FCC To Require Backdoor Network Access for Feds
humankind writes "The EFF is reporting that the Federal Communications Commission issued a release [pdf] announcing its new rule expanding the reach of the Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act (CALEA)." From the article: "Practically, what this means is that the government will be asking broadband providers - as well as companies that manufacture devices used for broadband communications - to build insecure backdoors into their networks, imperiling the privacy and security of citizens on the Internet. It also hobbles technical innovation by forcing companies involved in broadband to redesign their products to meet government requirements."
"What if it means that the equipment will accept connections if it passes a rigerous sshv2-dsa key handshake, with a really, really big key size? I don't see that being insecure, setting aside concerns about the stupid feds being bitches in power games leaking the key. Technically, there's nothing stopping them from making it secure (as secure as you or I have our home systems, that is)."
The dominant SSH implementation (OpenSSH) isn't even based in the US, so the FCC doesn't have the power to mandate backdoors in it.
I rarely criticize things I don't care about.
Big deal. So anyone with a little bit of knowledge and desire can cripple the entire internet in one blow.
We can't let the terrorists win! We must comply with this obivously good idea.
Oh wait...
Hey guys this isn't new news, my father works for a telecom company where they produce cable modem termination systems. One of the requirements mandated by federal law was that in order to sell their product they had to write a backdoor for the FBI. This is nothing new and unfortunately is just another example of creating alot of noise by not doing that much under the guise of protecting citizens.
It's been ruled as implicit in the US Constitution (the basis of Roe v. Wade) and is explicit in the California Constitution. This, by virtue of the 10th Amendment, should trump the Feds. I say "should", because like much of the rest of the document, the Supremes seem to be unable to read or comprehend the 10th amendment.
You have violated Robot's Rules of Order and will be asked to leave the future immediately.
The 4th Ammendment covers it pretty well:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
Now, maybe I'm just a crazy left-wing wacko, but I think one should be able to reasonably extraplotate "papers and effects" to include their own computer networks and files.
Not to rain on your parade, but check the definition of terrorist: it's well accepted that a terrorist is someone who employs terror as a political weapon.
The more the US resorts to giving up freedoms in order to "combat" terrorism, the more terrorists win. It's simple, sadly enough.
This is about engineering the creation of a hardline Islamic theocractic regime (i.e., the return of the caliphate), and the best way to do that is to terrorize the enemy that works to westernize (read "support freedom") predominantly muslim nations. There is a long history of terror and assassination used as a tactic against western incursion:
We are seeing the modern version of a conflict that is hundreds of years old, and it has nothing to do with Usama bin Laden wanting George W. Bush to convert to Islam.perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
In Russia the FSB (ex-KGB) apparently has (or at least had, the article is quite old) been forcing this on ISP's for years, but some are trying to fight it. I guess KGB is now considered as a good role-model...
http://www.libertarium.ru/libertarium/14424
Actually, the rest of the world feels that the US foreign involvement has little to do with terrorism. I should know, i'm part of them :)
Actually I'd say it who you ask and how you ask, how the questions are phrased. The US has supported terrorists, bin Laden for instance. He is a terrorist the US supported along with the Taliban when they were fighting against the Soviet Union. President Bush gave the Taliban millions of taxpayer dollars shortly after entering office. In Kosovo, Serbia, the US supported the KLA terrorists again Serbia. In East Timor, former president Ford and Henry Kissinger, armed and supported Indonesia's Soharto invasion of East Timor in 1975-6 after Portugal who colonized East Timor granted then their independence. From the invasion to after the 1999 vote when East Timorese voted for independence 200,000 East Timorese were massacred, one third of the population. Ford and Kissinger again supported Chile's Gen Penochet's overthrow of a democratically elected government and started a dictatorship. Thousands in Chile simply disappeared, many were murdered and thousands more tortured.
There are many examples where the administrations of the US supported military dictatorships and the overthrow of democratic governments, Iran and Iraq amoung them. The only qualification for said support was the be anticommunist. And that's not even bringing up what was done to the Native Amnerican Indians with all the signed treaties the US broke.
Sure the US has done good and helped some in need but it has also supported those who violated human rights and committed atrocities.
FalconShould there be a Law?