Dutch Wiretaps: Too Many To Bother Counting
Brenno de Winter writes "While the U.S. wiretapped 1,350 phonelines, the Netherlands managed to wiretap approx. 10,000 phonelines in 1999. With the new Telecom Act the Dutch government could wiretap even easier and are doing it so much they cannot count it anymore. Bits of Freedom (BOF) requested statistics under the Dutch Freedom of Information Act and were denied it since it was to hard to gather the data. Even though telecom and internet operators regularly send bills for operational wiretapping costs, the ministry of Justice claims it doesn't keep account of the numbers. What scares you more a government that wiretaps or a government that wiretaps and doesn't know what it is wiretapping?"
Apparently, the police wiretaps not only criminals, but also the people they phone or get phoned by, and the people those contacts phone or get phoned by.
I think the recursion stops there, but I'm not sure.
I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
I find this to be very disturbing news. I doubt that its true. Being dutch i know that the Dutch are pretty incompetent with important information. I guess some guy at the ministry just took a number for the amount of wiretaps.
What if they had Total Information Awareness?
Everyone is born right-handed; only the greatest overcome it
And I am told everyday that the US is a bad place to live. I guess not.
Given that the US also has a population more than 15 times that of the Netherlands that means somebody living there is more than 100 times more likely to be wiretapped than in the US.
That seems to be pretty incongruous for a country that prides itself on the personal freedoms of its citizens.
Canadian equivalant for the Netherlands, anyway?
Finland, eh?
IM moving to BELGIUM~!!
some years ago the dutch telecomcompany and a technical university recorded ALL phonecalls from fixed (identifiable) lines during a six month period, to "research voice-printing and speech/pattern recognition". wonder what they are doing with that big fat and very handy database!
"What scares you more a government that wiretaps or a government that wiretaps and doesn't know what it is wiretapping?"
How about a country that claims to not wiretap but does so anyway? (FBI, NSA, CIA in the USA)
Someone I know in Amsterdam once put it this way...
The American people seem willing to put up with searches of their houses and no-knock warrants all of the time, but are horrified at the prospect of someone tapping their phone.
The Dutch people would be horrified at the prospect of that degree of home invasion by the authorities but seem pretty resigned to the idea that their phones might be tapped.
I found it to be an interesting converse.
The Dutch people would be horrified at the prospect of that degree of home invasion by the authorities
. ht m
Then please explain how we have the Dutch authorities working hand-in-hand with the DEA conducting raids complete with 17 search warrants.
http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/pubs/pressrel/pr112200
I bet the real story is just like the wiretaps - Dutch citizens are brainwashed that their country is free when in fact the rate of government intrusion into their lives is much higher than they realize.
The fact that the wiretap rate in the Netherlands is 100 times higher than the US per capita really should be a warning that you may need to rethink your assumptions.
Hmmm... it seems they have more in common with us Americans than we thought...
The Mongrel Dogs Who Teach
it seems they have more in common with us Americans than we thought...
At least when your door is getting kicked in your KNOW that a government intrusion is going down.
The Dutch make gentle fun of Belgium, which is a small country on our southern border. "How can you make a Belgian go mad? Put him in a round room and tell him there is a bag of fries in the corner."
;-)
We also make (more serious) fun of Germany, which is a large country on our eastern border. Jokes tend to involve the second world war.
We *never* make fun of the North Sea, which is a sea on our northern and western borders. It has invaded us too many times for us to make fun of.
In truth, we like both the Belgians and the Germans (the generations that remember the second world war are dying, and the new generations do not feel any resentment or anger). We also like the North Sea, as long as it stays put.
If pressed, most people here will confess to hating the French. As one of our government ministers said a few years ago: "French is a beautiful country. It's just a shame the French live there." Instant political fireworks
As a rule, we like the USA, although we are a little bit peeved that you granted yourself the right to invade our country if any american soldiers ever end up in the International Court of Justice in The Hague. If you *do* decide to invade, please make sure you get the right coastal town - I live in the next one to the north, so this matters a lot to me.
I live in the Netherlands, and frankly, this doesn't bother me at all. After all, anyone can overhear a phonecall, and tapping Internet connections is not exactly hard. There are just so many people who may be listening, with possibly worse intentions than the government. Actually, it makes me feel kind of proud that nl is so well-organized we can tap 100 times more than the USA. With regard to the counting thing; who says the numbers for the US are accurate, nith all those agencies that officially do not exist?
---
Life is too short for sentences that begin with "Life is too short for".
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
YEah, and don't dare to get into a discussion of Holocaust occurances/nonoccurances. Although those who are deniers are more than a little bit blind, its sad when a group can completely take over a discussion just by saying, "anti-semitism!" with no real points to argue. You can have a logical discussion of the number of Chinese, Japanese, and Koreans killed by the Japanese during and leading up to WWII (over 12 million), the number of Russians killed by Germans in WWI/WWII combined (around 12million), the number of Soviet citizens killed in Stalins purges (around 20 - TWENTY Million!!), the number of Chinese killed in Mao's cultural revolution (ditto, around 20million); but question even for a second the number, method, or whatever of Jews killed in the camps and you get immediately shut down. They drag out the Holocaust every 5 minutes, saying, "Never again," which many would agree with, but how many of the Jewish leaders, or how many Israeli troops, sign up to fight the same sort of situation happening elsewhere? Like, say, Palestine? No, they only mean, "Never again for us!" But bring this up in Holland or Germany, and you can actually be arrested. Scary.
That's the problem with liberalism - you have tons of rights, as long as they agree with the liberal mindset.
The Democratic Party: We've been pussies since 1968!
I work with a small Dutch ISP and we recently had the 'pleasure' to have to cooperate with an e-mail tap against one of our customers.
;-)
I was surprised to find that the people I dealt with hardly knew a thing about e-mail tapping. It took them more than a week to find out who was handling the customer's e-mail (no idea about mx records) and when we asked them where to forward the 'tapped' mail they came up with a 'free' e-mail address (say like a hotmail address).
The free e-mail box quickly filled up and started bouncing. If I hadn't fixed the envelope-sender addresses the whole thing would have been exposed. Maybe I shouldn't have done that...
Anyway, I came up with the thought to regularly sen myself e-mails whith linked tags (an old spammer trick to see if a mail is actually being read) and monitor the link image to detect if anyone is reading my mail without my knowing it. The amateurs are using OE, so that should work pretty well.
Xenna.