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Carnivore No More

wikinerd writes "FBI has retired the controversial Carnivore software, strongly criticized by privacy advocates for its email capturing abilities. However, it is believed that unspecified commercial surveillance tools are employed now. What does that mean for Internet users' privacy?"

5 of 194 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What about encryption? by ThisNukes4u · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not if they don't know what key was used... A better way would be to encrypt the actual e-mail itself instead of relying on the way it is transmitted to keep your content secure. You can never trust the messenger.

    --
    thisnukes4u.net
  2. Carnivore has offshoots by itpr15061 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Carnivore relied heavily on a product called SilentRunner. SilentRunner was purchased by Computer Associates and given a new name, Network Forensics.

    http://www3.ca.com/Solutions/Product.asp?ID=4856

    It has the ability to decode email on the fly. I have the product and while it does have some "wow" factor, the usability and stability is atrocious. Another fine cobbled together product from CA.

  3. Re:In other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Kidding aside, just the like alleged dismantling of the "Office of Strategic Influence" (i.e., intentionally lying to the press), things may go on [CNN] under different project names. cf. also the Total, er, Terrorism, Information Awareness program.

  4. open source carnivore by dlkj83jdk3883ll · · Score: 2, Informative

    yes, Carnivore was opensourced in 2001 by a group calling themselves RSG. it was covered on slashdot. of course tcpdump is still better if all you want is to packet sniff, but this other version is good for realtime data visualization.

  5. Re:It Means by EodLabs · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hushmail does, and it was free last time I checked. The pay service has alot more features, but for a hotmail/gmail/etc.. substitue it's note bad.