hell is really going on you're probably full of shit.
Hmmm (Score:1)
Re:Think about the consequences people... (Score:1)
I see you probably read the History of World War II from the bottom of a Crispies packet.
I think you one the war because of the combined economic power of the United States and the Military strength of the Soviet Union (they had people dying like flies over there.)
What where American troop loses in WWII can you say 23 million people....... that's how many the Russians lost. Not to mention that a good section of the Middle East was liberated by Australian Light Horsemen and Infantry.
But that is right the only people who really won WWI where the United States.
Grow a brain you ignoramus read alittle history before you start frothing off at the mouth on topics that you have no idea about!!!
Re:Think about the consequences people... (Score:1)
I see you probably read the History of World War II from the bottom of a Crispies packet.
I think you one the war because of the combined economic power of the United States and the poulation strength of the Soviet Union (they had people dying like flies over there.)
What where American troop loses in WWII can you say 23 million people....... that's how many the Russians lost. Not to mention that a good section of the Middle East was liberated by Australian Light Horsemen and Infantry.
But that is right the only people who really won WWII where the United States.
Grow a brain you ignoramus read alittle history before you start frothing off at the mouth on topics that you have no idea about!!!
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:1)
Anyway, to get back to the main thrust of the argument, no, that's crazy. What you've just said is that it's better to only give the protection to the intelligent and computer literate. Which is discriminatory in the extreme and exactly why this sort of law is needed. There are plenty of people out there, blissfully ignorant of the threat of eavesdropping. You and I are paranoid souls who know very well what is possible and so can judge for ourselves whether we want the risks, but apply the mother test here: would you expect your mother to be have thought of this and then to know how to solve it? Sorry if this offends anyone as a test - purely that IME men tend to pick up computers more quickly than women, while the older generations tend to pick up more slowly full stop. Hence mothers are a fairly good test that most of us can use for a standard baseline user.
I don't presume myself to be automatically more intelligent than others either, but I do automatically regard myself as more computer literate than the average person based on simple experience. That isn't disciminatory in the least, nor arrogant as I'm not making claims to be the best, merely above average. Considering I'm a Computer Science undergraduate with A-level and GCSE computer qualifications, I think I'm justified in making that claim. Now, I say again - you and I know what we're doing broadly. Our very presence on this site suggests that as a possibility, certainly our participation in this thread suggests marginally more knowledge about this sort of topic than most. Would we gain from this sort of rule? Sure, everyone would. Our gain would be less, though, as we're more capable of using the available barrier technologies. But imagine your example average user again. Do they know this sort of thing is possible? Unlikely, based on my experience. Are they going to know what to do to protect themselves, should they desire such protection? Equally unlikely.I'm sorry if you think I'm being elitist or arrogant here - I'd consider that I'm mostly trying to defend civil liberties, and this seems to be a way to do it. You, on the other hand, are suggesting that the government and their agencies should be permitted to eavesdrop on our private communications whenever they want for whatever purpose they want, and it's up to us to protect ourselves should we desire. Which I would see as being on a similar level to suggesting that we abolish the police force and hire private security to cover ourselves, though on a knowledge rather than financial elite.
Sorry, but this attitude is repugnant to me and suggests that you simply haven't thought this one through properly - or that you are so blinkered that you don't understand the average user.
Greg
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:2)
Don't underestimate the market. Were there a broad public interest in secure communications, it would not be as difficult to send secure email as it is today. You cannot get around the fact that the problem here is not one of computer litteracy but one of attitude, people just don't care. Maybe that is because they are under the illusion that they are not being spied on, but my suggestion of simply ending the hypocracy on this subject goes a lot farther towards solving that then passing another, unenforceable, law.
I made my mother get an account on Hushmail so I could communicate with at least moderate security (of course she is using an export netscape, so) for discussing matters that call for it. She had absolutely no problem doing that, but we continue using normal email for most communications, because we just don't care if people are reading.
As for me, I do not agree that I would have anything to gain from it. Another hypocritical unenforceable law for our overbaring behemoth governments to not give a shit about, is not something I consider positive.
In theory, I do believe that (private security over authoritarian forced upon policing), but I am also pragmatic in my anarchism. I am not naive enough to believe that we can just tear down the disfunctional mal-implemented system of society we have built around us (sort of like a bad routine in software, it isn't working but instead of fixing it we have implemented exception after conditional after hack for every new problem) and expect that something new and working would pop instead. But that does not mean I cannot say no to further movement in the direction of laws to patronise over us rather than being honest and giving the individual responsibility (and don't fool yourself: responsibility == freedom) in a matter where it is so readily available.
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We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:2)
It might explain why we're having this argument, though, if you would dismantle official law enforcement structures and require us all to make our own provisions. Which is exactly what we have on this issue ATM and exactly what I was opposing, simply as it means you only get rights and protection for an elite. Not good.
No, I really don't see that parallel in the least. I can accept that you don't like this law, but responsibility == freedom and freedom always being best? No way. While we live in a society governed by human nature, there will always be people who want to abuse something like this. Why is this even being discussed? Because we feel our freedom is being infringed by this system. Do we agree that this infringement is wrong? Yes. So why is it that you are happy for them to continue infringing your right to privacy?Let's put this another way. Theft. Is it right for me to break into my neigbour's house and steal their posessions? No. So is it legal for me to do so? No. Yet, by extension, you are arguing that I should have the freedom to do that while my neigbour should protect their freedom to retain their posessions by hiring a policeman to stand outside their door or keeping them all locked in safes when they'r not being used. Which is patently ludicrous.
We are (almost) all agreed that we have a right to private communications unless there is strong grounds of suspicion that we might be using such communications to facilitate illegal acts. So why on earth should the various law enforecment agencies have the right to intercept my communications, which they currently do?
Greg
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:2)
The extension does not (yet) cross the border from the world of mathematics and information to that of physics and meat. The analogy with the car is just as flawed as the same analogy regarding intellectual property (that copying a cd is like stealing a car). Fact is, it is mathematically possible to secure my communications, it is not mathematically possible to secure my car. In one case, the law is necessary, easily verified (you will know if your car has been stolen) and enforceable through finite effort, in the other it is the opposite of all that. I do see a possible future where it may be possible to apply mathematical laws to our physical world, and while I look forward to and strive towards it, I concede that it is far off.
Most of the things that Echelon allegedly does are clearly not legal (such as the NSA keeping tabs on Americans). I have no doubt in my mind that they laugh in the face of the laws and consitution. What makes you think that this law will be any different? Which will be your method of ensuring this? Enforcing it?
I am against it simply because we could spend all our money trying to enforce obedience to this law, start spy agencies to spy on our spies ad inifinum and still not be sure that it is working: or simply encrypt our communications and be sure of it at no cost and ten seconds time spent.
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We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.
Re:Time to amend an Amendment? (Score:2)
To get back to the main point, though, I agree about the effort to enforce. Hence my earlier comment: make this illegal and such evidence becomes inadmissable. So what if we can't tell whether they've actually done this? Why would they bother if they couldn't sumbit this as evidence in court or as a justification for a search warrant? The effort then becomes disproportionate to the reward for them. I'd still like to see it as a fundamental right regardless, but I can't see how it's impractical.
Actually, as long as the current situation where our data transmissions aren't legally protected remains, I can't see that this is actually illegal. Immoral, sure and against the spirit of the law perhaps, but illegal? No. My point, again, was simple: make it illegal and the evidence becomes inadmissable. At which point they can search as hard as they like, but it's not worth anything other than amusement value to them. So why should they bother?
Greg
Re:Why don't they sue? (Score:1)
>activities or behaviors that we can classify as
>"illegal" in the sense that they violate >someone's rights (discrimination, for >example).
While I agree with the general claim, I'm not sure about your example--wasn't discrimation made illegal by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, or something similiar?
I don't imagine the courts were too quick to recognize a right to force someone to hire you or do business with you before then. Not that I'm any kinda legal scholar or anything.
Re:Malaysia and other 'dreaded countries' (Score:1)
Are you sure that's not due to the secret agencies trying to steam open the mail servers and read the mail? ;o)