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EFF Sues AT&T Over NSA Wiretapping

Omega1045 writes "Cory Doctorow over at BoingBoing is reporting that the Electronic Frontier Foundation has just filed a lawsuit against AT&T for helping the National Security Agency execute illegal warrant-less wiretaps against American citizens. From the article: 'The lawsuits alleges that AT&T Corp. has opened its key telecommunications facilities and databases to direct access by the NSA and/or other government agencies, thereby disclosing to the government the contents of its customers' communications as well as detailed communications records about millions of its customers, including the lawsuit's class members.'"

746 comments

  1. TLA truck overturns on the turnpike by Thud457 · · Score: 5, Funny

    thousands confused...

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:TLA truck overturns on the turnpike by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Funny

      How is this off topic? They couldn't have worked more alphabet-soup acronyms into the headline if they tried?

      Well, maybe they could. Let's try rewriting the story:

      YRO: EFF vs ATT re NSA FUBAR

      CD of BB SEZ EFF vs AT&T re: NSA USC H4X0R FTA: "SNAFU: ATT let NSA, other GAs p0wn NOCs, POTS, & DBs"

      19 acronyms, 5 abbreviations, etc.

      Well, its certainly Acronym 2.0 compliant.

    2. Re:TLA truck overturns on the turnpike by mr_tenor · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      patched version for better acronym coverage:

      YRO: EFF vs ATT re NSA FUBAR

      BB's CD:
      EFF vs AT&T re: NSA USC H4X0R
      FTA: "SNAFU: NSA & etc. GAs pwn NOCs, POTS, & DBs w/ ATT"

      Need to get rid of the pwn, & and w/ somehow I think...

    3. Re:TLA truck overturns on the turnpike by JWtW · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I don't usually do this....especially with the low UID folks. Boy, you guys are smart!
      But, there was a time when the article was picked apart, then the article summary was all wrong, and nobody read the article, but now you're not even reading the summary, and the HEADLINE is hosing you up? Wow, are we so pressed for time that we don't read, or are we just picking--just to pick?.....

      "Excuse me, where's my latte?"

    4. Re:TLA truck overturns on the turnpike by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      Offtopic?!? What's wrong with you moderators? What? Slashdot moderators don't work in IT anymore? I though that was a requirement. * sighs * If you worked in IT you'd be laughing.

      --
      It's funny. Laugh.

      --
      blah blah blah
    5. Re:TLA truck overturns on the turnpike by tomhudson · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      It's because the first poster was modded as flamebait for criticizing the excessive use of alphabet soup/acronyms. Not everyone here knows who the EFF and the NSA are - yet :-)

      Besides, its Troll Tuesday - we have to have some funonce in a while ... we can't just leave it to the GNAA.

    6. Re:TLA truck overturns on the turnpike by JWtW · · Score: 1

      Oh, see, I knew you guys were smart.
      Thanks, for saving from myself. I'm off to click your link now....

  2. NSA censorship? by gricholson75 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Nothing for you to see here. Please move along.

  3. Yes! by s0rbix · · Score: 5, Funny

    EFF is my BFF.

    1. Re:Yes! by micahfk · · Score: 4, Funny

      the EFFect of this will bring it to everyone's ATTention.

    2. Re:Yes! by itsdave · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      as if there is anyone that has not heard about it yet, including the terrorists who were being tapped that have since found other means of communication.

      thank you New York Times...

    3. Re:Yes! by 246o1 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      as if there is anyone that has not heard about it yet, including the terrorists who were being tapped that have since found other means of communication. thank you New York Times...
      Are you stupid? Somehow the terrorists never suspected that phone calls were being tapped until the media IRRESPONSIBLY reported the truth to the public, allowing us to hold our Dear Leaders slightly accountable. Jesus H. Christ, try rubbing both those brain cells together harder, maybe you can start a fire. (yes, this was not the nicest way to say this, feel free to be unhappy about that)
      --
      Although the moon is smaller than the earth, it is farther away.
    4. Re:Yes! by Eccles · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, right.

      "But Osama, Osama, you said they had to go to FISA before they could wiretap our conversations! Now they're doing it without a warrant!"

      "What can I say, how can I get a lawyer when we won't deal with Jews?"

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    5. Re:Yes! by joebok · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Reporting a crime is not irresponsible - it shows that maybe there is hope we are still living in a democracy and still have some liberties.

    6. Re:Yes! by 246o1 · · Score: 1

      Sorry if my sarcasm wasn't clear, it was clear in my head, though my post was a bit more muddled than it should have been. I agree with you completely.

      --
      Although the moon is smaller than the earth, it is farther away.
    7. Re:Yes! by joebok · · Score: 1

      No problem - I wondered if it might be that, but sadly with the way things are now, I know too many people where such a statement is their earnest belief and I just couldn't take the chance!

    8. Re:Yes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Osama Bin Laden sez: Yes, we used to Hate America for its Freedoms, as Bush said, but now that they don't have any anymore, we kinda admire them...

    9. Re:Yes! by omeomi · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, yes, publishing that story was a crime;

      Just because you think it was a bad idea, doesn't mean it was a crime. What law was broken?

    10. Re:Yes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know why you're now feeling so smug? That's your partisan brain rewarding you for your failure to see what staring you in the face.

    11. Re:Yes! by SnapShot · · Score: 1

      Just so you know, it was the Washington Times (the Moonies ultra right-wing newspaper) that leaked the Osama story back in the 90's. Actually, I'm not surprised, every other point in your post was incorrect. Some members of one congressional committee were informed in secret not all of Congresss. No one except for Rove believes it is acceptable under the CiC clause. The NYT held on to the story to keep from affecting the 2004 elections not to torpedo the Patriot act. And, it was Ramzi Yousef not Osama that was responsible for the '93 attack.

      Next time you post please, please, please try and get at least on fact right. Thanks.

      --
      Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    12. Re:Yes! by narcolepticjim · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You'll have to chide the Congressional Research Service (that bunch of zealots!), which stated in its 44-page report:

      "It appears unlikely that a court would hold that Congress has expressly or impliedly authorized the NSA electronic surveillance operations here," the authors of the CRS report wrote. The administration's legal justification "does not seem to be ... well-grounded," they said. [WaPo Story]

      Whaa? Rush didn't talk about this? Oh, wait, wait, don't tell me, you listen to Neal Boortz. He's the intellectual idiot's radio man.

    13. Re:Yes! by ultraslacker · · Score: 1

      The NYT sat on the story for a year at the urging of the white house...so you should thank them, heartily, for acquiescing to a rogue executive.

    14. Re:Yes! by Politburo · · Score: 1

      The calls intercepted on 9/10 used code.. "The match begins tomorrow." "Tomorrow is zero hour." and that was in Arabic.

      Terrorists watch movies, too.

    15. Re:Yes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually that comment is kinda funny. Did you know in the early 80's I think it was that the leader of the White Power movement actually had a Jew lawyer from the ACLU. Won his case to. He was fighting for the right for a assemble for pro-white anti-everything else in one of the most densly populated area(to be exact one of the most dense WW2 Jew concentration camps survivors) in the USA. After winning the case he decided that he would rather use his winning as a leverage to re-establish his Chicigo base and not march there if they let him.

    16. Re:Yes! by sorak · · Score: 1

      as if there is anyone that has not heard about it yet, including the terrorists who were being tapped that have since found other means of communication.

      Yes, Osama...Atlanta...I said "AT-LAN-TA"...Yeah, we're gonna blow it up. I said "BLOW it up"...as in huge freakin bom-holy crap! Are you reading the New York Times? Yeah, page six. Fuck, they're spying on us. I knew it was legal, and they do it all the time, but, crap, you never expect it to happen to you...

      Time for plan B. eway eednay elloway akecay...yeah, buttloads...oh crap. I'll need time to practice our new communications system. Let's just do this some other time...

  4. For the love of all that's good... by bconway · · Score: 0, Troll

    Someone, please, stop the EFF before it's too late. I know they might think of these things as a "why not, let's give it a shot and see what happens" deal, but these trials and the EFF's continued losses are going to be a serious impact on ALL of our futures. I know, I get a chuckle too after seeing the latest story about how they've been laughed out of court, again, and see how riled up people get over it, but this needs to stop now. Our rights, and our (US citizens) futures may depend on it.

    --
    Interested in open source engine management for your Subaru?
    1. Re:For the love of all that's good... by vodkamattvt · · Score: 5, Insightful
      What is the alternative? Just let it happen? Wait until there *might* be an administration or government or judges that are more sympathetic to privacy?

      You cant just ignore something and hope it goes away, they are fighting the good fight within the system .. and are losing some ground, but I dont see anyone else trying as hard.

    2. Re:For the love of all that's good... by mordors9 · · Score: 1

      I think they see some of the kooky things the ACLU goes after and makes the news doing and thinks, why not us? But it (the EFF) apparently hasn't noticed that they don't have the huge base of support the ACLU has, that will continue contributing large sums no matter what.

    3. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Just so I understand, are you saying suing to protect our rights and freedoms diminishes our rights and freedoms?

    4. Re:For the love of all that's good... by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Someone, please, stop the EFF before it's too late. I know they might think of these things as a "why not, let's give it a shot and see what happens" deal, but these trials and the EFF's continued losses are going to be a serious impact on ALL of our futures. I know, I get a chuckle too after seeing the latest story about how they've been laughed out of court, again, and see how riled up people get over it, but this needs to stop now. Our rights, and our (US citizens) futures may depend on it.

      All that is necessary for evil to succeed is good men do nothing.

      I'd rather they kept plugging away, regardless of losses. If there's one less soldier on your side, it's all the more likely the other side will prevail.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    5. Re:For the love of all that's good... by pinkocommie · · Score: 1

      I was going to mod you down as flamebait but thought it'd be better to ask you to simply provide proof of the same? Why exactly is suing a company that clearly did something illegal wrong or bad? And why dont we get a list of cases that they've won vs lost beyond your opinion and how they have played a part in reducing our freedoms?

    6. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Our rights, and our (US citizens) futures may depend on it.

      Don't be such a fucking twat. The laws are there for a reason. Just because you've bought into that `war on terror` crap doesn't mean we all have to suffer. Keep your islamophobic paranoia to yourself.

    7. Re:For the love of all that's good... by killjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I tend to agree with you. The proper forum for this is impeachment. The president has committed felonies. This is not my opionion but the opinion of virtually every legal scholar who has spoken out on this matter.

      The problem is what recourse do you have when you have a congress who values party loyalty above the constituion of the unites states? I certainly don't think the courts are an option in this case since they have been packed with republicans all the way up and down the chain. I certainly don't expect any of those nominees to have more of a loyalty to the constitution then the congress does.

      Yes the EFF will lose this case, no I don't know what the alternative is. It seems like we are SOL on this one. Even if the congress changes parties in the next election it will be too late and nothing will be done (not that there is a whole lot of difference between them in the first place).

      --
      evil is as evil does
    8. Re:For the love of all that's good... by susano_otter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      All that is necessary for evil to succeed is good men do nothing.

      Ironically, all that is necessary for good to fail is for good men to be ignorant.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    9. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Kev_Stewart · · Score: 1

      You don't write for The Register do you?

      +1 Inciteful

      not

    10. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. Not talking about these issues, not filing lawsuits, and not getting people riled up is the perfect way to protect our freedoms.

      We can't help it if the courts don't get it. Eventually, if enough people get on the ball, they will.

      The easiest way to lose is to stop fighting.

    11. Re:For the love of all that's good... by deKernel · · Score: 1, Redundant

      The only people who say this do NOT have any credibility. The President has not done anything wrong. It is his job to protect and serve the people. Please do not interpret your opinions with facts.

    12. Re:For the love of all that's good... by evil+agent · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Wow, you just gave a good argument justifying the Iraq War. Hurry up and retract before you're banned from /.!!

      --
      End transmission.
    13. Re:For the love of all that's good... by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Where is the guarantee that these wiretaps will protect and serve the people? The war on terrorism will fail just like the war on drugs failed. Yet we continue to throw good money after bad, and are oh so willing to burn the Constitution in the process. The terrorists have already won.

    14. Re:For the love of all that's good... by pete6677 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      When the result is a loss, yes it does. It sets legal precedent which will be cited in future cases.

    15. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Hes+Nikke · · Score: 1

      The only people who say this do NOT have any credibility

      i suggest that you read - in particular - before putting your own credibility on the line again. thank you. :)

      --
      Don't call me back. Give me a call back. Bye. So yeah. But bye our, well, but alright we are on a shirt this chill.
    16. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Hes+Nikke · · Score: 1

      uh... my first link, and my second link disapeard when i clicked submit instead of preview.... sorry. :\

      Slashdot requires you to wait between each successful posting of a comment to allow everyone a fair chance at posting a comment.

      It's been 1 minute since you last successfully posted a comment

      --
      Don't call me back. Give me a call back. Bye. So yeah. But bye our, well, but alright we are on a shirt this chill.
    17. Re:For the love of all that's good... by susano_otter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's not at all clear that AT&T has done something illegal, if for no other reason than if they had, this lawsuit would not be necessary. The whole point of a lawsuit, after all, is to try to prove that somebody did something illegal. In fact, if the EFF loses this case, it will establish a precedent that what AT&T did is not illegal.

      But even beyond that, the matter is highly controversial and hotly debated. There's the question of the extent of the Executive's power to conduct military operations during wartime. There's the question of whether or not the definition of "military operations" includes intelligence-gathering operations conducted by the Executive. There's the question of the wisdom of arbitrarily curbing the Executive's constituional authority, which would make it more difficult for the Executive to fulfill its constitutional responsiblities.

      And these are just a few of the more interesting (to me) questions of principle. There's also the practical questions: how much of what's being said about this issue is FUD from partisans, extremists, the media-industrial complex, etc.

      Then there's the technical questions: You raid a cell in Pakistan, find a U.S. phone number on a computer there. In criminal justice terms, that's not probable cause to tap a phone line. What do you do? Give up? Hope that number doesn't reach an active cell planning to smuggle an Iranian suitcase nuke across the Mexican border? Or do you say, I'm Executive, the Constitution gives me the responsibility to do whatever I can and whatever I need to do to protect the country in time of war, and Congress has told me this is a time of war, so tap that fucker and let's see what's up?

      Now, I admit that the responsible answer to that question depends a lot on the answers to the preceding questions. My point is that there is no consensus on the preceding questions, and therefore it's not at all obvious that AT&T did anything illegal.

      There's nothing wrong with suing a company allegedly did something "obviously illegal". There is a problem with suing a company that did something not obviously illegal, and losing the suit. The problem is that this sets a precedent whereby the not obviously illegal act becomes obviously legal. This would be the oppsite of a Good Thing.

      Personally, having forgotten to get fitted for a tinfoil beanie when I signed up for my /. account, I hope that the EFF does lose this suit, thus bolstering Bush's case for Executive freedom of action in military matters during wartime (subject to initial Legislative approval, of course).

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    18. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Egatlov · · Score: 1

      Yeah!!!!
      Impeach Bush!!!
      Then Cheney becomes president.....
      As amusing as it would be to see a puppetmaster thrown into the national spotlight, I'd rather just stick with Bush for the remainder of his term than let a man wholy consumed by evil take the reins.

    19. Re:For the love of all that's good... by btempleton · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ok, so I didn't comment when slashdot linked to the troll at the Register who likes to berate the EFF with false claims that we lose all the time, but since they are simply not true, it would be nice if people would check into that before repeating them, ok? This poster seems to claim there was some sort of big recent loss by the EFF, which is similar in pattern to the troll articles that cited lost cases that were not by the EFF to support the strange idea the EFF loses all the time. (There was a recent loss in case case personally brought and funded by John Gilmore, an EFF board member, in which the EFF itself had no involvement, and I presume that's what's being alluded to here.)

      Bad enough I'm feeding the troll here, but please, don't repeat the trolls, that gets them really excited.

      --
      Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
    20. Re:For the love of all that's good... by rm69990 · · Score: 1
    21. Re:For the love of all that's good... by SilverspurG · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If the best way the president can come up with to protect us from people who feel screwed over by his business buddies (remembering, of course, that we once had very favorable ties with many of the top terrorists) is to place us in a permanent state of war then, honestly, I don't want his protection. He's not my president. He's broken his Oath of Office. Maybe you can rationalize it to your satisfaction but, until we know honestly why those people are so pissed (and no, this isn't just about religion), it'll never be explained to my satisfaction.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    22. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You raid a cell in Pakistan, find a U.S. phone number on a computer there. In criminal justice terms, that's not probable cause to tap a phone line. What do you do? Give up?

      You do some legwork - find out who owns that phone line. See if they have any other connections that makes them suspicious and if they do, then you've got your probable cause. If they don't - then you've probably got bigger fish to fry. It isn't like fatherland security has a bunch of agents sitting around twiddling their thumbs waiting for new leads to pop up.

      They've already got information overload, a couple of orders of magnitude more information per agent than they had before 9/11 - and they obviously did not have enough agents then because all the clues they needed to prevent 9/11 were already recorded and filed. Tapping even more phonelines isn't going to make the investigators more efficient - its going to make them waste even more time on pointless "leads."

    23. Re:For the love of all that's good... by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Sadly, this has nothing to do with "wrong" or "illegal". Lawsuits are in civil court, which does not decide cases based on the actions being illegal or not. It is up to the judge or jury to determine if the plaintiff has been wronged and to determine a judgement (generally financial) that will address the wrongdoing.

      So the first question is, how much is the EFF suing for and how much do you think they could get in a class action lawsuit? Would $5 and a coupon for some free phone service help you?

    24. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You raid a cell in Pakistan, find a U.S. phone number on a computer there. In criminal justice terms, that's not probable cause to tap a phone line.

      Your example is bogus. Contact of a known terrorist? Of course that's probable cause.

      I'm Executive, the Constitution gives me the responsibility to do whatever I can and whatever I need to do to protect the country in time of war

      This is also bogus. It gives the responsibility to protect the country, but as far as the _power_, "whatever I can and whatever I need to do" is way off the mark. The President is still bound by the Constitution that their powers come from, and also by the laws Congress passes (as long as those are constitutional).

    25. Re:For the love of all that's good... by TinyManCan · · Score: 1
      Maybe the terrorists are not rational. Maybe they just hate us.

      Why do people always look to place blame internally? If you think that we can end terrorism by appeasment, then you are wrong. Failed with Hitler, and it will fail again. The only way to stop it is to remove them completely from the face of the Earth. Country by country, terrorist by terrorist.

      I for one am glad that the majority of the losses in the war on terror have a) not been on American soil and b) not been our boys.

      Maybe you're right, we should invite all of them irrational terrorists to a big meeting and see if we can 'pound' out a resolution.

    26. Re:For the love of all that's good... by onwardknave · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yes it's flamebait... but it's insightful flamebait. Don't dismiss it too readily as partisan politics until you can seriously argue that most politicians in favor of invasive wiretaps aren't Republicans (I doubt anyone would make that case). The demographics of U.S. politics are partially responsible too - in the desire to appear more anti-terrorist, Bush takes drastic steps which may fight terrorism, but violate the U.S. Constitution (a cute ancillary benefit is that the executive branch gains significant power over legislative checks). Republicans in congress would be politically stupid to argue against his policies. The Democrats, in order to fight critics' allegations from the last elections that they are disorganized, are practically obligated to play the civil liberties card (and rightfully so, IMO) to appear unified.

    27. Re:For the love of all that's good... by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "It is his job to protect and serve the people."

      What?! Huh?! Wait, I missed this one.

      The President takes an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the constitution of the United States. No mention of the people.

      Show me where it is the President's job to protect the people...

    28. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Godeke · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You know, I agree with this up to the point that there was an already existing method for obtaining authorization *after the fact*. By neglecting to take that step, it has offended even people like me who believe in executive power during times of crisis.

      The existing methods were put in place to create a paper trail of what was being done, and it is clear that paper trail was an unwanted nuisance. *That* is what ticks me off, not that they follow up on leads. Nothing in the law would have prevented those wiretaps and there would be little heat if the president would simply follow established, auditable procedures.

      The suit likewise is going after the idea that AT&T opened the networks up far beyond the requirements (and potentially legal bounds) of a normal, legal wiretap. I have no idea if they did or didn't do that.

      --
      Sig under construction since 1998.
    29. Re:For the love of all that's good... by grcumb · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "But even beyond that, the matter is highly controversial and hotly debated. There's the question of the extent of the Executive's power to conduct military operations during wartime."

      The matter is controversial, and there's no denying it's being hotly debated. The issues of law, however, are not so tenuous as you seem to think. Every argument that the White House has offered has been quite thoroughly refuted. About the simplest and clearest summary of these arguments can be found in Al Gore's speech on MLK day. And before anyone screams 'bias!': read the speech and weigh his statements on their merits. I'm not asking you to buy his conclusions, I'm asking you to consider his arguments and draw your own conclusions.

      "You raid a cell in Pakistan, find a U.S. phone number on a computer there. In criminal justice terms, that's not probable cause to tap a phone line."

      That almost certainly is probable cause, and because it's an espionage- and national security-related issue, the FISA court could readily be expected to issue a warrant for this.

      In terms of spying on Americans, however, there must be a warrant. Article 4 of the constitution asserts this.

      With regards to whatever 'War powers' the president might or might not have, he was explicitly denied the exercise of those powers in the US by Congress. When the White House asked the House to explicitly place US territory within the scope of the bill giving the president the right to use all means necessary, they refused. This is a matter of public record. It is therefore proven that Congress authorised no such program, and the warrant-less surveillance of individuals on US soil is illegal and unconstitutional.

      Again, you're right to say that the issue of whether the president should conduct unwarranted surveillance on US soil is controversial and hotly debated. The issue of whether it is legal to do so today is not.

      But back to the issue of whether AT&T is breaking the law - the details will have to come out before anyone can venture a reasoned opinion on this, I think. Even if AT&T's lawyers concluded that the unwarranted surveillance was illegal, they might still feel that the company had to comply with a US government order.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    30. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HA HA HA, More Liberal Clap-Trap.

      Let me break it down for you:

      The proper forum for this is impeachment. - Buzz word #1 - Throw out the big I word. The funny thing is, we impeached Clinton for lying under oath, and the Lib's saw it as a badge of Honor. When Nixon was threatened with impeachment, he took the horable route and resigned. Clinton's ego was so large, he didn't even conceive of it. They pull out this impeachment nonsense because they know a) They will never have the votes for it, and b) If they did, Bush would be honorable and leave office to save the honor of the presidency; unlike Liar Clinton.

      The president has committed felonies. - Buzz word #2 - This calls back to the whole "It's not the facts of the case, but the seriousness of the charge" thing the Lefies like to do. This particular tactic no longer has the strength it once had and only makes then look silly when they say it.

      This is not my opionion but the opinion of virtually every legal scholar who has spoken out on this matter. - Consensus / Conjecture - Ah yes, the old favorite. My kids use this one all the time on me and my wife. "But everybody is doing it" "All the other kids have one". Ummm no. Sorry. First, you provide no information to back up your claims. No links, no quotes, hell you don't even try to use the bastion of B.S., Wikipedia as a source. Like any other claim that attempts to persuade the reader / listener that uses all encompasing words (every, all, etc.) the person is simply expounding their opinion. This is Persuasion-101.

      Now here is where it really gets good. Lets take a look.

      The problem is what recourse do you have when you have a congress who values party loyalty above the constituion of the unites states? - Now, it looks to me like he's talking about the Democrats here. *shrug*

      I certainly don't think the courts are an option in this case since they have been packed with republicans all the way up and down the chain. I certainly don't expect any of those nominees to have more of a loyalty to the constitution then the congress does. - This is the really ironic part. The nomination of Alito today ensures that the courts will do their job of following the Constitution. Up until now, the Liberals have been using the courts to push through their agenda through the courts instead of the Legislature system. Now, they will be forced to actually have their law makers, umm, make laws. The Judiciary will do what they are supposed to do as laid out in the Constitution; Judge if laws are Constitutional, not make laws from thin air.


      So lets lay this out on the table. You have been listening to the antique media and hearing all the news about how American's are being spied on, yet what you didn't hear from the antique media, and what you've refused to head from the Bush administration, is that the only people being listened to are those who are talking to known Alkida operatives. I have no problem with that. Is an American is talking to them, either knowingly of unknowingly, I want the gonvernment to listen in and find out WTF is going on. Next, the actions this administration is taking have been practiced since FDR. In fact, it was James Carter that signed the executive order that first made use of them in the current method. They were used by every administation since then. Heck, Clinton executed a warentless search on an American citizen. He put away an evil man because of it, but it was reaching far past what the Bush Administration has authorized. I don't see you all getting in a huff over any of the previous administrations.

      If you don't like the law, that is fine. That is your right. But you need to handle it in the manner laid out by the Constitution. Talk to your Representative. Talk to your Congressmen. Have them make/change the law. Taking the route you are only makes you look like fools. Why can I say that? Because you

    31. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope that the EFF does lose this suit, thus bolstering Bush's case for Executive freedom of action in military matters during wartime (subject to initial Legislative approval, of course).

      But it seems that the definition of "wartime" is vague these days. The "war on terror" is likely to continue for an indeterminate period of time, as the ideals and motivations behind such attacks are unfortunately not going disappear overnight.

      So is it desirable to support Bush's (or any subsequent president's) case for Executive freedom of action in military matters for an indefinite period of time?

    32. Re:For the love of all that's good... by deKernel · · Score: 1

      Let me get this straight, you want a guarantee that a counter-terrorism project will succeed? Using that logic, you might as well dissolve all police departments because not only can't they provide a guarantee. Plus, since there is still crime in my community, we as a community are throwing our money away buy supporting the police department.

      I hate the fact that they are wiretapping, but they are trying to do it with some level of intelligence. They are only tapping incoming calls from questionable location like say Syria, Afganistan and such. They only reason I support the Patriot Act is that it must be reup'ed every year not the normal practice.

      During the times of war, historically the government has had to do such things. See Roosevelt & Lincoln as examples, and please don't say that we aren't in a time of war. Please remember what happened on 9-11. There are large groups of fanatics who are bent on destroying our way of life. They don't believe in freedom of choice. They believe in their own religion.

    33. Re:For the love of all that's good... by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      He said GOOD men.

    34. Re:For the love of all that's good... by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      Wow, you just gave a good argument justifying the Iraq War. Hurry up and retract before you're banned from /.!!

      Hey, I voted for this guy.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    35. Re:For the love of all that's good... by jcr · · Score: 1

      They're not getting "laughed out of court", and your idea that our rights can be secured by not litigating an issue is rather puzzling to me. Korematsu lost, and so did Dred Scott, but those cases were certainly taken seriously, as was Gilmore v. Gomez.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    36. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I'd rather they kept plugging away, regardless of losses. If there's one less soldier on your side, it's all the more likely the other side will prevail.


      Rummy - is that you?

    37. Re:For the love of all that's good... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      What if they're tapping less phone lines, but more of the important ones?

      And what if the tap is in addition to the legwork?

      What if they're striking a compromise between timely intel and information management, by tapping anything they find on a terrorists computer, until such time as the results of the legwork confirm that it's either a hot number or a cold one? That's certainly how I would do it, at least in part.

      Besides, what kind of a colossal fuckup would it be if someone did detonate an Iranian suitcase nuke in San Diego, and it turns out that the cell that did it was all on that Pakistani computer's rolodex? The President has to go before Congress and tell them that even though the Consitution makes him responsible for national security, and even though he had those phone numbers in his possession for over a year, he was waiting for due process to play out before he started tapping them. He could defend himself at his impeachment hearing by complaining about information overload.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    38. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather just stick with Bush for the remainder of his term [ed.] than let a man wholy consumed by evil take the reins.

      How certain are you that his term will end?

    39. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Puf_Almighty · · Score: 1

      What if they're tapping less phone lines, but more of the important ones?

      Wouldn't it be nice if we didn't have to wonder, or discuss, who's getting wiretapped, because the government was actually following the law?

    40. Re:For the love of all that's good... by westlake · · Score: 1
      My point is that there is no consensus on the preceding questions, and therefore it's not at all obvious that AT&T did anything illegal.

      There are at least two big problems for the EFF:

      "Cases and Controversies." The american federal courts do not not deal in abstractions. You have to persuade a judge that you are the injured party or his legal representative. The bar to ill-defined class actions is set very high. It simply isn't enough to say that you represent "the people."

      The EFF further has to prove that AT&T was not acting in good faith in responding to what it believed to have been a lawful request from the government.

      This is not a particularly promising line of attack. It would be within his rights for a judge to question why AT&T was being brought into his court and not the NSA.

    41. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What if they're tapping less phone lines, but more of the important ones?

      By definition, if they are important, then they've got probable cause. Else how do they know they are important?

      Besides, what kind of a colossal fuckup would it be if someone did detonate an Iranian suitcase nuke in San Diego,

      And what a colossal fuckup it would be if the information to stop 9/11 was already recorded by agents in the field, reported and filed on FBI computers but nobody noticed?

      Oh yeah, it was.

      You demonstrate a profound lack of understanding about how security works. It is impossible to follow up on every diddly little lead. There are not enough resources to cover everything. So you prioritize and work the leads with the highest probability of yielding results. To do otherwise is to ignore the obviously good leads in favor of chasing your tail. The leads that have high-probability of yielding results are, by definition, those for which there is probable cause.

      You advocate ignoring good security principles in favor of something akin to throwing darts.
      In which case you have roughly no security at all.

    42. Re:For the love of all that's good... by maxpublic · · Score: 0, Troll

      Maybe the terrorists are not rational. Maybe they just hate us.

      And so the fuck what? There is no international X-Files-ish conspiracy of evil "terrorists" looking to destroy the United States of America by, uh, the incredibly stupid tactic of blowing up one building at a time. All there are is a few crazed criminals, here and there, some of which, some of the time, manage to cooperate with one another long enough to destroy something. Usually something pretty fucking irrelevent, like two office buildings. Oooh, look how close they came to wiping out the United States when they wasted the Twin Towers! Woe is us!

      Really, if our nation can be overthrown by the simple expedient of knocking down a couple of skyscrapers then we don't deserve to exist in the first place. A nation that overwhelmed by cowardice is just begging for a good beating.

      Let the sheep whine and run for cover every time some government hack starts screaming about color warnings. Let them live their lives in fear, as if some maniac actually gave a shit about some no-name Joe who actually thinks he's important enough to warrant the attention of the Boogeyman.

      There are no terrorists; just crazed loons looking to wreak a little havoc. The assholes who hit the Twin Towers aren't any different than any other bunch of mass murderers; they just managed to make the Guiness Book of World Records on body count. And the people who're using that incident to amass power hit the jackpot big-time with that incident, not because of what those criminals did but because Americans have become spineless fucking pansies pissing their shorts at the sight of their own shadow.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    43. Re:For the love of all that's good... by vodkamattvt · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There is a whole lot going on there than partisan politics. America as a whole is completely polarized on the basic issue of security versus freedom. Its not the the republicans want to screw everyone over for the sake of it, many honestly believe that a little freedom (or privacy) should be given up to make America more secure. Many democrats feel the opposite.

      This is an old debate, it just so happens that it is easily polarized through the two parties. This is of course, and election year for many congressmen though. I have a feeling the president will not have as much support in congress than we think. If you watched the Alito hearings (I watched everyday, the whole thing because Im a freak for constitutional law), most of the senators on the judiciary committee had some pointed questions about executive power and the wiretapping issues, on both sides of the isle. The beauty of the American system is that, even when you have one party in control of the executive and the legislative, the legislative still doesnt want to lose their power because next term you may have that democrat president with a unitary executive with loads of power!

    44. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Stonent1 · · Score: 1

      Guarantees only come with household products. I endorse wiretapping anyone who's having a lot of conversations with known terrorists. And that's my opinion.

    45. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Egatlov · · Score: 1

      If he's going to ignore constitutional term limits, why would he step down if impeached?

    46. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are large groups of fanatics who are bent on destroying our way of life. They don't believe in freedom of choice. They believe in their own religion.

      I think that's just what everyone is complaining about, but they're probably thinking of different groups than you are.

    47. Re:For the love of all that's good... by MonsterMasher · · Score: 1

      This is the perfect way to handle this.

      Basic fact is that these (non-oversited) wiretapes are illegal, even if our fascist leader says otherwise. No one is correcting Bush on this, but by-god make it clear by hitting every for profit company which moves to help - hit'em in a way they understand. $money$

      It's commonly understood (through out the world if not here) that big money corporations are overly represented in our government. This seems a good tactic.

        (flamebate on)
          It makes me sick to see min wage poor, or unemployed bluecollar worker, or anyone for that matter showing support for Bush. Bush is 3 times more impeachable then Nixon was. Wakeup please.
        (flamebate off)

    48. Re:For the love of all that's good... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be nice if we didn't have to wonder, or discuss, who's getting wiretapped, because the government was actually following the law?

      Oh, no doubt. Wouldn't it also be nice if we didn't have to wonder, or discuss, who's getting wiretapped because the opposition faction understood and accepted that the government is, in fact, following the law?

      I mean, the Administration is claiming that there are laws--and Constitutional obligations, even--that clearly and properly justify these wiretaps. You want to put an end to the wonder and discussion? Easy enough: simply accept the Administration's interpretation of the Constitution, rather than jumping on the partisan bandwagon and trying to apply FISA for political gain.

      While you're at it, could you please bring back the unicorns and the fairies? Because, hey, wouldn't that be nice, too?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    49. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Quadraginta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The issues of law, however, are not so tenuous as you seem to think.

      Erm, real lawyers and law professors disagree with you and Al Gore on that point. Try here and here, for example. I'm not saying either post is right on the money, but these are real fancy-pants lawyers throwing around real F. Ctr. Op. fnord. Cit. (3) legal citations. And when the professionals disagree so heatedly among themselves I'd say the legal issues are indeed unsettled, at least until such time as the Supreme Court weighs in on the issue.

      This is hardly surprising: the exact point where the Executive Branch's Article II war-fighting powers trump the Legislature's power to make law has been argued for centuries. Did Lincoln have the authority to free the slaves by decree in the absence of any law whatsoever giving him that power? Could Truman seize steel mills hit by a strike during the Korean War to prevent disastrous steel shortages? Scholars still debate. Let us not even get into the delicate question of the famous War Powers Act, which every President, Democrat or Republican, has claimed to be unconstitutional since the day it passed.

      In terms of spying on Americans, however, there must be a warrant. Article 4 of the constitution asserts this.

      Nooo, the Fourth Amendment (not Article IV) just says there can be no "unreasonable" searches. That may or may not mean a warrant -- the definition of "unreasonable" is up to the Courts, ultimately the Supreme Court. For example, if a policeman sees you stuffing something that looks like a body in a trash bag or 50 pounds of marijuana into your woodshed, does he need a warrant to order you to unlock the woodshed and let him search it? Nope. In a case like that, the Courts have held that the value to justice of allowing the policeman to exercise his reasonable judgment on the spot, and collect evidence that you might otherwise hide, if given time, outweighs any danger to your civil liberties.

      Furthermore, the Courts have generally held that the Executive Branch (that's the President, or his designees, like the NSA) has broad authority to search the effects, persons, and, yes, communications of US citizens when they enter or exit the country. You'll have noticed, I hope, that the Customs and Immigration people don't need a warrant or your permission to search your bags, papers, person or car when you enter or exit the country. They can even stop you within the US to search your bags or car for, say, illegal aliens or drugs, if you're near enough to the border. And the postal service can open up packages sent by you to international destinations, or from international destinations to you, to inspect them. They don't need your permission, a warrant or even a specific reason to do so. (The generic reason of making sure the Customs and Immigration laws are being followed is considered good enough.)

      We can think of border control and inspection as something like a sobriety checkpoint. As long as the "borderline" over which, if you step, you get inspected, is clear, and as long as there is some reasonable law-enforcement goal served by the inspection, and as long as the inspection does not overly intrude in your daily life, then the procedure has been held to be Constitutional, even in the absence of probable cause or a warrant.

      Modern communication, with the binging of messages back and forth across international borders, has made a bit of a mess of our expectations. Fifty years ago, the government read every international cable or telegram as a matter of course. But people expected that. It was an unusual thing to communicate internationally. Nowadays, and especially with the Internet, we tend to think of international communications as pretty much the same as intranational communications. But they're not. We expect the same privacy and legal rights as when we talk to our neighbors. But we shouldn'

    50. Re:For the love of all that's good... by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 1

      How best to serve and protect the people?

      Do we act in a manner to minimize loss of life? For if that is the case, we could ban automobiles and subsidize health care for everyone. I don't see that happening, which leads me to the conclusion that protecting peoples' lives is not the highest priority. The government spins it that way, but their actions say otherwise.

      How about ensuring that our legal and civil rights are not trampled upon by big government? Isn't that one of the reasons trumpeted for entering into conflict? We must protect the American Way of Life! How many wars/police actions has the U.S. entered into for the publicized sake of spreading/preserving democracy? And yet, in our own country, laws like the Patriot Act are passed that allow the enforcers to wiretap our phones and enter our homes without a court order --- without due process. What are we fighting for again?

    51. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    52. Re:For the love of all that's good... by schwaang · · Score: 1
      Personally, [...] I hope that the EFF does lose this suit, thus bolstering Bush's case for Executive freedom of action in military matters during wartime (subject to initial Legislative approval, of course).


      [bold added.]

      So you honestly believe that Bush had legislative approval to conduct the NSA taps? That sounds like a purely partisan position rather than a sincere reading of Congressional intent in their authorization of the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq to me.
    53. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm.

      Congratulations! You've just stirred the liberal hornets nest where every jackass with an opinion but no actual knowledge of the facts or law will now jump on you to slam you.

      *shrug* it's Slashdot. That's pretty much par for the course I suppose.

    54. Re:For the love of all that's good... by The+Hobo · · Score: 1
      This is a much more appropriate way of saying what you did:

      We must always fear the wicked. But there is another kind of evil that we must fear the most, and that is the indifference of good men.


      (Boondock Saints)
      --
      There is another kind of evil which we must fear most, and that is the indifference of good men. -- Boondock Saints
    55. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just came across an interesting statistic on Brad Templeton's blog: the number of American deaths due to the war in Iraq has exceeded the 9-11 death toll. Of course, the total number of civilian deaths exceeds it many times over, but these are American deaths directly due to the invasion of Iraq.

      If Iraq was a reaction to 9-11, what should be the reaction to Iraq?

    56. Re:For the love of all that's good... by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
      for starts, if you raid a terrorist target outside the USA we have the secret FISA court that will willingly sign the warrant for you... [and up to 72 hours AFTER you do the tap] They've only rejected a half-dozen in almost 20 years! The trouble is that the executive isn't even bothering to ask the secret court for permission anymore!!!

      They are fighting ATT on consumer rights front.. that they gave the Feds private data nobody else could legally get and without any formal court paperwork. Like you said, it's a grey area that's not offically illegal because we can't prove it was going on... so how do you prove you're injured if it all happens with a few company execs and the feds in the computer room???

      As far as the tail of your post, we are not at war...this is a policing action. the prez started one, but not with the congress approval before hand. Under the current precedent, the prez can pretty much start something somewhere and call us "at war" forever if he wants... that's got to stop. To put a counter conspericy out there, what if 9/11 was planned, or at least allowed to happen all along? The "patriot" act was way to convenient, big and thought-out for a last minute powers bill, what if it was planned to grab for the power all along.. there's a large segment of higher ups that think we should return to "cowboy" days where the "good guys" can just "get" the bad guys and go home proud of themselves and damn the conciquences.

    57. Re:For the love of all that's good... by compro01 · · Score: 1

      well, as far as my watch goes on the US government, it doesn't matter which party is in power, the exact same thing seems to happen (with this kind of issue at least)

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    58. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what really amuses me about all of this? Never once has the news mentioned the US Signals Intelligence Doctrine. That set of laws happens to be classified.

      The purpose of warants and wiretaps is to protect people in criminal law. Basically, it's to protect civil liberties. The purpose of the NSA is to support the warfighters. There should be a different standard applied. There is. However, having been spoonfed by the media, you don't see it that way.

      I'll give you a hint. It's perfectly legal, it's morally imperative, and it's not going to stop.

    59. Re:For the love of all that's good... by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      if someone did detonate an Iranian suitcase nuke in San Diego

      You might as well discuss the likelyhood of the Moon turning into a gigiantic green face and proceeding to spit out hordes of winged toasters which then proceed to smother the US under 60 foot thick layer of toasted Pumpernickel. I'd say, start preparing secret underground caches of butter to deal with this "imminent" threat.

      Seriously, the Iranians are about 5 years away from producing a most primitive, dumpster-truck-sized uranium pistol-type nuke. It will take them years to produce enough uranium just for a single one using their gas centrifuge enrichment process. Before they can start making anything a wee bit more practical, they will need plutonium and therefore a fast-breeder reactor to feed their U235 and U238 into. A decade before they have anything even remotely streamlined to put on a missile after that. Suitcase? Pure comedy. The same by the way applies to Pakistan and India. You did not seriously fall for all that comical posturing about "nuclear capable missiles", did you? They'd need a Saturn V sized one to deliver their current generation of nukes anywhere. Their test ones had to be assembled in-place at the test site and weighted a feather-like 5 tons or so. They are far behind in many ways of the stage where the US was with the Manhattan project in 1944.

    60. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Godeke · · Score: 1

      Ya' know, answering an Anonymous Coward is one of the stupidist things one can do, but for anyone who comes after and wonders what this anonymous "but oh so wise" coward is spouting about:

      http://cryptome.org/nsa-ussid18.htm

      --
      Sig under construction since 1998.
    61. Re:For the love of all that's good... by grcumb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Thanks for a really thoughtful reply. It's nice to see actual dialogue on this issue. 8^)

      I'm afraid I'm going to have to cherry-pick a few small points, because it's nearly 04:00 where I am, and I will never be able to do justice to your entire message. I don't necessarily agree with every assertion you make, but I respect the time and effort and thought that went into it.

      With regards to legal controversy, I've read across a number of online resources, but I'm in Eastern Europe at the moment, so I haven't had the chance to do more than that. While there are individuals (Yoo, the ex-Justice dept. staffer and legal scholar, for example) who strongly defend the president's power to perform warrant-less surveillance on US citizens, it appears to me that the majority strongly disagree. A number of conservative Justice dept. officials are reputed to have lost or left their jobs because of their refusal to support the White House warrant-less surveillance programme. There's a good article on the Newsweek website. It's well researched and well written, presenting the reasoning and rationale in a pretty straightforward manner.

      "Nooo, the Fourth Amendment (not Article IV) just says there can be no "unreasonable" searches. That may or may not mean a warrant -- the definition of "unreasonable" is up to the Courts, ultimately the Supreme Court."

      The 'unreasonable' element puts limits on the kinds of search, but the 'probable cause' part makes it clear that searches and seizures require warrants that have stood up to the appropriate level of scrutiny, in this case the FISA court.

      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.

      That's fairly unambiguous.

      Again, people will argue that the president needs the ability to conduct warrantless surveillance of US citizens in order to protect the nation. While I don't personally agree with that, I can see why people would argue for it. What I consider indisputable, though, is that he would require congressional approval to do so, and that would certainly entail legislation. Some say the law covering FISA already provides this capability. I'm prone to agree with them.

      "Congress has no power to grant or deny war powers to the President, because he is granted those powers under Article II of the Constitution, and the Constitution supercedes all laws passed by Congress."

      I think you need to re-examine that assertion. Only Congress has the right to declare war. Once that's done, the president has constitutionally granted latitude to carry out the conflict as he sees fit, without requiring further advice or consent. But Congress has not declared war; they have granted him powers as defined within the legislation authorising the use of force against Iraq. The fact that Congress explicitly disallowed the prosecution of these powers on US soil is, in this case, integral. They did not grant him the power to operate unsupervised on US soil.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    62. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Our rights, and our (US citizens) futures may depend on it."

      Yeah sure. Ali Akbar is going to send emails detailing his plans. Get a life.

    63. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Smallpond · · Score: 1

      ITYM the US Signals Intelligence Directive. Its only partly secret, its legal and its not morally imperative, just expedient.

    64. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Under FISA, the administration could wiretap for up to 72 hours before requiring a warrant, from a secret court. Despite this, the administration petitioned to make wiretapping (for any length of time, for any reason) legal and was denied by Congress. Having lost their battle, they did it anyway. That alone proves they knew it was wrong, but even if that weren't true, ignorance of the law is no excuse (especially not for lawmakers).

      There's already speculation that political opponents were bugged, not to mention regular citizens. These wiretaps are wrong for reasons other than privacy. What if the eavesdropper hears someone about to commit rape or murder? Well, according to national security, they can't act (can't reveal this secret program or tipoff who's being tapped). So, this innocent person is assaulted/murdered. How is GWB a good Christian after letting innocent people get murdered to save innocent people? That's right, because it's okay for other people to sin on your behalf, just as long as you don't.

      Giving a person unchecked power gives them the ability to do whatever they want. Look at Saddam Hussein, he had unchecked power and he tortured people and invaded other nations that were no threat to his. Sound familiar? Yep, now that Bush has unfettered power, he's torturing people and invading whomever he wants. Heck, now he's authorized the kidnapping of wives, just to get at their husbands. Now, take a look at the sexual assaults that took place in Abu Ghraib and tell me that won't happen to these women?

      So, what do you call it when one person kidnaps another and threatens murder or rape? Why, by our (American) own definition, it's terrorism. So, George W Bush is a terrorist and the US Military should deal with all terrorists in the same manner.

    65. Re:For the love of all that's good... by bagofbeans · · Score: 1

      Interesting comments, particularly your last sentence which hadn't occurred to me before, and yet seems obvious in retrospect. Thanks for the insight.

    66. Re:For the love of all that's good... by JakartaDean · · Score: 1
      It's not at all clear that AT&T has done something illegal, if for no other reason than if they had, this lawsuit would not be necessary. The whole point of a lawsuit, after all, is to try to prove that somebody did something illegal. In fact, if the EFF loses this case, it will establish a precedent that what AT&T did is not illegal.
      Actually, you're wrong. It may sound like nitpicking, but your misunderstanding really does relate to what you have said. The purpose of a civil suit (tort) is to right a wrong . This can be through damages or court orders to return something or change one's behaviour (or lots of other stuff).

      The purpose of a criminal trial is to decide whether someone did something illegal. Precedents do apply to both under common law systems, but I wouldn't worry too much about a lower court ruling in a civil case becoming an important precedent on such a significant issue.
      --
      The subject who is truly loyal to the Chief Magistrate will neither advise nor submit to arbitrary measures (Junius)
    67. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then there's the technical questions: You raid a cell in Pakistan, find a U.S. phone number on a computer there. In criminal justice terms, that's not probable cause to tap a phone line.

      What a complete and utter lie. That's more than enough cause to get a FISA warrant, which can be applied for retroactively. Are you really this fucking stupid in real life?

    68. Re:For the love of all that's good... by sigzero · · Score: 0

      The big part is going to be "on US soil" because you can make the case that they are monitoring an INTERNATIONAL call from a KNOWN or SUSPECTED Al Qaeda or terrorist organization. That changes the playing field. I have to parrot here "If my neighbor is talking to a terrorist, the government better know it" and I would want them to. I think it is going to come down to "Yeah, he can do it but we want to lay down some rules".

    69. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a civil suit, not a criminal prosecution, so the whole premise of your post is wrong.

      Aside from that, the rest of your post, to make any sense, pre-supposes the American people are the enemy in a war the president is personally conducting without Congressional oversight. *Ahem.* I beg to differ.

    70. Re:For the love of all that's good... by westlake · · Score: 1
      I'd rather they kept plugging away, regardless of losses. If there's one less soldier on your side, it's all the more likely the other side will prevail.

      What you need at your side is a buddy you can trust to get the job done.

    71. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "if for no other reason than if they had, this lawsuit would not be necessary."

      The USDOJ is going to prosecute against a phone company that gave warrantless wiretaps to the USDOJ. Yeah, that'll happen.

      "There's the question of whether or not the definition of "military operations" includes intelligence-gathering operations conducted by the Executive. There's the question of the wisdom of arbitrarily curbing the Executive's constituional authority, which would make it more difficult for the Executive to fulfill its constitutional responsiblities."

      I've read Article II. I see no mention of any "war powers," with or without a declaration of war.

      I hear a lot of talk of "implicit powers." The Ninth and Tenth Amendments say to me that there are no implied powers of any agent of the United States in the Constitution: it's either explicit or they don't have it.

      "There's also the practical questions: how much of what's being said about this issue is FUD from partisans, extremists, the media-industrial complex, etc."

      Considering that the White Hosue is defending rather than denying (or at least they stopped denying once the program became public), I'd say very little.

      If anything I've only seen FUD coming from the programmers supporters: this has nothing to do with Osama calling somebody in the United States, that's something explicitly untouched by FISA; this is about tapping calls made from within the United States. For example...

      "Then there's the technical questions: You raid a cell in Pakistan, find a U.S. phone number on a computer there. In criminal justice terms, that's not probable cause to tap a phone line. What do you do? Give up?"

      You listen in to the calls coming from outside the United States to that particular number without need for a warrant, as explicitly spelled out in FISA. It's the calls made by the US number that you aren't allowed to listen to without a warrant.

      However, if you want to go that far without warrants, you simply ask the 107th Congress to give you the power. They already gave the White House the keys to the kingdom in the form of the USA PATRIOT Act, what's one more little rider? The only reason for doing this in the way President Bush did it is pure hubris: he didn't want it to seem that he needed to ask permission (a rather liberal application/abuse of power from a self-described conservative, IMO).

      "Or do you say, I'm Executive, the Constitution gives me the responsibility to do whatever I can and whatever I need to do to protect the country in time of war, and Congress has told me this is a time of war, so tap that fucker and let's see what's up?"

      We're talking about the United States Constitution, not a Tolstoy novel. If the Constitution gives the executive such power, there should be a clause in the (rather short) document that makes this as plain as day. Otherwise, at most, these "executive powers" are left in the hands of the states to whom the constitution belongs.

      "There is a problem with suing a company that did something not obviously illegal, and losing the suit."

      Then how, praytell, are you supposed to find out whether or not it's legal if not before a court of law?

    72. Re:For the love of all that's good... by blamanj · · Score: 1

      Of course, regardless of how the legal issue is finally resolved, it's pretty sad that Bush lied about it until he was caught. Consider his comments in this speech.

      Now, by the way, any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires -- a wiretap requires a court order.

      Now that it's out in the open, they claim it is legal. If they were so sure, why didn't they simply announce they were going to be doing it?

    73. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem misinformed on this point (and heaven knows why) but a government official cannot perform a search without probable cause. Put differently, and there are centuries of precedent to back up this point, a government official who conducts a search without probable cause loses any claim to qualified immunity and thus can be criminally and civilly held liable for their outside-the-scope of the law act. I challenge you to find a single example in case law where "reasonableness" and not probable cause was held to be the standard promulgated by the Fourth Amendment. In point of fact, under the United States' Constitution, a search is not reasonable unless there is probable cause. Fnord.

      --
      * That has not been overruled.

    74. Re:For the love of all that's good... by nomadic · · Score: 1

      What is the alternative? Just let it happen?

      No, you have skilled trial advocates who actually win trials do it. The problem with the EFF is they're way too emotionally involved with the issues, and it makes lousy lawyering. We need more people who know how to win cases and less ideologues.

    75. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Quadraginta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, I understand your position, too, I think. I don't agree entirely, but as I said, this is an area where reasonable men have differed for centuries. Consensus is not likely any time soon...

      First, I believe the Supreme Court has held that all sorts of searches can be considered "reasonable" under the Fourth Amendment without involving the issuance of a warrant. The text you quote certainly establishes two things: that searches may not be unreasonable, and that warrants may not be issued without probable cause and a narrow specification of what precisely is to be searched. But this text does not explicitly connect the two, and state clearly that a search is a priori unreasonable if it is not authorized by a warrant.

      What exactly the text of the Fourth Amendment means, what the precise connection between "reasonable" and the presence of a warrant is, is therefore up to the Supreme Court to say. (Congress, of course, has no say in the matter.) Certainly what the Supreme Court has in fact held has been a welter of horribly complex reasoning that has kept fleets of Constitutional lawyers busy from the founding of the Republic to the present day. Myself, I do wish Madison had been a tad more explicit. But we have what we have.

      One might argue -- as perhaps you are here -- that even if a search is not in fact authorized by a Court warrant, the Fourth Amendment requires that it be authorizable in principle by a warrant. That is, the same legal standards must be met. But I think the Supreme Court has rejected this reasoning. I believe they have held that different standards apply in different circumstances. For example, what is "reasonable" when a policeman decides the issue in a split-second can be different than what is "reasonable" when a learned judge with days to ponder decides the issue. And (more to the point) what is reasonable when the nation is in danger of armed sneak attack is not necessarily the same as what is reasonable when it is not.

      I believe there are also all kinds of complex issues about what constitutes a "search" that depend on when one has a "reasonable expectation of privacy." An example is that, while it is blatantly illegal for the police to tap your home phone without a Court order, it is perfectly legal for a plainclothesman to listen to your conversation (and take notes that can be used against you in Court) if you and he are sitting in a cafe and you're jabbering on your cell phone loud enough for him to overhear. The circumstances mean he doesn't need a warrant or "probable cause" to listen in.

      So, what kind of "reasonable expectation of privacy" do you have when talking internationally, versus domestically? When talking over a cell phone (on which anyone with a radio receiver can eavesdrop) versus on a landline? When talking to friends and family, or your lawyer or your doctor -- or to people you know or should know are enemies of the United States? These are complex questions, and reasonable men may certainly differ on the exact answers. But the exact answers matter, to determine how the Fourth Amendment applies.

      What I consider indisputable, though, is that he would require congressional approval to do so.

      Well, other people -- indeed, all Presidents -- dispute this. In the context of fighting the foreign enemies of the United States, the President draws his power directly from the Constitution. That's why there didn't need to be a law authorizing the CIA to spy on the Soviets during the Cold War, and that's why Eisenhower, for better or worse, was able to secretly order -- without Congressional knowledge or approval -- spy planes to fly over Moscow and photograph Chairman Brezhnev taking a leak behind Lenin's Tomb, if they could.

      If the President were ordering the NSA to wiretap conversations between Americans and, say, German industrialists, for the purpose of industrial espionage, surely that would not fall under Article II. But it's difficult to see why, for example, FDR shoul

    76. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's not going to come down to he can do it but we want to lay down some rules -- they already laid down the rules in the FISA statutes and Bush decided not to play by the rules. And we are all at more risk because of it. Wasting our valuable terrorism-fighting resources on multiple, on-going fishing expeditions is criminally negligent behavior from the executive branch. There is a reason so many government officials have already resigned over this issue -- when your government is doing wrong and putting its people at risk, you do *not* support it.

      There's also a big, glaring question in there: why didn't the White House want any judicial oversight of the searches it was conducting? What is the White House hiding? (Up until two months ago, we know they were hiding the fact of the warrant-less searches. What else is Bush hiding?)

    77. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Quadraginta · · Score: 1

      Ooookay...I go to www.google.com...enter a few search terms...press enter...presto!

      Elapsed time, 20 seconds.

      To quote from the opening paragraph of the link:

      Washington, D.C.-- U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner Robert C. Bonner today hailed the Supreme Court ruling upholding CBP officers and agents authority to disassemble and thereby search a vehicle's gas tank for terrorist weapons, drugs, and other contraband, without the need to obtain a warrant or probable cause.

    78. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Gareth1996 · · Score: 1

      YES thank you, very well put. I keep hearing people say these wiretaps are "unconstitutional". I suppose they are referring to the 4th amendment which states in part: The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated. Does anybody honestly believe it is unreasonable for the government to tap Bin Laden's cell phone? Cmon put aside the tin foil hats and think about that one for a minute, anybody remember 9/11 ???? It's not like they are tapping your phone call to your grandma, and waiting to break down your door if you say "allah" or "bomb", only calls to known al quaeda operatives are tapped. Of course then someone will say, ahhh they are ALLEGED al quaeda operatives, who cares if they were caught on a battlefield fighting our troops, doesn't mean anything unless they are convicted in court. Thank God we did not have this mentality 60 years ago, I can hear it now, no we cannot just storm into Normandy and start shooting people, they are not nazis in those pillboxes, they are SUSPECTED nazis. People don't seem to realize criminal justice standards do not apply in war.

    79. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      You link to powerlineblog as an example of "real lawyers" who disagree with Al gore. That implies they are neutral, independant legal scholars. That is hogwash - they are very partisan.

      They might be well educated, but they are WAAAAAAY on the rightwing side of the fence. Saying they disagree with Al Gore is quite obvious and non-informative.

    80. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Quadraginta · · Score: 1

      Dude, the point is simply that when Constitutional law professors at big law schools can make the argument either way, then the legal issues can't possible be as settled as the OP said.

      I didn't endorse any point of view. I just said that when the guys with JD's don't agree on what the Supreme Court will say, then ipso facto the final word on the issue -- the clear opinion of the Supreme Court -- doesn't yet exist.

    81. Re:For the love of all that's good... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      -1, Troll? Pheh. Truth hurts, I suppose.

      You're right on.

    82. Re:For the love of all that's good... by mathmathrevolution · · Score: 1
      Nooo, the Fourth Amendment (not Article IV) just says there can be no "unreasonable" searches. That may or may not mean a warrant -- the definition of "unreasonable" is up to the Courts, ultimately the Supreme Court

      For those who need a quick reminder, the fourth amendment reads as follows:

      "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."
    83. Re:For the love of all that's good... by onemorechip · · Score: 1
      then the legal issues can't possible be as settled as the OP said.

      He never said the legal issues were "settled". What he wrote was this:

      The matter is controversial, and there's no denying it's being hotly debated. The issues of law, however, are not so tenuous as you seem to think. Every argument that the White House has offered has been quite thoroughly refuted.

      He's saying one side's arguments have been discredited, but since there can be many sides to a legal issue, that's not tantamount to saying the issue is "settled".

      In fact the arguments from the White House depend on a theory of consolidation of powers (my phrase, not theirs) in a strong executive branch. I'd say we pretty thoroughly refuted such theories when we fought a war with the British over just this sort of thing back in 1776. Sure, the Supreme Court could rule otherwise and resurrect that theory, but in doing so they would be abandoning the principles on which the union was founded.

      --
      But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
    84. Re:For the love of all that's good... by SETIGuy · · Score: 1
      Maybe the terrorists are not rational. Maybe they just hate us.

      Sorry. Does not compute. Maybe you should try taking a history course. Or read a newspaper. The thing that should probably scare you the most about terrorism is that terrorists are not irriational. The thing that should scare you the least is their bombs, because you are far more likely to be struck by lightning. Or be murdered in prison.

      Why do people always look to place blame internally? If you think that we can end terrorism by appeasment, then you are wrong. Failed with Hitler, and it will fail again. The only way to stop it is to remove them completely from the face of the Earth. Country by country, terrorist by terrorist.

      Exactly! That's precisely why World War II wasn't won until we had exterminated every last German, Italian, and Japanese.

      In the real world (rather than the one you live in,) our "War on Terror," especially the whole Iraq part, has been the best al Qaeda recruiting tool they could have come up with. You don't win the war on terror by making more terrorists than you kill. You win a war on terror by reducing the recruiting base for terrorists. And the only way to do that is to find the problems that cause people to become terrorism. This is not appeasment. It's more like "stop propping up failing dictatorships because they sell us oil and hold our hand when we walk through the garden at our Texas ranch."

    85. Re:For the love of all that's good... by masdog · · Score: 1

      I'd rather just stick with Bush for the remainder of his term than let a man wholy consumed by evil take the reins.

      Karl Rove can't be President.

    86. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No wonder we've got a rogue President that feels comfortable spying on citizens on the flimsiest of excuses masquerading under color of authority. It's because of cocksuckers such as yourself that stand by and endorse it....and that also goes for all of the other cocksuckers who modded this post to '5', too.



      Let's review the actual text of the 4th Amendment, shall we?



      Amendment IV.

      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, you can parse all the words you want, but the Amendment is crystal clear....no searches without a warrant, period.



      "Nooo, the Fourth Amendment (not Article IV) just says there can be no "unreasonable" searches. That may or may not mean a warrant -- the definition of "unreasonable" is up to the Courts, ultimately the Supreme Court. For example, if a policeman sees you stuffing something that looks like a body in a trash bag or 50 pounds of marijuana into your woodshed, does he need a warrant to order you to unlock the woodshed and let him search it? Nope. In a case like that, the Courts have held that the value to justice of allowing the policeman to exercise his reasonable judgment on the spot, and collect evidence that you might otherwise hide, if given time, outweighs any danger to your civil liberties."


      Bullshit, bullshit, bullshit. No warrant, no search (at least legal search, that is).



      Fucking unbelieveable the mindset that passes for purported intelligent thought these days.
    87. Re:For the love of all that's good... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      We are not at war. Well we are at war but we are at war with a word. To quote a wiser man. "you remember when we declared war on drugs and now you can't buy drugs anymore? It will be just like that".

      So you have bought into this eternal war. This war which will never end and gives the president any power he wants as long as the war exists.

      No fucking wonder this country is going down the shithole.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    88. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, crossing a international border in a private or public conveyance on a public throughfare has little to do with the 4th Amendment. The courts have long upheld that driving a vehicle is a priviledge, not a 'right'. And you can bet that absent consent to search said vehicle, a warrant could be obtained lickety-split if required.

    89. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Quadraginta · · Score: 1

      Er, it doesn't? Do you figure that as soon as you step out your front door and into the "public thoroughfare" your Fourth Amendment rights vanish? Or, they vanish because you travel on a bicycle, automobile, motorcyle, public bus, or rented donkey instead of on foot?

      Geez, that point of view is far more restrictive of civil liberties than the wildest dreams of H.R. Haldeman.

      They key distinctions here have nothing to do with the mode of travel or whether you're on public or private land. You have the same FthA rights in your car as you do on foot, or on a public bus, and the same rights on your own land as in a National Park or someone else's house. What's different is (1) what your "reasonable expectation of privacy" is, and (2) what public interest is served by inspecting you, with or without a warrant. That's because the FthA is not an absolute statement; the restrictions it puts on government are to be balanced by the competing public interests of order, justice, and national security.

      In the case of crossing the international border, there is a very strong public interest in making sure the border is secure, and a reduced reasonable expectation of privacy. Exiting and entering the country is an unusual and public action, and potentially puts your fellow citizens at great risk (should you, say, import dangerous and illegal substances, devices, or persons). You should therefore reasonably expect to be subject to a more than ordinary level of scrutiny. (And, of course, if you object to that scrutiny, you always have the option of not crossing the border. Crossing the border is almost never a necessity of life.)

      So the government has very broad rights to inspect people crossing the border. Some people don't get this, and that's why the case I cited exists -- some times it's necessary for the Supreme Court to affirm the simple fact that crossing the border is special, and you should have considerably diminished expectations from the FthA when doing so.

      Should this diminished expectation of privacy extend to "crossing the border" electronically, via phone or e-mail? Stay tuned, the Supreme Court will enlighten us on this topic any day now.

    90. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit, bullshit, bullshit. No warrant, no search (at least legal search, that is).

      Fucking unbelieveable the mindset that passes for purported intelligent thought these days.


      Yes, it is...and you, sir, are a prime example.

      As far as "No warrant, no search (at least legal search, that is", go and attempt to smuggle some contraband across the Canadian or Mexican border. I'm sure that when they search your vehicle without a warrant or probable cause, and find the contraband, you can get a judge to throw it out, right?

      I hope your new cellmate "Bubba" is gentle.

      Yeah..you're an authority on intelligent thought alright. I'm sure you'll be the smartest one on your cellblock.

    91. Re:For the love of all that's good... by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Its not the the republicans want to screw everyone over for the sake of it, many honestly believe that a little freedom (or privacy) should be given up to make America more secure. Many democrats feel the opposite.

      They can 'honestly' believe that all they want, and they would be fucking morons. This Administration isn't doing a damn thing to make this country safer. It's apparently so incompetant it had no idea that Hamas was about to win so many election, it had no idea the leves in New Orleans could fail despite having warnings(1), it says stupid-ass things like 'Crusade' and 'Axis of Evil' that piss off our allies, and, of course, it invades Iraq for no logical reason which has made our position in the rest of the middle east incredibly bad, like in Iran.

      And we ignore actual security problems, like the fact both Iran and North Korea. And problems to be, like Pakistan. And, oh yeah, bin Laden.

      Meanwhile, the 'freedom' removals are things like no wiretapping, when any wiretaps were easily gettable, trial by jury, when of course any jury would convict terrorists, free speech around the president, when no protestor has ever attacked a president, freedom from torture, which doesn't get us anything except the loss of moral ground when others torture us, etc. None of these makes us safer in any logical way, they just remove our freedoms.

      Trading freedom for security is a lie, it is not actually happening. Due to the actions of the Bush Administration, we are losing security and freedom. We have gained no security at all.

      1) No, I refuse to be drawn into an argument whether local authorities should have done more. They should have, but their failure does not excuse the failure of the Administration.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    92. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is exactly like the war on drugs!
      Drugs have been around since some caveman threw a bunch of dried hemp on a fire to stoke the morning fire. Terrorizing others has been a means to an end since before man learned not to drag his knuckles on the ground. These are two wars that will never go away and if we let those in power abuse the rights we have now these draconian measures will never cease. History has taught us that they will only be expanded and abused. I applaud their EFForts!

    93. Re:For the love of all that's good... by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      I mean, the Administration is claiming that there are laws--and Constitutional obligations, even--that clearly and properly justify these wiretaps.

      Okay, we'll try this is simply as possible: This is a lie.

      The president must, at all times, follow the law, even with regard to the military. It is his job to execute the law, not decide what the law is, or what it means, or whether it's constitutional or not. He has no power, whatsoever, to break the law, as passed by Congress, as filtered through the courts, in any way, shape, or form. Got it?

      Now, because the President is in such an important position, he cannot be arrested. (In addition, he'd have to be arrested by his own branch, which is unlikely.) He must be impeached first. However, this does not affect the legality of his actions.

      This 'Constitutional oblications' is a lie. He doesn't even have the power to 'make war', as some lunatics keep saying. He is the Commander in Chief of the armed forces, and that's it. Someone in command does not have the authority to do whatever they want, they must still follow laws. He does exactly the same thing he does for civilian government, execute decisions made by Congress.

      Congress, in recent decades, has granted the president limited authority to use the military without their permission for a short of amount of time for 60 days, but don't confuse that with a 'right'. The president has no more constutitional authority to invade Canada than I do.

      So there's the 'constitutional obligations' out the window. Let's look at FISA.

      FISA forbids spying outside of that authorized by law. Everyone agrees with this. So let's see if the resolution to invade Afghanistan authorized anything under FISA. Well, no. Let's see if it authorized wiretapping in general. Hrm, nope. What did it authorize?

      Well, first of all, it clearly says military force, but, more to the point, it says 'all necessary and appropriate force'. That is, in fact, legal code. Necessary is the opposite of excessive. Appropriate is the opposite of inappropriate. What is 'inappropriate'? Well, part of the legal meaning is 'within the law'. (Among other things.)

      I.e., like many things, authorization of force is require within the law.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    94. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank God you're brave enough to speak up for Comrade Bush, and his secret laws, secret police, secret gulags, and his righ to torture anyone he wishes. But you showed a little bit of cowardice, comrade, for which the Party may rebuke you -- you said that evil terrorist word "constitutional"! Remember, Comrade Bush is Divine, and the Party is Holy, and only evil people think of the evil constitution.

      All Power to Comrade Bush! Down with the evil humans and down with evil democracy!

    95. Re:For the love of all that's good... by deadweight · · Score: 1

      "You raid a cell in Pakistan, find a U.S. phone number on a computer there. In criminal justice terms, that's not probable cause to tap a phone line." In what alternative universe would the FISA Court NOT grant a wiretap based on this information?

    96. Re:For the love of all that's good... by deadweight · · Score: 1

      How the fuck do you KNOW who they were wiretapping? With no warrants, not even from FISA, they could very well be wiretapping your grandmother. "Only guilty people need to worry, I have nothing to hide" is an age old excuse for every kind of totalitarian government.

    97. Re:For the love of all that's good... by sglane81 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. How this was modded a troll is beyond me.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_troll
      In Internet terminology, a troll is a person who posts rude or offensive messages on the Internet, such as on online discussion forums, to disrupt discussion or to upset its participants.

      Disruting the discussion was not the parent's intent. Moderation abuse.

      --
      This is the Internet. You can say "fuck" here. - AC
    98. Re:For the love of all that's good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Brad -
          Thanks for coming by. Your comments are always appreciated.

          Something you need to know is that because of that Register article, this is a _common_ misconception about the EFF. I thought it was true myself for over a month after it was published, because there wasn't a public refutation as large as the original statement. I didn't see anyone refute it, so I believed it to be true.

          I would strongly advise you to make a page refuting the trolls and give us a link we can hand out when we encounter this bit of misinformation.

      Thank you.

    99. Re:For the love of all that's good... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      I honestly believe that Congress acknowledged a state of war, and that on that basis the President was authorized to invade both Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as conduct intelligence-gathering operations using all the means available to the Executive. This position is no more partisan than the one which would more narrowly interpret Congressional intent.

      After all, as many people keep pointing out, Iraq is not the be-all and end-all of terrorism. Nor was the Hussein regime the worst perpetrator. While shutting down state sponsors of terror is an important part of the war, surely robust intellignece gathering operations are equally as important.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    100. Re:For the love of all that's good... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Feel free to substitute your own horrible act of slaughter, then.

      Unless you're arguing that the U.S. already totally secure, and monitoring the communications of suspected terrorist cells is wholly unnecessary on account of them (a) not existing and (b) not having any convenient methods of murdering large numbers of people all at once.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    101. Re:For the love of all that's good... by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Unless you're arguing that the U.S. already totally secure, and monitoring the communications of suspected terrorist cells is wholly unnecessary on account of them (a) not existing and (b) not having any convenient methods of murdering large numbers of people all at once.

      I am arguing that acts of terrorism are fundamentally unpreventable in a free society and only marginally so in a totalitarian one. Therefore the intelligence services in a free state should confine themselves to operating within confines of the law, respecting due process and citizen rights, otherwise the outcome is the loss of the very freedom they are supposedly defending and any moral authority the state had for no substantial practical gain, other than incurred by would-be tyrants, small and large, wishing to end such freedom to further their own designs. Furthermore, combined acts of terror globally for the last 50 years account for less then 10% of the casualties on both sides in the Iraq and Afghanistan campaigns alone, or less then 20% of the yearly death toll due to car accidents in the US. The whole point of terror is that it is conducted by weak enemies who, lacking any significant military strength, resort to psychological warfare aiming to frighten hundrends of millions of people out of their mind, to the point of them ceasing any logical thought, to the point of them reverting to their most base animal instincts, to the point of them giving up all their rights and freedoms for which their ancestors fought and died, to the point of bigotry and xenophobia becoming the standard in their relations with others, to the point of welcoming totalitarian police-state complete with intrusive surveilance which would boil the blood of any of the patriots of any decade past, to the point of where their fear becomes an all-encompassing world-view which can only be satisfied by bloodshed and military dominance of all who might be a source of that fear -- all of it by an inexpensive act of killing at most few thousands and making sure hysterical media enlarges that act until it surpasses the opening battles of WWII in preceived importance.

      The way to fight terror is courage and resolve, not panic, not random lashing out at random targets and definitely not cowardice exemplified by pathetic bargraining of one's sniveling subservience to authority figures in exchange for a comforting but empty promise of protection by the state.

      The most potent anti-terror weapon ever devised, one that makes Osama cringe, is a simple refusal to be indimidated by him and the corresponding responsibility of the media of reporting any terror attacks matter of factly, briefly and immediately de-emphasizing them without any hint of fear or hysteria. Conversely, fueled by fear mongering, crazed, out-of control activities of zealots on a power-mad binge of destruction of the cornerstone elements of the democratic legacy, under the cloak of "war on terror", most certainly please Osama greatly as the actions of these lunatics only legitimize his position in the view of many moderates in his audience and drive them to his cause. That is how the phony "patriots" whose contempt for the principles of democracy is only surpassed by their hate for all who would challenge their power make Osama's terror campain such a success.

    102. Re:For the love of all that's good... by schwaang · · Score: 1

      This was not a formal declaration of war, it was a specific authorization to use necessary force.

      I'm not sure if you followed the public debate that occurred when Congress authorized the use of force. But I did. And at no time during that debate was it suggested that this action would give the president full war-time powers with respect to domestic spying (or other domestic action for that matter). Don't you think the American people should have understood that issue when they advised their members of Congress on how to vote?

      In fact, drafts that included language that could possibly, under some circumstances, give the president more domestic powers were explicitly cut from the final bill, because the Congress did not have the intent to give Bush those powers.

      One thing we do agree on is that "robust intelligence operations" are important to combat the threat of terrorism. But it needs to be done within the law.

  5. It's about time EFF got back into the news! by erroneus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This will definitely be an interesting story to follow. This will put companies on the defensive for complying with any illegal acts by the government. Some say you can't sue the government, but you sure as hell can sue the people who comply with illegal acts. Why didn't I think about that angle? I just assumed they tapped the communications in some way that circumvented the companies...

    1. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by Siergen · · Score: 1

      If the EFF truly thought it was illegal, they'd be suing the US government directly. That would stop the NSA from asking ANY company to assist them, not just AT&T. Instead, they apparently have decided they can't prove that the NSA is breaking any laws, so they are hoping to use the threat of legal costs and bad publicity to force AT&T to stop fulfilling lawful requests from the US government...

    2. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      How are they lawful without a warrant?

    3. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that you have to ask the government to allow you to sue it, right? And that permission is almost never granted by the federal government right?

      If it weren't so, things wouldn't be such a mess with regards to unconstitutionality, since you can't do anything about it unless the government puts you in court so you can appeal all the way to the Supreme Court, or the feds deign to let you sue them over it.

    4. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Funny

      Why, because the current President of the United States says so, and it's not like he's every got anything wrong before.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    5. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are assuming a lot with your statement. It is much more likely that the fastest route to get the wiretapping stopped is by first filing suits against the companies complying with illegal requests for wire taps. Once the wire tapping has been stopped through the legal actions against the company not only do you have those court rulings to use in future cases, but you can start the lengthy legal process against the government. The fight to stop illegal wire taps being performed by the U.S. Government is likely to not be a single case in a single court. It is more likely to be a number of cases against the companies performing the tapping, the U.S. Government for requesting the taps in the first place, and it's likely these cases will go all the way to the Supreme Court.

    6. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by akasper · · Score: 1

      If the EFF sued the government... then wouldn't that mean that "we" the taxpayers would have to pay the settlement? Or am I getting this all wrong?

      I agree with the others... go after corporations... they have seem to have the most influence on our government anyway...

    7. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

      Didn't you know that the Crown^H^H^H^H^Hgovernment of the United States has sovereign immunity?

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    8. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who do you think pays if the Corporation has a judgement against it? It's called consumers! Which is really funny if the EFF is a consumer of AT&T. (It's called paying for your own settlement.)

    9. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by SETIGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      If the EFF truly thought it was illegal, they'd be suing the US government directly.

      Unfortunately, suing the government is difficult. It's likely the people suing would be required to show that they have been directly harmed. Since the government won't release any information about who was monitored, it's impossible to prove you have grounds to sue.

      The standard would likely be lower for suing AT&T, which could be as simple as breach of a privacy contract. I'm sure AT&T has many privacy agreements with its customers that say that they will not release private information to government agencies without a warrant. Moreover, during the discovery phase, some information about who was monitored might become available at which point suits against the government could proceed.

      Then again I'm just a simple country astronomer. I didn't even read TFA.

    10. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by darkmeridian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Civil rights unions file suits like this only to get attention. These suits do not get anywhere. Remember, courts want to encourage compliance with court orders or government agency orders instead of everyone pulling a Google. What normally happens is that the United States government comes in and files an amicus brief or intervenes in the action and says, "National Security. Nothing to see here." Completely apolitically, look at the gays in the military issue. The military files an amicus brief to the effect that gays in the military in any capacity--even as a lawyer or translator--would be detrimental to national security. Or rather, gays who admit to being gay in contravention of "don't ask, don't tell" would be dangerous. Think about that logically. The Supreme Court took that argument hook, line, and sinker. I wouldn't get too happy about the EFF's suit just yet.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    11. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by humphrm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You don't know how right you are, if the EFF keeps it up. I, for one, amd going to make a cash donation to the EFF now, and tell them that my donation is intended to keep the illegal wiretapping lawsuits coming.

      EFF has a long road ahead of it... it needs to get RIAA with telecom companies. One or two actions will raise eyebrows, but when the fear of a lawsuit tingles CEOs backsides whenever the government whispers in their ear, those whispers are going to start falling on deaf ears. So it's going to take many more lawsuits (and of course some wins). But once that investment is made... CEOs are far more powerfull than the President and David Addington can ever dream of.

      --
      -- "In order to have power, I must be taken seriously." -Mojo Jojo
    12. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by ksheff · · Score: 1

      or maybe the corporations are hoping that the EFF sues them. http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/06/16 6248

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    13. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by arodland · · Score: 1

      There are other things than "settlements" in the legal book of remedies ;)

      In any case, never forget that corporations are created by the power of government, and exert their influence through the government. Given an uncorrupt government (heh heh) without an interest in meddling in business to any end (hack, cough), the "big corps" wouldn't be anything special at all.

    14. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by Quadraginta · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's likely the people suing would be required to show that they have been directly harmed.

      The EFF found a few subscribers of AT&T to allege violation of their First and Fourth Amendment rights, and have asked every similarly-situated subscriber to be joined to make it a class-action suit. The EFF is not in fact suing the government itself, the named plaintiffs (and potentially the millions of unnamed members of the class) are. The EFF is just providing the lawyers.

      The standard would likely be lower for suing AT&T, which could be as simple as breach of a privacy contract.

      No, AT&T is obligated to give up information on their subscribers in response to any lawful government order, private privacy agreements notwithstanding. That's why they can comply with ordinary secret wiretap orders without telling you, and you can't sue them for breach of contract.

      The complaint alleges, first, that AT&T acting as an agent of the government violated the plaintiffs First and Fourth Amendment rights by not securing a warrant for a wiretap and mining AT&T's "Daytona" database. Obviously, the Court could not find for the plaintiffs without finding that the President has no constitutional or statutory authority to order wiretaps of this nature without a warrant. Additionally, it would need to find that AT&T was acting as the government's agent, and not merely complying with an order it thought, or had good reason to think, was legal.

      This is a tall order, especially with regard to finding AT&T an agent of the government. I suspect it's the equivalent of the following: you work at the DMV, and a policeman comes in, shows you his badge, and asks you to run the plates of a certain car and tell you the owner's address, because he's investigating a certain crime. He's asked you to do this many times before, you know for a fact he works for the PD, and you know for a fact the crime he mentions exists, because you saw it on the news. But -- alas -- it turns out the cop was not acting officially. He was merely sneakily finding out where his ex-girlfriend was living. So the ex-GF sues you for violating her Fourth Amendment rights. Is the Court going to back her up? Mmm, sounds unlikely. Sounds like you were just doing your job and responded to what any reasonable person would think was a legal order from law enforcement. The ex-GF has a case against the cop, sure. But not against you. Similarly, I 'spect a Federal judge is going to tell the EFF the plaintiffs might have a case against the United States, but not against AT&T.

      The complaint alleges, second, that AT&T violated FISA because they knew, or should have known, that the government order to wiretap without a FISA warrant was illegal, notwithstanding that it was signed by the Attorney General of the United States or his representative. Um, sure. Good luck with that one, boys.

      The remaining counts are a couple of Hail Marys alleging violation of the usual wiretap laws -- which relies on AT&T's defense that it was obeying a legal (or apparently legal or legal at the time) order not holding up -- and for violating California's business code because AT&T deceived subscribers into thinking their communications would not be monitored illegally by the NSA.

      I would be shocked if the EFF expects to prevail on this at any level, except maybe barely possibly at the trial court level if they do get venue in San Francisco and can seat a load of ACT-UP activists on the jury. But, mmmm, any way it turns out, it's very good publicity. Look how long this comment thread is...

    15. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      The military files an amicus brief to the effect that gays in the military in any capacity--even as a lawyer or translator--would be detrimental to national security. Or rather, gays who admit to being gay in contravention of "don't ask, don't tell" would be dangerous. Think about that logically.

      It must be true. Clearly the penguins' pebbles were a secret soviet code of some kind.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    16. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by symphara · · Score: 1
      This is a tall order, especially with regard to finding AT&T an agent of the government. I suspect it's the equivalent of the following: you work at the DMV, and a policeman comes in, shows you his badge, and asks you to run the plates of a certain car and tell you the owner's address, because he's investigating a certain crime. He's asked you to do this many times before, you know for a fact he works for the PD, and you know for a fact the crime he mentions exists, because you saw it on the news. But -- alas -- it turns out the cop was not acting officially. He was merely sneakily finding out where his ex-girlfriend was living. So the ex-GF sues you for violating her Fourth Amendment rights. Is the Court going to back her up? Mmm, sounds unlikely. Sounds like you were just doing your job and responded to what any reasonable person would think was a legal order from law enforcement.

      I think your example forgets something very important: if normally the policeman in question has to provide some sort of paper trail to the DMV, but this time he doesn't, and the DMV guy closes his eyes and still releases the data, then you can't really argue he was doing his job. He should have questioned the order and the lack of legal documentation.

      It's the same with AT&T. I don't know the standard operating practice, but if AT&T should have seen warrants before doing anything, and they obviously didn't - while still complying with the government request, they are a guilty party. They should have opposed the government and gone to court, since they were in their right fighting an illegal order. They should have gone to the press and kicked a huge fuss. But they chickened out and complied.
    17. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by LandruBek · · Score: 1

      Remember, courts want to encourage compliance with court orders or government agency orders instead of everyone pulling a Google.

      No. You're conflating the judiciary and executive. Judges might be biased to see that people comply with other courts' orders, but I don't think that, in GENERAL, you'd find that most judges are biased in favor of the prosecutor, e.g., DOJ subpoena-ing Google.

      --
      $META_SIG_JOKE
    18. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by defile · · Score: 1

      It's all about surfacing the query log.

      Who's in it and why?

      And if John Kerry or anyone remotely connected to him was spied on (sillier things have happened, think Nixon) it's curtains for the Bush administration.

      Unless the administration says that the Demorats are being spied on because they're terrorists who hate America and orders them arrested and shipped to gitmo. It's still curtains alright, only for America.

    19. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by zCyl · · Score: 1

      if AT&T should have seen warrants before doing anything, and they obviously didn't - while still complying with the government request, they are a guilty party. They should have opposed the government and gone to court, since they were in their right fighting an illegal order. They should have gone to the press and kicked a huge fuss. But they chickened out and complied.

      That point you made warrants emphasis. (No pun intended.) If there are no penalties for companies failing to obtain a warrant before compromising the privacy rights of citizens, then warrants will end up only protecting the privacy of "popular" individuals, while the "unpopular" will promptly lose protection of the fourth amendment. I don't want to live in a world where companies can conclude that a particular individual is "probably guilty anyway" because "everyone knows it", and can then hand over compromising personal information without a warrant.

    20. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by Quadraginta · · Score: 1

      I don't want to live in a world where companies can conclude that a particular individual is "probably guilty anyway" because "everyone knows it"

      I don't mean to be overly cynical, but I find it hard to believe anyone over the age of 30 can imagine we don't already live in that world. Have you never been or known someone who's been stopped by the police for DWB ("Driving While Black")? Are you not aware that women are almost always given far lighter sentences for crimes of violence than men? (The perception is that women are more often "driven to" violence, while for men it's more of a choice.) Is it not clear that attractive people are routinely treated with more trust in business deals than ugly fat people? That is, they get mortgages easier, are promoted more often, et cetera?

      I mean, relying on Constitutional protections to protect us from human nature seems a bit...well, unrealistic.

    21. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by humphrm · · Score: 1

      Heh OK I'm a bit late with a reply, but better late than never :)

      I've worked closely with a half dozen CEOs in my career, and I can say from experience that regardless of what Bonhomie Snoutintroff says, a lawsuit is a lawsuit is a lawsuit, and no CEO welcomes them. They have to declare them in their SEC statements. They have to hire and pay people to defend them. And sometimes runaway juries do things that you never expected. Litigation is a crapshoot that you can't control with (in America) almost unlimited downside and no upside for them.

      Still, nice segue :)

      --
      -- "In order to have power, I must be taken seriously." -Mojo Jojo
    22. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > I, for one, amd going to make a cash donation to the EFF now, and tell them that my donation is intended to keep the illegal wiretapping lawsuits coming.

      You, for one, are going to be disappeared for providing material support to a terrorist organization.

    23. Re:It's about time EFF got back into the news! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
      Like another replier said, this is more like the DMV office leaving an "empty desk" for law enforcement to use... Yeah, they know the guys a valid officer, yes, they know he catches lots of high-profile cases.. so they just set him up a desk so he can do his own searches...and they don't bother to ask for papers anymore. THEN the girlfriends start suing the DMV because they don't have any proof weather he was was legally allowed to make the searches or not.


      at that point, the burden should be on ATT to prove they have some records of who was requesting searches and what for... especially if they allow direct access to a database of millions of customers! What's going to be interesting is how much discovery the judge will allow.. will they appoint some grand jury to look at the secret requests and match them up? That's really what this is about and a good judge should be VERY interested in some form of accountability for the executive branch.. The whole problem right now is that the Bush Administration isn't even complying with the laws for doing things in secret!!! Courts don't like it when really common data is called "secret" by anybody... that's the angle to go on here.

  6. LOCAL CALLS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So it's local calls too, not just international ?

  7. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  8. Flip Side? by akasper · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What would have happened to AT&T if they had not complied with the demands of government agencies?

    1. Re:Flip Side? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The agencies would come back with a warrant, like they're supposed to?

    2. Re:Flip Side? by akasper · · Score: 1

      Maybe they're afraid of losing their influence and lobbying power? Or maybe they just give in easily after being forced to break up from their monopoly decades ago... ;)

    3. Re:Flip Side? by brxndxn · · Score: 1

      "What would have happened to AT&T if they had not complied with the demands of government agencies?"

      Their stock would be as popular as Google's.. Oh wait.. China.. hrmm.

      --
      --- We need more Ron Paul!
    4. Re:Flip Side? by jZnat · · Score: 1

      I dunno; GOOG's up about $32 since the last time I checked about a week or so ago. I think they're doing just fine. :)

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    5. Re:Flip Side? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      but this is about UNWARRANTED search.. from the tone of things, the feds got direct access to the database to do their own searches... this is several steps past warranted searches... and with no accountability at all. They don't know WHAT the feds are looking up at this point! they may be looking for pizza, looking for drug delivery boys, or checking up on old girlfriends... the point of the lawsuit is that ATT opened the gates there is no accountabiltiy at all anymore!!

  9. What'd they say? by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Funny


    "What'd they say?"
    "Said they're gonna sue AT&T."
    "Why?"
    "Dunno, probably because AT&T let's us wiretap illegally."
    "What're they saying now?"
    "Something about their line is probably even now being bugged."
    "Harsh!"

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  10. TLAs... by The+Good+Reverend · · Score: 4, Funny

    EFF Sues AT&T Over NSA Wiretapping

    OMG!

  11. Good for them. by RyoShin · · Score: 2, Funny

    Nice to see someone finally starting some backlash for the tapping, even if it's not against the government.

    In other news, Cory better be careful or he may get another mean letter calling him names and threatenin' all legal-like.

    1. Re:Good for them. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Illegal or extra-legal like too...

    2. Re:Good for them. by spacefight · · Score: 1

      Cory is not employed by the EFF anymore.

  12. Re:Not illegal. by erroneus · · Score: 4, Informative

    Uh, no. Congress did not grant this power explicitly. Congress allowed military action. And from what I've heard, they are spinning this to mean that domestic wiretaps are okay. Here's the problem:

    They already have the power to do these things without a warrant so long as they go back and get the warrant within 72 hours. This gives them the ability to act on a lead immediately without the hassle of waiting on a judge. They don't want to do even THAT much -- they want whatever they are doing to be SECRET and to be UNACCOUNTABLE for it. Ultimately, I believe we will find that it is going well beyond communications where one side is 'al qaeda' and the other side is in the U.S. I think if we get to see what they are REALLY doing, we'll find investigations against anti-war and anti-Bush organizations and their members.

  13. Does the NSA need help? by Sen.NullProcPntr · · Score: 3, Funny
    I thought the NSA just happened to have satellite dishes right next to every communications down link in the US.

    Maybe they haven't yet perfected undersea cable interception.

    Where are those laser guided sharks when you need them?

    1. Re:Does the NSA need help? by La+Camiseta · · Score: 1

      Sorry there, they were placed on the endangered species list. But I do have some tuna with lasers on their heads. They're genetically mutated tuna at that.

  14. Re:Not illegal. by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Funny
    Who says it was US Citizens ? I've not seen that anywhere. The president was granted this power by congress and congress knew all along about it. Nothing to see here, move along.

    Aren't you supposed to be preparing for your speech tonight?

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  15. WMDs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe the NSA told AT&T that they needed access to their databases because WMDs were being built in there. Operation AT&T Freedom

  16. Re:Not illegal. by hsmith · · Score: 1

    Isn't like the packed supreme court would side on the side of the people and not the executive!

  17. Excuse me? by StefanJ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do nothing. Roll over. Keep quiet. Don't stick your neck out. Hunker down. Give up. Deal with it. Surrender. Comply.

    Is that what you'd recommend in the face of arrogance and tyranny?

    1. Re:Excuse me? by the-amazing-blob · · Score: 1

      Sadly, it has definetely worked for the masses so far.

    2. Re:Excuse me? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Well, actually, that's precisely what is expected of us.

      What can we, as individuals, really do? We honestly live in what appears to be the most well managed, well thought out, and well prepared oppressive regime in history. The system of control, mostly based upon financial necessities in modern life and social backlash for displaying resistant behavior, is so nearly perfect that there's very little outright violence needed. In a way the cattle are packed so tightly together that there's no room to break out of the cattle farm even if one wanted to. With such a well managed system in place even people who, in centuries past, may have identified and resisted the oppression are unable to notice any oppression. To them, this is just the way things should always be.

      How I wish I had been born as one of those average folk who could be satisified by nightly television and a cookie cutter job. Unless a person finds themselves accepted into social circles filled with already-powerful individuals the desire to excel is a sentence of lifelong misery. Ridicule and ostricism comes from the average folk--the overwhelming majority--and denial, ridicule, harassment, and ostricism comes from the priveleged folk.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    3. Re:Excuse me? by waynemcdougall · · Score: 4, Funny

      Do nothing. Roll over. Keep quiet. Don't stick your neck out. Hunker down. Give up. Deal with it. Surrender. Comply.

      Is that what you'd recommend in the face of arrogance and tyranny?

      Uh, no, I'd recommend:

      click...I, for one, welcome our warrantless, wire-tapping overlords...hello, hello, is this thing on, CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW? I SAID I can be useful in rounding up fellow slashdotters to slave in your undeground Echelon data store....click

      --
      Recycle PCs and build a wireless community network www.hillsborough.org.nz
    4. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      How I wish I had been born as one of those average folk who could be satisified by nightly television and a cookie cutter job. Unless a person finds themselves accepted into social circles filled with already-powerful individuals the desire to excel is a sentence of lifelong misery. Ridicule and ostricism comes from the average folk--the overwhelming majority--and denial, ridicule, harassment, and ostricism comes from the priveleged folk.

      Honey, I know it's hard for you right now, but you hang in there. In a few years you'll be at college and everything will seem so different. Now turn off your music, log out of your blog and I'll be back to tuck you in in five minutes :)

    5. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Only technology, such as PGP/GPG, Tor, encrypted file systems and such like will protect us from state control and surveillance.

      We, Slashdot readers/writers, are the future of freedom - we need to put our coding where our values lie. If we can make it easy to use, the general public can enjoy protection from "democratic" bodies.

    6. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Brilliant!

    7. Re:Excuse me? by geekoid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is so wrong.

      The US is full of examples that counter your point. Don't blame the US because you can't succeed.

      "What can we, as individuals, really do? "
      Change the country. What? you think there is some sort of hive mind doing all this? no, it's just individuals.
      Participate or don't be counted, your choice.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    8. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Is that what you'd recommend in the face of arrogance and tyranny?
      This suit is frivolous. They have 0 chance of winning it, they are wasting the courts time, and they know it. They should be speaking out against what is going on, petitioning lawmakers, and so on, but a courtroom is not the appropriate forum for what they are saying at this time.
    9. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent post, you summarized the real state of the union very eloquently.

    10. Re:Excuse me? by Rahga · · Score: 1

      We honestly live in what appears to be the most well managed, well thought out, and well prepared oppressive regime in history."

      Oh yes, the Bush administration is sooooo oppressive. I'm sure they'll stop idiots from doing the pots-and-pans-clanging protest outside the State of the Union address tonight.

      Not.

      It's a lot like Rebel Without A Cause... just a lot more rebels.

    11. Re:Excuse me? by SilverspurG · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You should study history. The pinnacle of an oppressive regime is the ability to sit behind closed doors, inside of protective walls, while the underclass demonstrates outside.

      "Let them eat cake" comes to mind. You were probably too eager with your ridicule to remember that, though.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    12. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is not that the wrong people hold power, in that we can remedy the problem by simply voting them out. The problem is that power exists, and cannot be restrained. (The US experiment in limited government, along with thousands of years of human history, have all but proven this beyond a doubt. Power, meaning the "right" to initiate force, is virtually irrefutable once acquired.)

      When a citizen votes, he votes not to limit power, but to expand it. Think about it. How many US politicians, on any level, have actually worked towards reducing -- instead of expanding -- the powers of government? The vast majority of them find "solutions" in the expansion of government power, not the reduction of government power.

      What I'm trying to say is that it's not as simple as "voting them out". Needless to say, there is no place for an anarchist like me in democracy; I get the short end of the stick no matter who I vote for, or whether I vote at all. I get the short end of the stick simply because I believe in the zero-aggression principle, and politics does not. That will not change as long as I live, and I have already accepted that.

      And BTW, selective freedom (as in the US) is by no means Freedom.

    13. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Omgggggggg -- we should write about it on our LJs and complain about how hard it is to be brilliant! That's the destiny of your life: the heavy-hearted work of staggering genius.

    14. Re:Excuse me? by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      "Let them eat cake" comes to mind. You were probably too eager with your ridicule to remember that, though.

      There is plenty of evidence that "Let them eat cake" was intended in humor, and that the joke was lost on the masses. (Rousseau wrote this when Marie Antoinette was a mere 10 years old in a parable about a princess.)

      However, in general I agree with your points. If you can keep the people believing that mere protesting will make one's voice heard instead of, say, talking with the congressmen, then you can use this to oppress the people :-)

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    15. Re:Excuse me? by javamann · · Score: 1

      What are you? French?

    16. Re:Excuse me? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Yes. It is questionable whether or not she actually said it but there's little doubt in my mind that it is indeed representative of the general feeling of people in a position of power.

      If it's humor then it's only the sick humor that can only be displayed by a person who is secure and protected enough to be able to harass, hound, or otherwise harangue another human with complete impunity for sport or amusement. That gets pretty close to the root definition of oppression.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    17. Re:Excuse me? by cgenman · · Score: 1

      What can we, as individuals, really do? We honestly live in what appears to be the most well managed, well thought out, and well prepared oppressive regime in history.

      I used to believe this, but it really isn't true. An individual who has the strength to be a intelligent, tenatious pain in the ass can change things. And the intelligent part is optional.

      For example, If you found the phone numbers to the board members of AT&T and complained every, single, day about the wiretapping, you would probably annoy them enough to avoid the next batch of wiretaps, if not just change their phone numbers. If you want companies to change the conditions in their workers plants, you smuggle video cameras in. If you want to get the US out of Iraq, you get photographs of the dead, you get video footage of people's lives destroyed, and you secretly "leak" it to newspapers and tabloids.

      Legal tactics largely don't work. I don't mean the legal system, I mean waving flags from the "free speech zones" 5 miles from the actual political event. I'm really sad when I see protesters separating themselves out into the "I want to be arrested" pile and the "I don't want to be arrested" pile. If you don't want the G8 conference in your hometown, and you REALLY mean it, everyone go get your shovels and dig up the fucking roads.

      That degree of breaking the law isn't usually what is called for... many an injustice has been brought to an end by a janitor who found a memo in someone's locked filing cabinet.

      People can change things. So few realize it, though, that things stay good for a select few.

      Unless a person finds themselves accepted into social circles filled with already-powerful individuals the desire to excel is a sentence of lifelong misery. Ridicule and ostricism comes from the average folk--the overwhelming majority--and denial, ridicule, harassment, and ostricism comes from the priveleged folk.

      The secret to getting into any circle is tenacity. Want to be with the powerful and rich people? Pick groups and activities with them (sailing, skiing, particular bars, etc). Build up your contact lists, and get credibility through raw face time. Eventually you will form a close friendship with ONE of them, which you can work and leverage into being allowed into the club. After 5 years you will be known. After 10 years you will be an integral part of the society. After 20 years you will be a pillar that holds the society up.

      Sadly, rich people are boring... Except for the crazy rich people, but they don't seem to congregate with the others.

      And while I'm at it, turn on, tune in, and drop out. I've met people who live entirely on picking up things they found outside of grocery stores while they biked across the country. I've met people who make a very good living selling drugs to cops. I know someone who sells muffins from their kitchen to local stores, maybe even legally. There are people in New York that make a fine living dominating other people's apartments while they are locked outside. I deal with people daily who make their living through nothing more regimented than music.

      The control of the system is illusory. It is only real when we believe that it is real. We only obey because we don't realize that more than 1/2 of all murders go unsolved, and most crimes are far, far lower.

      Take control of your life and see what happens. Don't worry too much, short of getting a disease or losing your kids anything you fuck up now can be smoothed over in a few years.

    18. Re:Excuse me? by oirtemed · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You do know that Senate and House reelection rates for incumbents are 90%+ With house pushing 97-99 most years. That is why old, racist, biggoted and backwards reps and senators remain in Congress. The few insightful, educated people that are able to make meaningful votes will not be able to counter the vast, sheeplike public. That is just common sense. This myth of 'democracy', that *I* can do something is almost utter garbage. Don't even start to say "Write letters", get the "word" out. Campaigns are won with money. People with 20 mill to burn, that Senator from what New Jersey?, or incumbents WIN. That's the bottom line.

    19. Re:Excuse me? by techno-vampire · · Score: 2, Insightful
      We honestly live in what appears to be the most well managed, well thought out, and well prepared oppressive regime in history.

      I don't know about you, but I don't live in North Korea, Iran, Saudi Arabia or China, and I doubt you do either. If you did, you'd probably not be allowed to post things like that.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    20. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you think there is some sort of hive mind doing all this? no, it's just individuals.

      Darn.

    21. Re:Excuse me? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Demonstrating perfectly that the nations which you've mentioned have not managed, thought out, or prepared their policies of oppression.

      The most oppressive regime is the regime which can treat the underclass with complete impunity because they know that the underclass has no real power against it. The power of a regime can be demonstrated by the effort which it must put into tracking those who dare speak out against it.

      In the US the regime gets AT&T to do the tracking for them.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    22. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're so right. Try to talk to someone about this sometime:
      .
      http://www.physics.byu.edu/research/energy/htm7.ht ml

      http://www.lewrockwell.com/reynolds/reynolds12.htm l

      Very strong evidence of controlled demolition of all 3 towers on 9/11, and nobody wants to talk about it. I'm being ostracized by my family right now. My wife even refuses to entertain the idea.

      But like the other guy said, evil can flourish when good men do nothing, so I continue to invite ridicule and worse by raising the discussion.

    23. Re:Excuse me? by AusIV · · Score: 1
      I used to feel the same way you do, but in the past year, I've come to realize, that I can get worked up over things like this, or I can ignore them and live my own life. If the NSA wants to tap my phone, log my web usage, let them. It's a waste of their resources. They're not going to get anything interesting about me.

      I know people say evil triumphs when good men do nothing, but what does it accomplish to get worked up about the "most well managed, well thought out, and well prepared opressive regime in history?" It may raise your blood pressure a bit, but calling people names, even accurate ones, doesn't actually accomplish anything.

      I'm not saying you shouldn't speak out. Encourage people to go to the polls and vote for better representation. Change happens when people act, not when they just sit and complain. I still believe in Thomas Jefferson's quote: "Dissent is the highest form of patriotism," but I don't wish to let my dissent overpower my life.

    24. Re:Excuse me? by orgelspieler · · Score: 1
      In the US the regime gets AT&T to do the tracking for them.
      Well I guess if they're gonna spy on us, they might as well be efficient about it, right? I mean, there's no point in me getting spied on *and* paying extra tax money so the feds can re-develop a database that already exists.

      I think you are right that true oppression is like that in 1984, where the proletariat is not even aware of it. However, I do not think we are there yet. The Republicrats are still at least doing lip service to ideas like ear-mark reform and campaign finance reform. If this were an Orwellian regime, they would not even bother because things like campaign finance scandals would not see the light of day.

    25. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait. Let me guess. You paint your nails black. Go cry for attention somewhere else, you emogoth loser. If you hate it here so goddamn much, give away your possesions and become a monk in the Himalaya Mountains or something. You sound like you need medication and counseling.

    26. Re:Excuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is such a troll. Who claims that the steel in the WTC melted? Nobody but this bozo. Talk to a structural engineer for 10 minutes to find out what happened. If you want a truly stupid theory, then ask a physicist.

    27. Re:Excuse me? by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      And I just used up the last of my mod points too...I don't downmod often, but the ones like this are sure well-deserving of it.

      However, you do provide an excellent illustration of one of the main points of the problem-this attitude that anyone who is dissatisfied or disillusioned simply needs to "grow up". Tell me again, what was Ben Franklin's age at the time of the American Revolution? Jefferson? Adams? Payne? Should they have just "grown up" and accepted that oppression is "just the way it is"?

      Real adults, with real adult brains, are capable of thinking for themselves and forming their own opinions-even if that opinion places them at odds with the majority. It is indeed unfortunate that so many have never grown up-but I say that of those who lack critical thinking ability, not of those who have worked to develop it.

      Now, were you planning on -refuting- any of the points made by grandparent, or just resorting to childish (yes, on your part) behavior?

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    28. Re:Excuse me? by SlowMovingTarget · · Score: 0

      Tyranny? What tyranny are you talking about? As a form of government, all power must be concentrated on a single individual. It isn't in the U.S. You want to have a look at tyranny? Try Cuba or North Korea.

      Tyranny in the sense of "oppressive power" exerted by the government? Where do you see that in the U.S., really? You can speak out against the government without fear of retribution from the government. You don't get to make threats, you don't get to put people in danger, but you do get to voice your opinion. You can even talk to a member of Al Qaeda if you like, but you shouldn't expect the call to be private. If you really want to see "oppressive power" exerted by the government (i.e. a police state), have a look at Iran.

      Or did you mean tyranny in the form of "a rigorous condition imposed by some outside agency or force?" If you compare the rule of law in the U.S. to a system of anarchy, then yes, the American government may be a bit tyrranical. But how about some real comparisons to, say, China? This particular sense of the word is relative, and relative to the rest of the nations in the world, the U.S. government comes off pretty well.

      You may not have intended to use a word with such force. There is real tyrrany in this world, but you will be hard-pressed to find it in any real sense here in the U.S., with the possible exception of the corporate world. If you really did mean to apply that word to the U.S., then I must take exception to such hyperbole. It diminishes the language. Granted, that's just my opinion.

    29. Re:Excuse me? by bagofbeans · · Score: 1

      "For example, If you found the phone numbers to the board members of AT&T and complained every, single, day about the wiretapping, you would probably annoy them enough to avoid the next batch of wiretaps, if not just change their phone numbers."

      No, you'd have the police on you for harassment.

    30. Re:Excuse me? by SilverspurG · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      You can speak out against the government without fear of retribution from the government
      Oh? Can you now? Look at the number of times I've been trolled by ACs using blatantly offensive material, grade-school type insults, and the sneer of political superiority in this topic alone.

      You may be able to speak out against the government here in the US but the fear of retribution is every bit as real here as it is anywhere else. In any documented forum the sheer number of the AC attacks lined against me, coupled with their particular form of sneering and hate, could probably be enough to file a lawsuit of harassment.
      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    31. Re:Excuse me? by SylvesterTheCat · · Score: 1

      >>Do nothing. Roll over. Keep quiet. Don't stick your neck out. Hunker down. Give up. Deal with it. Surrender. Comply.

      - sarcasm on -
      That's right. People (term used loosely) have, and if given the opportunity, will take innocent life inside of our borders. They will plan and execute these acts using our own communication infrastructure against us as they have use our own transportation infrastructure against us. So lets "Do nothing. Roll over. Keep quiet. Don't stick your neck out. Hunker down. Give up. Deal with it. Surrender. Comply."

      >>Is that what you'd recommend in the face of arrogance and tyranny?

      Yes, in the face of the "arrogance and tyranny" of our enemies, that is exactly what we should do.

      - sarcasm off -

      You obviously perceive Bush as either a greater source of tyranny than those who want to destroy western civilization or as the only source of tyranny. I don't know which, however the result is the same. I will admit that I see all of this as a slippery slope which has the potential to lead to bad things. I also believe that Bush honestly believes that his actions are necessary, legal (whether or not they really are is another question), are not for his personal gain, and are in the best interests of the US.

      Is this not what a President is supposed to do?

    32. Re:Excuse me? by SlowMovingTarget · · Score: 1
      ...but the fear of retribution is every bit as real here as it is anywhere else.

      My point is that fear of retribution is unnecessary and not a reasonable fear to have in the U.S. There is no retribution from the authorities if you voice dissent, no punishment for publicly disagreeing with government policy. In real tyrannical or totalitarian governments, you would be killed for voicing dissent.

      If people publicly (if anonymously) disagree with you, this is not retribution. If people make fun of you on Slashdot, this is not retribution. If people make a habit out of "sneering" at you in a post on a forum, I do not believe that this qualifies as harassment in a legal sense.

      There is no such thing as a "right to be agreed with." Nor is there any such thing as a "right to an audience." Vocal disagreement or even vocal derision can be ignored, even if it is unpleasant. There is no such thing as a "right to be pleased," either.

      Again, this is just my personal opinion, but I have a hard time equating dissenting posts with punishment (retribution). If you were unreasonably moderated down, that's another thing. But if that moderation is actually reasonable, you can't claim punishment on that account either.

      Paper cuts and knife wounds are not the same thing.

    33. Re:Excuse me? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      However, you do provide an excellent illustration of one of the main points of the problem-this attitude that anyone who is dissatisfied or disillusioned simply needs to "grow up". Tell me again, what was Ben Franklin's age at the time of the American Revolution? Jefferson? Adams? Payne? Should they have just "grown up" and accepted that oppression is "just the way it is"?

      What they didn't do was complain about the oppression then blame it on their fellow colonists for accepting it. They got together, they tried to create an alternative form of government, they agitated for change, they put their lives on the line. And when they asked their fellow colonists to put their lives on the line as well they raised themselves an army.

      So yes, I'm going to agree with the poster you're criticizing. Looking down on the rest of humanity and blaming them for your problems is a fundamentally immature philosophy. So he really should "grow up", because anyone who detests that many people just either hasn't been around too long or hasn't really experienced much of life.

    34. Re:Excuse me? by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      And the way they made that change was...by convincing their fellow colonists that things weren't right, and advocating that they, too, stand up for change! Why do you think Paine passed out brochures detailing what was going on, if -not- to wake people up and exhort them to get off their ass and do something about it?

      Great-god-knows-how-many-grandparent is in many ways correct. It IS a major problem that so many see "the way things are" and don't realize that change is possible. It is also a major problem that those who do are ostracized and scorned. What's wrong with a bit of criticism, even of the general public? Abolitionists criticized -very- broad segments of society at large, as did those in the civil rights movement, and both succeeded. (Not to say progress doesn't remain to be made, mind you.) Now, the opinion could certainly be better supported, but I guess I don't see how holding the opinion in itself can be called "immature."

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    35. Re:Excuse me? by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      He is probably using tyranny in the same sense that our founding fathers did. They used terms like 'tyranny of the majority' to describe democracy.

      "Tyranny in the sense of "oppressive power" exerted by the government? Where do you see that in the U.S., really?"

      Oh, things like warrantless spying, and not mentioning it, even lying about it, until forced by the news media, etc. True, it has not been used for evil purposes, yet, that we know about.(ie that bush has admitted, it is seceret after all) Stupid question though, what is there to keep it this way? An open and honest president?

      I am not worried at the moment that my phone calls are being monitored for 'unamerican opinions' but the protections are gone. Removing a bullet-proof vest does not do you any immediate harm. It is what can happen next that is the problem. History tells us that what happens next is often very ugly.

      "Tyranny has perhaps oftener grown out of the assumptions of power, called for, on pressing exigencies, by a defective constitution, than out of the full exercise of the largest constitutional authorities."

      Alexander Hamilton and/or james Madison, Federalist No. 20
      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    36. Re:Excuse me? by magores · · Score: 1

      Nicely said. Swift is chortling.

    37. Re:Excuse me? by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      My point is that fear of retribution is unnecessary and not a reasonable fear to have in the U.S. There is no retribution from the authorities if you voice dissent, no punishment for publicly disagreeing with government policy. In real tyrannical or totalitarian governments, you would be killed for voicing dissent.

      Are you saying that if you advocate the overthrow of the US government, or other 'highly controversial' policies, you're completely safe - you won't be put on any FBI watch list? No fly list? Etc?

      Not all retribution involves death or direct and immediate incarceration.

    38. Re:Excuse me? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Where do you see that in the U.S., really? You can speak out against the government without fear of retribution from the government.

      Tell that to Russel Tice.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    39. Re:Excuse me? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1
      I used to feel the same way you do, but in the past year, I've come to realize, that I can get worked up over things like this, or I can ignore them and live my own life. If the NSA wants to tap my phone, log my web usage, let them. It's a waste of their resources. They're not going to get anything interesting about me.

      You are wrong. They will eventually find something interesting. Maybe they'll get it wrong, but that does not change the consequences a bit.

      Do some reading up on how things worked in every single oppressive regime in history, and find out how many of the people that ended up being viciously crushed "had anything interesting" against themselves.

    40. Re:Excuse me? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1
      We, Slashdot readers/writers, are the future of freedom.

      Urgh. As much as I appreciate the fact that among the piles of nonsensical babbling to be found here there are, from time to time, amazing jewels of insight and clarity (which is precisely why I keep coming (this is actually not different from what happens in any other group of people)), I hope you are wrong, very wrong.

    41. Re:Excuse me? by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      I think you are right that true oppression is like that in 1984, where the proletariat is not even aware of it. However, I do not think we are there yet. The Republicrats are still at least doing lip service to ideas like ear-mark reform and campaign finance reform. If this were an Orwellian regime, they would not even bother because things like campaign finance scandals would not see the light of day.

      The fact you think the Democrats have anything to do with current scandal shows that it, at least, is not seeing the light of day correctly.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    42. Re:Excuse me? by Bimo_Dude · · Score: 1
      It's a shame my mod points expired before I read this post; it is one of the better thought-out posts I've read in a long time. Most posts I read (and post myself) complaining about the system here in the US are merely griping and complaining.

      I applaud you for making the point that we can change things, and providing a good starting point:

      The control of the system is illusory. It is only real when we believe that it is real. We only obey because we don't realize that more than 1/2 of all murders go unsolved, and most crimes are far, far lower.

      Take control of your life and see what happens.

      --
      "Teleporting Rodents with D-Cell Battery Displacement" theory -- IgnoramusMaximus (692000)
    43. Re:Excuse me? by Bimo_Dude · · Score: 1
      It's a waste of their resources.

      s/their/taxpayer/

      IMHO, this is still something that is worthy of "getting worked up" over. The taxpayers in the US are paying to be spied on. We are funding our own oppression. This is unacceptable.

      What we should all do is to put our tax dollars in escrow instead of the federal government, and only authorize the release of funds when issues such as this are resolved to the satisfaction of the people. Then, we should each choose to which departments our tax dollars go, and how the money will be used.

      --
      "Teleporting Rodents with D-Cell Battery Displacement" theory -- IgnoramusMaximus (692000)
    44. Re:Excuse me? by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      I also believe that Bush honestly believes that his actions are necessary, legal (whether or not they really are is another question), are not for his personal gain, and are in the best interests of the US.

      Maybe Bush honestly believes that his actions are necessary, but this does not automatically make them acceptable.
      When reading "Mein Kampf" by Adolf Hitler, I also had the impression that he honestly believed in his actions being good for the German people. Beware of misguided fanatics, they can be just as destructive as people who are intentionally evil.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    45. Re:Excuse me? by Leebert · · Score: 1

      You do know that Senate and House reelection rates for incumbents are 90%+ With house pushing 97-99 most years.

      Then it sure sounds like the People have spoken, and are getting what they asked for.

      Money doesn't win elections, VOTES do. Spending lots of money doesn't ensure an election. Just ask Ross Perot.

      There has to be a choice when considering a democratic government: Do we trust the people's ability to choose? If so, then we're doing quite fine as a country, because people still have full freedom of choice for whom they cast their vote.

      I, for one, have little interest in the campaign contribution limits and similar measures. Bribes are already illegal. Enforce the laws on the books. The more regulated things become, the more underground the contributions go, and the less informed the voting public can be.

      Which brings up the other point -- I support disclosure laws. For some people it is useful to know who is contributing to their elected officials. *I* can make up my mind, though, if I believe that I am being fairly represented by my public official. Who cares if he's accepting campaign contributions from the KKK if his votes aren't influenced by it? If his votes ARE influenced by it, I'll notice, and vote him out.

    46. Re:Excuse me? by AusIV · · Score: 1
      Change happens when people act, not when they just sit and complain.

      Apparently you missed that part. I'm not saying you shouldn't act, I'm saying you shouldn't get worked up over something you're not going to do anything about. I applaud the EFF for standing up against illegal wiretaps, although I'm not sure suing AT&T for complying with a government agency is the best way to go about it. The primary target for my post was those Slashdotters whose blood starts boiling everytime they hear about things like this, but do nothing about it. If they want to support the EFF, I encourage them to do so. If they want to vote or campaign (or run?) against the current administration in coming elections, I would encourage them to do so. But don't just sit and complain.

      As far as the NSA tapping my phone, I'll state again, I don't care. If they find some petty crime I've committed, (and that is the worst they could find) there's nothing they can do about it. An illegal phone tap won't hold up as evidence in a court of law, even in our current "opressive regime."

      Furthermore, while the current administration may be trying to shape the United Sates their own way, they've been losing a lot of ground with the American people. I would guess they will take a large hit in November at mid-term elections, hopefully one large enough to create a balance of power. As bad as this administration may seem, it's not even close to being the most opressive our country has had. Time and time again, our system of government has been strong enough to overpower corruption. I see no reason it won't happen again.

    47. Re:Excuse me? by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anything about the latest scandal. The whole ear-mark/soft money thing is an ongoing problem, and it has been a problem for decades. Both major parties pretend to care about reform, while accepting hunting trips or book deals or whatever the loophole of the year is.

    48. Re:Excuse me? by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      You are 100% correct. Possibly even more.

      But all the rules kept things mostly in check. But the Repubs have suddenly decided they don't even need to follow them.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  18. Do you think governmental abuses of power... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    .. get better when nobody bothers to object?

    When has that ever happened?

    Laws against warrantless spying on US citizens exist for a reason. History demonstrates that when the government has this power, they don't just use it on terrorists. First they use it on terrorists, but then they use it on drug dealers. Next come child pornographers. After that, conventional pornographers. Then, "radical" artists and dissidents.

    Before long, they're spying on the modern-day heirs to the radical legacy of Martin Luther King and John Lennon.

    1. Re:Do you think governmental abuses of power... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh.. in Canada they skip the drugdealers and kiddie porn producers and go straight to radical groups like the "rageing grannies"

  19. Fuck You by dangitman · · Score: 1

    There is no polite way to respond to your ignorance.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
    1. Re:Fuck You by ctr2sprt · · Score: 1
      Of course there is. You give a few examples showing why he's wrong. Then he, if so inclined, can reply with counterexamples or explain why your examples don't mean what you think. This process is called a rational debate, and I'm not surprised you aren't familiar with it. This is Slashdot, after all. But even here, you can still have one if you try. I manage to, from time to time, and I usually find them very interesting and enjoyable... even when everyone disagrees with me. I hope those debating against me feel likewise. Sometimes I even change my mind!

      See? That's what a polite response to ignorance looks like.

    2. Re:Fuck You by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah? Fuck you!

      (kidding, and I think it probably needed to be pointed out.)

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    3. Re:Fuck You by dangitman · · Score: 1
      A rational debate assumes someone rational to debate with. Seeing as the other poster has no idea of reality or rationality, then what possibility is there for such a discussion.

      What possible discussion can there be when someone says "nothing to see here, move along"? They are indicating they aren't interested in rational discussion or debate. So fuck that. I'd rather if people posted who were willing to discuss things rationally.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    4. Re:Fuck You by ctr2sprt · · Score: 1
      What possible discussion can there be when someone says "nothing to see here, move along"? They are indicating they aren't interested in rational discussion or debate.
      I'm not quite willing to concede that - NTSHMA is basically Slashdot-speak for QED - but even if I were, Slashdot is a public forum. It's possible that someone else would see our well-formulated, intelligent replies and jump in to argue the original position better. Or maybe some lurker who was nodding his head reading the original post would have second thoughts and decide to do some research on his own. (Even if he doesn't change his mind, he's better-informed. And two rational, well-informed people can disagree. Maybe next time around he'll be changing our minds.)

      Not to be an ass, but your original reply was as useless as you're saying the original post was. And yet here we are having what is, in my opinion, a pretty rational, intelligent discussion, one which others might find valuable. Of course, we're not talking about wiretaps at all. But considering the self-congratulatory circle-jerk of most of the other comments on this story, maybe that's for the best.

  20. not the typical class action suit... by SethJohnson · · Score: 5, Insightful



    The text of the EFF lawsuit requests damages of $100 per day for each day the violation occurred or $10,000 (whichever is greater) be paid to each class member. Sure beats getting a coupon for $10 off our next purchase of a bill of rights.

    Seth

    1. Re:not the typical class action suit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sure beats getting a coupon for $10 off our next purchase of a bill of rights.

      Yep. If the above writer was really asked to pay his fair share for the bill of rights, I'm sure he'd find it was more than he could bear to pay.

  21. Instead of "Informative . . ." by StefanJ · · Score: 1

    . . . maybe that should have been modded "Informer."

  22. What ever happened to ... by thundergeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Probable Cause?

    From what I can remember my trooper friend saying. "If it's visible by the Post Man, I don't need a warrant." Meaning if some idiot decides to grow weed on the coffee table in front of the picture window, the police can knock the door down and arrest everyone, without a warrant.

    Doesn't this procedure fall under probable cause? They had cause to believe these imagrants, who weren't even US Citizens, had ties to terrorism. Isn't that enough?

    Correct me if I'm wrong, I'm not a lawyer or anything. You can tell by my spelling.

    1. Re:What ever happened to ... by TheSpoom · · Score: 3, Informative

      The problem is that to determine if there is probable cause for arrest, they're intruding on the privacy of everyone else by searching through databases containing innocent phone conversations and private information. They did not have probable cause to search through this other information. That is where the main issue lies; the privacy and security of everyone is being compromised to seek out the few that have done something wrong.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    2. Re:What ever happened to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how do you know they were immigrants? how do you know anything - this information is top secret and nobody is told about it. usually, that means someone is hiding something.

      what are are they hiding? the fact they are tapping all sorts of americans and only americans while lying to the public about it?

      decent people want to know.

    3. Re:What ever happened to ... by Wah · · Score: 4, Informative
      Immigrants?
      WASHINGTON - A year ago, at a Quaker Meeting House in Lake Worth, Fla., a small group of activists met to plan a protest of military recruiting at local high schools. What they didn't know was that their meeting had come to the attention of the U.S. military.

      A secret 400-page Defense Department document obtained by NBC News lists the Lake Worth meeting as a "threat" and one of more than 1,500 "suspicious incidents" across the country over a recent 10-month period.
      [full story]

      Jeez, a couple weeks of Doublespeak ("terrorist surviellance program") and a whole bunch of people forget what the hubbub is all about.
      --
      +&x
    4. Re:What ever happened to ... by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      They had cause to believe these imagrants, who weren't even US Citizens, had ties to terrorism. Isn't that enough?

      What immigrants? You have a list of them?

      Anytime Bush wanted to make this legal, all he had to do is hand over this list of "non-citizens" he had already tapped to the super-secret FISA court he filled with his best buddies after the USA PATRIOT act and tell them to issue warrants. Why didn't he? Can you come up with any reason other than it was not a "list of non-citizens"? Did the voice in his head tell him his best friends were Iranian moles? Did he just set the paperwork down on Jose Padilla's criminal indictment and misplace it for three years? Did he think Cheney would do it, while Cheney thought Bush was going to? If you have a reason for Bush refusing to get warrants for the wiretaps, please, the entire world wants to know.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    5. Re:What ever happened to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      No. It comes down to an expectation of privacy.

      The "in plain sight" rule is what you are talking about. If a crime or items related to a crime are in plain sight, there's no need for a warrant (or a search for that matter). That has nothing to do with probable cause.

      Probable cause is why you can be stopped by the police... if they don't have it, they are either guessing (bad) or harassing you (bad). What is needed for a warrant is a judge... the judge will review the application and see if there is probable cause.

      The problem with wiretaps is that they always require a warrant (under FISA, it can be a secret warrant, even approved after the fact) unless it is against someone outside of the US, or withing 15 days of the beginning of a declared war.

      Neither of those thresholds were met.

      There were no warrants, no intentions to get warrants, and the government has admitted they don't even know who all the people were which were surveiled, so it is impossible they had a reasonable cause to suspect them all.

      In other words, it was illegal, on the face of it, but because it was approved by the President and implemented in secret, there was no chance for review.

      So now that people know, they can sue those companies which participated in it without the proper warrants.

    6. Re:What ever happened to ... by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      Doesn't this procedure fall under probable cause? They had cause to believe these imagrants, who weren't even US Citizens, had ties to terrorism. Isn't that enough?

      They didn't just tap the phones of immigrants? but of US citizens who were communicating with people abroad. This includes noted journalists, politicians, and others. The taps invaded the privacy of thousands of people.

      Such a wide ranging net would be the equivalent of raiding an entire subdivision because one guy might have a bag of dope in his house.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    7. Re:What ever happened to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

      Probable cause still requires a warrant signed by a judge in order for the government to invade the privacy of your home, except in cases where someone's life is imminently threatened.

      What if George W. Bush's lawyers worked for the local PD? They would no doubt argue that the police cannot afford to wait for a warrant, and must be allowed to (secretly) surveil and (secretly) enter a person's home if they believe it is important (but never tell anyone what their reasons were or even report what they did after the fact.)

      Unfortunately for the local PD, that's not the way we do things in America. Fortunately for GWB's goons, they now operate above the law of the land.

    8. Re:What ever happened to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your analogy is flawed. What the NSA has done is not seen something in plain sight, they have illegally tapped non-suspicious persons. How do I know they weren't suspious persons? Because if they were there would have been zero problem involving court oversight - especially with a retroactive warrant that is designed specifically to make the nature and timliness of wiretapping like that both effective and legal.

      Essentially, they suspect that those long hairs going into that house are growing weed, so when they're not home the cops go inside to install cameras in the bathrooms and then knock down the door to arrest anyone on film before even looking at the footage.

    9. Re:What ever happened to ... by shiafu · · Score: 2, Funny

      Immigants! I knew it was them! Even when it was the bears, I knew it
      was them.

    10. Re:What ever happened to ... by BoneFlower · · Score: 1

      They might have had probable cause(without specifics of a given case I can't say, even if I was a lawyer), and that would be enough to get a warrant.

      What would justify a warrantless search, wiretap, or whatever would be someting called Exigent Circumstances- basically there has to be an *immediate* threat, that cannot be countered any other way, and the delay in getting a warrant would eliminate any opportunity to deal with it. Even then, such actions are supposed to be subject to judicial review after the fact.

    11. Re:What ever happened to ... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      The analogy would be rather like a known narcotics pusher handing over a brown paper bag to the someone in the house in exchange for cash. Do you now have probable cause to search the house? Do you need to ask Nancy Pelosi's permission?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    12. Re:What ever happened to ... by demonlapin · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You know what your remedy is if you can show the government did not have probable cause? You can get their evidence thrown out in court. That's it.

      They don't care if any of this stuff is admissible. (As others have noted, it is believed that this fishing expedition stuff is to find people to be interested in, for whom FISA warrants are then obtained so that evidence becomes admissible in court.)

    13. Re:What ever happened to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might be surprised to see how horribly most lawyers spell; spelling is for secretaries and paralegals.

    14. Re:What ever happened to ... by WilliamX · · Score: 1

      They didn't just tap the phones of immigrants? but of US citizens who were communicating with people abroad. This includes noted journalists, politicians, and others. The taps invaded the privacy of thousands of people.

      Bull. How do you know that any "noted journalists" (I'll avoid the question of whether any journalists today deserve the term 'noted') or politicians, or any specific person was listened to?

      The fact is that you don't, and are just spouting off like most of the liberal anti-GWB'er Michael Moore succubants who look for any reason, real or imagined, to bash this administration.
      The FACT is that only calls where the NSA supervisors had reason to believe were somehow linked to Al Qaeda were listened to. If the other end was in America, the could have been subject to brief eavesdropping to determine if they were in any way involved with Al Qaeda. The number of calls was not substantial by any account.

      Clinton himself authorized these types of wiretaps under the SAME conditions. Both properly notified the members of Congress of BOTH PARTIES that are required to be notified of such intelligence related activities. But Clinton went MUCH further with them than the Bush Administration...

      Clinton Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick's 1994 testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee: "The Department of Justice believes, and the case law supports, that the president has inherent authority to conduct warrantless physical searches for foreign intelligence purposes." This led the way for President Bill Clinton's Echelon program, which unleashed a far greater "invasion of privacy" during peacetime by intercepting millions of communications, often between American citizens -including Senator Strom Thurmond.

      As to the legality, the 4th Circuit Court of appeals [United States v. Truong Dinh Hung, 4th Cir. 1980], held that the President did have inherent authority to conduct warrantless searches to obtain foreign intelligence information. "We take for granted that the President does have that authority and, assuming that is so, FISA could not encroach on the President's constitutional power."

      John Schmidt, President Clinton's associate attorney general from 1994-7, wrote that NSA surveillance against al-Qaeda "is consistent with court decisions and with the positions of the Justice Department under prior presidents"; FISA "did not alter the constitutional situation." He quoted Clinton Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick's 1994 testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee: "The Department of Justice believes, and the case law supports, that the president has inherent authority to conduct warrantless physical searches for foreign intelligence purposes." This led the way for President Bill Clinton's Echelon program, which unleashed a far greater "invasion of privacy" during peacetime by intercepting millions of communications, often between American citizens - including Senator Strom Thurmond.

      By calling this "warrantless" the liberals try to imply they are illegal. But the facts are that many government actions are legal under the law without warrants.

      Here is a non-exhaustive list:
      Detain American citizens for investigative purposes without a warrant

      Arrest American citizens, based on probable cause, without a warrant

      Conduct a warrantless search of the person of an American citizen who has been detained, with or without a warrant

      Conduct a warrantless search of the home of an American citizen in order to secure the premises while a warrant is being obtained

      Conduct a warrantless search of, and seize, items belonging to American citizens that are displayed in plain view and that are obviously criminal or dangerous in nature;

      Conduct a warrantless search of anything belonging to an American citizen under exigent circumstances if considerations of public safety make obtaining a warrant impractical;

      Conduct a warrantless search of an American citizen's home and belongings if another person, wh

    15. Re:What ever happened to ... by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      A few problems with this logic:

      1) The president has wartime powers which include surveillance of suspected enemies. The recognition of a state of war and authorization to take wartime actions was declared by Congress after 9/11, but constitutionally this declaration was not even required.

      2) The constitutionality of the FISA courts has not been tested. There is good reason to believe that, in the case of war powers or international communications, the FISA restrictions violate the separation of powers, giving cocnstitutional presidential powers to the courts.

      3) There is no expectation of privacy for international communications. FISA requires an expectation of privacy.

      4) The executive has the power to "search" international communications in the same way that it has the power to inspect packages crossing the border.

      5) All modern presidents have used these powers. Only the current president, who actually has a dangerous war to fight, is plagued by people leaking highly classified information about them - people who should go to jail for a very long time, as this information aids terrorists - i.e. our enemies. It is interesting that the anti-Bush press made such a big deal about the leak of Valerie Plame's identity, which probably had zero impact on natinal security, but is keeping quiet about the import of this newer leak (and the other very damaging leak about CIA prisons in foreign countries) and is not reporting about the NSA requested criminal investigation into this latest link.

      In addition to these legalisms, it is pretty clear that you can't wage a war if you don't even surveil communications crossing your borders to suspected enemy agents!

      Furthermore, the mere act of gathering large amounts of customer data does not mean that each customer was surveilled. It depends on how the data was used. Since the NSA has little interest in surveiling ordinary citizens (and no resources to do so), the fears of these actions are dramatically overblown.

      The EFF, in its role of civil liberties extremist, is showing its lack of cocnsideration for our national security, or its failure to understand the nature of the threat we face. In other words, they are acting like irresponsible children - not for the first time.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    16. Re:What ever happened to ... by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      I'm offended by your assertion that somehow because I think the NSA wiretapping is dangerous and anti-democratic I'm immediately some Michael Moore syncophant. I think the NSA wiretapping is wrong, whether Clinton did it--a fine defense by the way--or whether Bush did it. Your list of warrantless searches just shows how much Democracy we've lost and rather than demanding our 4th and 5th Ammendment rights back, not to mention our 1st, you keep implying some political bias as if the word liberal means anything but a prejorative to you. The checks and balances in our government are obviously failing if even the rubber-stamp method of FISA is somehow unnecessary and I would argue that this is an extension of Executive powers far and above what it should be.

      Lastly, you're response contains no specific sources or links, and you don't know any of the people involved in either this administration or the previous and except for two quotes--using your same standard for truth--you have the same apparent problem I do.

      Now, I haven't called you ignorant or stupid and I would expect the same thing in return. I'm going to read the decisions, the quotes and think very hard about this, but as it stands, this program appears dangerous and possibly illegal and Gonzalez's testimony flirted with perjury which is at best problematic. But the political rhetoric and party affliations aside and ask yourself if this is right, if it is necessary, and if it even works. Stop making assumptions about the people you're replying to and take that goddamned chip of your shoulder, I'm willing to listen, but not if you lace poison among your ideas.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    17. Re:What ever happened to ... by WilliamX · · Score: 1
      ask yourself if this is right, if it is necessary, and if it even works.

      I have no doubts that it is right, and I am convinced that the way the President implimented it, with required review and renewals at short intervals, and with rigid rules about what is and is not covered by this order, that it is within the President's powers, and does not in any way EXTEND his powers, because these powers have been recognized by the courts for a long time.

      There were checks and balances the whole time. The leaders of both parties in both houses, plus the members of the intelligence oversight committee, were informed, and regularly kept abreast of this. The New York Times and a couple other publications discovered it more than a year before the Times irresponsibly decided to publish their story. It was a move intended to affect the outcome of the Patriot Act renewal, a POLITICAL move by a well known liberal biased newspaper. If they thought the public had a right to know, and that this was truly illegal, then they would have done it when the first discovered it, instead of holding it as a political card to play when it best suited their political leanings. The Congressional democrats bemoaning this policy also could have proposed legislation, without referencing the classified information, to make this type of wiretap illegal, but not a single one of them did. Why is that, do you think? Strange how angry they have gotten all of a sudden when they knew about it from the beginning.

      What I know for a fact is that the day before the NY Times published that story, our enemies did NOT know that we were listening to both sides of an international conversation they may be having with a contact or operative inside our borders. They believed that only their side was being listened to if at all, and could coordinate their conversations accordingly. The next day, they knew a method we used to collect intelligence on their actions, and you can bet they changed their methods to make it harder for us to collect that intelligence.

      Then you asked if it even works.

      I just watched the movie Flight 93 on A&E tonight. One thing I do know, is that no airline passengers or flight crew has had to make the horrible choice that brave crew had to make. No other families in the US have had to watch a drama unfold on television knowing that their family members were being murdered in a terrorist attack on our soil. And I don't believe it is because the terrorists are not trying.

      I am proud of the way this Administration has found a way to balance the need to protect our privacy, with the need to take the steps necessary to make sure that in the future, we are much better informed, and better able to thwart such attacks. And I am all for the courts and the congress having oversight, just as they did over this issue.

      Do i want my privacy? CERTAINLY. Do I recognize that if a terrorist misdials the number of his contact, and reaches my cell phone, that the government may monitor my calls until they realize it was a mistake? Sure, but I don't see the harm in it. The fact is that any information gleaned could ONLY be used for specific purposes, that is the restriction of the President's power here. And I sleep well at night knowing they are watching, and listening, for intelligence to stop and thwart those who might be inside our country right now at the behest of the irrational terrorists who would try to bring this country to its knees through terror.

    18. Re:What ever happened to ... by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >1) The president has wartime powers which include surveillance of suspected enemies. The recognition of a state of war and authorization to take wartime actions was declared by Congress after 9/11, but constitutionally this declaration was not even required.

      False. The US is not in a state of war. For it to be so, congress must pass a declaration of war, and they haven't. An authorization to use force is not equivalent to a declaration of war, regardless how much the president wishes it were.

      >2)...

      Might be true.

      >3) There is no expectation of privacy for international communications. FISA requires an expectation of privacy.

      Huh? Why would there be less an expectation of privacy on international call than domestic? A phone call is a phone call.

      >4) The executive has the power to "search" international communications in the same way that it has the power to inspect packages crossing the border.

      I tend to agree, but that's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about the mass searching of the phone records of everyday communications, not just international calls.

      >5) All modern presidents have used these powers.

      Not the supposed power to search everyone's phone records at will.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    19. Re:What ever happened to ... by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      The US does not require a constitutional declaration of war to be in a state of war. That is a fiction. It is true that the Constitution allows only the Congress to 'declare' war. Care to tell me what that really means? Nobody declares war any more. They just do it.

      When your country is attacked by a foreign enemy, and many are killed on your homeleand, you are, by default, in a state of war. Would you argue that the president would not have the authority to shoot down a sudden incoming ICBM before he consulted with congress?

      3) There is much less expectation of privacy on an international call. To start with, you can expect that intelligence agencies of foreign governments, who do not have our privacy fetish (or ignore it), will be listening. So forget the privacy expectation. I suppose somebody very ignorant might have such an expection, but that's irrelevant.

      4) No, we are not talking about the mass searching of everyday domestic phone calls (or if we are, please give me a reference). The fact that the press has chosen to call this activity "domestic surveillance" does not mean that it actually is. It has repeatedly been stated that the NSA is monitoring international calls with a specific target or terrorism specific calls - primarily those that go to already known terrorist numbers overseas.

      5) Prove that this has been done, please. I would be interested in knowing if that is actually true. And I am not talking about statistical analysis (which the government does all the time, often with far more sensitive information such as medical data) - I don't mind if they do statistical analysis where there is no specific monitoring of individuals.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

  23. Re:Not illegal. by YooHoo2U2 · · Score: 1
    Who says it was US Citizens ? I've not seen that anywhere. The president was granted this power by congress and congress knew all along about it. Nothing to see here, move along.

    Shut up, George. And tell your little friends Dicky and Donnie to quit ringing my doorbell. Damn kids.
  24. Interesting by ewhac · · Score: 4, Interesting
    By responding to a wiretapping request they knew to be illegal, AT&T became complicit to the act, and can be charged with aiding and abetting.

    It's a valid assertion. "I was just following orders," has long been regarded as no defense. It'll be interesting to see how this turns out.

    Schwab

    1. Re:Interesting by Kesch · · Score: 1, Funny

      Everyone forgets about the unwritten rules.

      Unwritten Rule 37.2.b: Don't fuck with the NSA.

      I hope you realize the peril I'm facing for writting an unwritten rule, but I thought it had to be said.

      --
      If this signature is witty enough, maybe somebody will like me.
    2. Re:Interesting by jabster · · Score: 1

      You do realize that there is no "knew" it was illegal. Regardless of what you think about it, most legal scholars are coming down on the side of the President and this little thing called the Constitution, which gives the President the right to collect intelligence data, and which Congress and the Courts CAN NOT encroach upon.

      It be like Bush signing an executive order saying that he can just appoint judges bypassing the senate.

      Even the FISA court of review has stated that the Pres. has the "inherent" right to collect intelligence and that the court has no authorization to limit that right.

      -john

      --
      Slashdot: you'll not find a more wretched collection of villainy and disreputable types...
    3. Re:Interesting by cbraescu1 · · Score: 1

      Is that you, CHARLES?

      --
      Catalin Braescu
      Ofaly.com
    4. Re:Interesting by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      Good luck proving AT&T knew it was asked to do something illegal. The lawful way of doing this was a secret FISA court warrant that could be procured after the wiretap was in place. The plaintiff has to proof knowledge or recklessness. So instead of saying, "I was following an order which I knew to be illegal" (which doesn't fly too well), the defense is "I was following an order that I had a reasonable basis for believing and actually did believe to be more probable than not to be lawful." Plaintiffs would be hard-pressed to show this to be false by a preponderance of the evidence. AT&T probably didn't keep too many memos saying they knew the orders were unlawful. Employees probably wouldn't be too keen on admitting that either.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    5. Re:Interesting by asavage · · Score: 1

      Ignorance of the law is never a valid reason.

    6. Re:Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, I'm a Republican. I'm a conservative. I love the second amendment, and you know what? I love the 4th amendment. I love the 1st, 3rd, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9, and 10th amendments too.

      You sir are full of shit. You like the President are not worthy of being Republicans, people like you have infested my party with a rot worthy of Lucifer.

    7. Re:Interesting by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      They know the law. That is their defense. The law itself is vague.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
  25. Re:Not illegal. by Omega1045 · · Score: 1
    Who says it was US Citizens ? I've not seen that anywhere.

    You are kidding, right? I mean, are you just trolling or are you serious? I am not even going to provide a link. Just go to Google News a enter "NSA Wiretapping". There is a ton of information that US Citizens were the subject of wiretaps, sans warrant. Man, I am a conservative, and even I think that your statement is like saying, "There Earth is flat. Where has anyone said it is round?"

    --

    Great ideas often receive violent opposition from mediocre minds. - Albert Einstein

  26. Gotta Love Lawyers... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I think the only way the EFF can when this is to prove that AT&T is their long distance carrier and that the NSA was sniffing their traffic. The first part should be easy but the second part might be more difficult. If the NSA was smart, all the EFF traffic would've been sent straight to the bit bucket for wasting bandwidth.

    1. Re:Gotta Love Lawyers... by rm69990 · · Score: 2, Informative

      This is a class-action lawsuit, on behalf of all AT&T customers in the US, not just the EFF. So it doesn't matter whether EFF's traffic was tapped or not.

    2. Re:Gotta Love Lawyers... by HolyCrapSCOsux · · Score: 1

      I guess it's a good thing I have Sprint. I'm pretty sure that that is both the first and last time I'll (have)EVER say(/said) that!

      --
      0xB315AA8D852DCD3F3DCA578FD2E0BF88
  27. Re:this is a mistake by EFF by McGiraf · · Score: 0, Troll

    You're the one that's being a partisant.

  28. Direct link to TFA...? by cswiger2005 · · Score: 3, Informative

    How about directly linking to the article, rather than bouncing through a portal full of ads?

    http://www.eff.org/legal/cases/att/

    Seems like BoingBoing.com is trolling for hits with several recent articles. I suppose there's nothing wrong with that, but I'd wish the Slashdot editors to prefer primary content to secondary sources being framed within ad bars on all sides....

    --
    "The human race's favorite method for being in control of the facts is to ignore them." -Celia Green
    1. Re:Direct link to TFA...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Seems like BoingBoing.com is trolling for hits with several recent articles." Funny you should mention that, it seems like there's been a strong influx of BoingBoing links posted to Digg.com too. Can't help but wonder if it's a concerted effort.

    2. Re:Direct link to TFA...? by asuffield · · Score: 3, Informative

      Most of those aren't ads, they're permanent picture links to stuff that the editors think is cool. Who the hell advertises "Impeach Bush"?

      Anyway, boingboing doesn't appear to be doing anything they haven't been doing for years - collecting interesting stuff from the internet and putting it on boingboing. It's like slashdot, only with interesting stuff and fewer idiots doing the writing. I can only guess that random users have been submitting things to slasdot that they saw on boingboing more often - I haven't noticed any of it coming from the boingboing editors.

    3. Re:Direct link to TFA...? by temojen · · Score: 1

      I was going to post a link to it too, but my internet connection went down for some reason. (probably the wind storm...)

    4. Re:Direct link to TFA...? by dschl · · Score: 1

      Maybe because Cory is an EFF Fellow, and also acts as a spokesman for the EFF? And BoingBoing is his site?

      --
      Slashdot - the place where you can look like a genius by restating the obvious
    5. Re:Direct link to TFA...? by ezthrust · · Score: 1

      There is nothing different between these recent articles and any other day of postings there. They are registering on the Slashdot radar today.

    6. Re:Direct link to TFA...? by cswiger2005 · · Score: 1
      Who the hell advertises "Impeach Bush"?

      Democratic politicans or advocacy groups (PACs)? Cindy whats-her-name? :-)
      I know, you probably meant that as a rhetorical question, but nevertheless, it does have an answer.

      I'm not particularly interested in criticizing BoingBoing for advertising, but let's do a reality check. The top of the page is a banner ad stating "Contact FM to advertise here", the left column starts with a header stating "Sponsored by" and 3 links all going through:

      http://boingboing.net/cgi-bin/clicker.cgi?somethin g

      Ditto for the right-side column, only that not has a bunch of ads going through clicker.cgi but is followed by another set of ads going through adbrite.com. And then the article text itself is wrapped around the ad image from craphound.com, and the end has ads by something called Kanoodle.

      Take a look at "Page Info" for the links on that page and judge for yourself, but *I'm* willing call an article surrounded by advertising links on all sides what it is, even if you choose not to.

      --
      "The human race's favorite method for being in control of the facts is to ignore them." -Celia Green
  29. Re:Not illegal. by delong · · Score: 1

    Uh, no right back at ya. The Congress issued the Authorization for the Use of Force, which states:

    That the President is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons

    This is an explicit authorization under the War Powers Act, ie a declaration of war against Al Qaeda, and empowers the President to use the full extent of his Constitutional War Powers as Commander in Chief and Chief Executive.

    Surveilance of foreign communications to intercept enemy intelligence is, and always has been, an inherent aspect of waging war, and so is within the President's inherent Constitutional power.

    As to the 72 hour provision - first of all, Congress does not have the power to limit the President's inherent Constitutional powers. Second, the AUMF is a later expression of sovereign will by the Congress, and supercedes FISA. Third, even though wiretaps are allowed for 72 hours without a warrant, the standard for approval by the Attorney General is the same standard required to get a warrant - in other words, there is no "get out of warrant free card" in FISA. Fourth, FISA's provisions were meant to cover surveiling of known foreign agents in known locations for purposes of observation, not detection. The "domestic spying" (which is a complete misnomer, btw) is for the purpose of uncovering foreign agents within the US when known terrorists abroad attempt to communicate with parties within the US.

  30. already seen it by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They have been spying on the Quakers, for fuck's sake. You know - the Protestant sect best known for militant PACIFICISM?!??

    This is the litmus test for true American Patriotism. If you aren't outraged, you aren't a patriot. At best, you are a nationalist.

    1. Re:already seen it by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      Don't get too busy appropriating the rhetoric of those you oppose. It's been the classic Democrat mistake for upwards of 20 years now.

      I do agree with your sentiment, however.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    2. Re:already seen it by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1
      They have been spying on the Quakers, for fuck's sake. You know - the Protestant sect best known for militant PACIFICISM?!??

      Um, yeah. Oddly, a lot of "pacifists" seem to have no problem with the other side waging war. There's no way a true pacifist would support either al Qaeda or the illegitimate government of Saddam Hussein.

    3. Re:already seen it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To Bush and AT&T, the true patriots are outraged by pacificism and privacy, not by illegal spying.

    4. Re:already seen it by daigu · · Score: 1

      It sounds like you don't know much about Quakers. Let me help with a quote from the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting's Friends Peace Committee in 1940:

      The foundations of Quaker pacifism are religious. We fully recognize the value of the intuitive recognition of the evil of coercive violence in the individual and national life. The sense of the contrast between the way of war and the way of love shown us in the life of Jesus Christ has compelling force. It is also enlightening to think of pacifism as a corollary of the fundamental Quaker postulate of the Divine Spark in every human being. This fundamental Quaker postulate lays on us the obligation to consider and cherish every human being. It follows, for those who accept the postulate, that they cannot do to human beings the things that war involves. It may follow that they become aware that other sorts of human relations are also evil, such as slavery, economic injustice, inferior status for women, and the results of the traffic in narcotics...

      Quaker pacifism is an obligation, not a promise. We are not guaranteed that it will be safe. We are sure that it is right. We desire to make our individual decisions in harmony with it, and to help our fellows to do so.

      Or consider this quote from James G. Vail in 1953

      There is no security except in creating situations in which people do not want to harm you. This is a difficult truth for most people to face, but the difficulty is more emotional than rational or scientific. "If thine enemy hunger, feed him," is not only Christian teaching, but it is profound wisdom, for the best way of getting rid of an enemy is to convert him into a friend.
    5. Re:already seen it by dangitman · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Um, yeah. Oddly, a lot of "pacifists" seem to have no problem with the other side waging war.

      What nonsense. Who are these "pacifists" that support Saddam or Al Qaeda? Opposing America's invasion of Iraq is not the same as supporting the enemy. That's just propaganda.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    6. Re:already seen it by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      Let's start with George Galloway. That was easy.

    7. Re:already seen it by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Galloway can hardly be considered a pacifist.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
  31. If AT&T is innocent, they have nothing to hide by bigtrike · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just like a citizen who is not guilty of any crimes should welcome the friendly government agent asking for his papers, if AT&T is innocent they should welcome this. If they have not been breaking laws by complying with the NSA, then they have nothing to fear. Should AT&T attempt to fight this, it must be because they are definitely guilty of violating laws.

  32. Re:this is a mistake by EFF by ActivLink · · Score: 0

    As a Republican who is concerned for individual rights...

    heh. heh heh.

    --
    -Activ
  33. Of course it's Slashdot... by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1, Interesting

    So you assume that the wiretaps were/are illegal. Although that
    is far from an established fact. I mean, the NYT said so, it must
      be true...

          Brett

    1. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. Those liberals who wrote pesky things into the bill of rights like the 4th Amendment and requring search warrants were leftist commies.

    2. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by 1000StonedMonkeys · · Score: 1

      It's not illegal until a judge declares it illegal (and all the various appeals play out). We won't know in a legally binding sense whether or not those wiretaps were illegal for years. The GP was right. Right now the EFF is suing AT&T for doing something the government told it to that they don't like. Unfortunately (or perhaps fortunately in certain cases) doing things the EFF doesn't like isn't illegal. We'd be better served if they helped the ACLU sue the NSA for the illegal wiretaps, then went after AT&T.

    3. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A judge may or may not declare it illegal but the 4th Amendment is rather clear here. Anyone who disagrees with wanting warrants just doesn't believe in the Constitution as a source of clear and absolute law.

      Judges have declared that Blacks are not people, instutionalized racism, and all sorts of terrible and clearly unconstitutional things but that does not make them right.

    4. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Correct. The assumption is that the wiretapping is illegal, but that's only because the media is telling us it is illegal. The administration is telling us otherwise. I know it's fashionable and chic for Slashdotters to despise the president, but blindly believing the media just because you don't like the other side is pretty stupid.

      While I personally may not personally like the president's policies, the administration does make some good arguments that it is authorized to perform these wiretaps. You cannot automatically declare these acts illegal on the basis of not liking the guy.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    5. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      I predict you'll be flamed out of existence for daring suggest there was anything meritorious about Chimpy McBushitlerburton's argument. This place makes DU and the Freepers look restrained sometimes.

      BTW, what's your take on the proposition that this should be legal, but that any evidence so gained should be inadmissible in court? It's an interesting proposal, and seems to protect citizens' rights while letting us watch what the bad guys are doing.

    6. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by wyldeone · · Score: 1
      I know it's fashionable and chic for Slashdotters to despise the president, but blindly believing the media just because you don't like the other side is pretty stupid.
      In a murder case, should the judge always believe the suspect when he claims "not guilty"?
      --
      In the beginning the universe was created. This made a lot of people very angry and is widely considered as a bad move.
    7. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by stubear · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As a matter of fact, yes he should believe the guy. That's what the evidentiary process is all about. You can claim you're innocent, at least in criminal cases, and it's up to the prosecution to prove this fact beyond a reasonable doubt. Are you honestly suggesting we move to a "I don't lke the way this guy said 'not guilty, your honor', so I don't believe him" justice system?

    8. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 1
      Although that is far from an established fact.

      It is definitely an established fact that gov't eavesdropping of domestic citizen-to-citizen calls is illegal. And Bush admitted to doing just this. He just disputes whether or not the President 'outranks the law' in Perpetual Wartime (the so-called Unitary Executive Theory... which incidentally, no constitutional scholar has ever heard of until 2 years ago).

      If you agree with Bush on this, then your opinion is that there has been no illegal wiretapping, since the President cannot break the law by definition. On the other hand, if that sounds to you like the fucking craziest interpretation of law in the history of time, well, you are certainly not alone on that either.

      --
      If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
    9. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 1
      It is definitely an established fact that gov't eavesdropping of domestic citizen-to-citizen calls is illegal

      I missed 'warrantless' in there.

      --
      If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
    10. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      The wiretaps were immoral and in contravention of natural law and the rights of man. According to almost every political thinker in the late 1700s, they would constitute more than enough reason to overthrow the government.

      Whether they were declared legal by the same government that did the wiretapping is perhaps an interesting point to debate when you're bored.

    11. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by phathead296 · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is becoming more and more like http://www.democraticunderground.com/ every day. Too bad, too. It just makes it too annoying to visit. I still come for the tech news, but more and more of the topics are political instead of technology oriented. Even the technology stories get politicized by the time the second comment is posted. All it takes to get modded up is to post something

      A lot of the comments in this thread show a clear misunderstanding of the wire tapping program, but arguing with them won't change anything. Minds around here are too closed to other ideas, and too paranoid to believe that anyone with an R after their name might actually be doing the right thing. It disappoints me as an independent with conservative and libertarian leanings to see such blatant partisanship overriding the real issues.

    12. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      >In a murder case, should the judge always believe the suspect
      > when he claims "not guilty"?

          " Believe" doesn't enter into it. The judge is *required* to treat the suspect as innocent until proven otherwise. This ain't France.

            And, in case it has escaped the laser-like focus of the local self-declared legal experts, the "evidence" that such a a wiretapping situation exists in the first place *was illegally obtained*. A felony was committed. We don't know who committed it, but it is unequivocally a federal felony to intentionally disclose classified information. But no one here seems to be too concerned over that crime.

              Brett

    13. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by gvibes · · Score: 1

      Of course, we can't even judge for ourselves because the administration will not tell us anything about how the program works.

    14. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by CharlesEGrant · · Score: 1
      but it is unequivocally a federal felony to intentionally disclose classified information

      So how do we deal with malfesance by the government that is concealed by improper use of security classification? In the late 60's and late 70's the bombing campaign in Cambodia was classified, not to avoid detection by our enemies (after all, Cambodia, North Vietnam, China, and the USSR knew perfectly well that the bombing was happening, and knew who was doing it), but at least in part to avoid the domestic political fall out from an unpopular policy that contradicted the publicly stated policies of the government. (The other motive was to avoid the international political fallout from publicly admiting that the US was violating the neutrality of Cambodia, ficticious though that neutrality was)

      In this case I have to wonder why the program was secret. The whole world knows that the NSA has the ability to tap domestic phone calls. The new information revealed here was that the tapping was being done without warrants. This information seems to be of no use to Al Queda, but of considerable interest to the citizens of this country.
    15. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      Well there is a law specifically saying that wiretapping people in the US is unlawful without a warrant, so yes, it is illegal.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    16. Re:Of course it's Slashdot... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      The judge can make no judgements until all of the evidence has been argued.

      But your analogy is a very poor one. It assumes a prior indictment. The current dispute regarding wiretaps is more on the other of "Can not! Can too!" So here's a better analogy:

      Nancy Pelosi goes to the police and says "write George Bush a ticket for jaywalking!" George Bush then says "there's no ordinance against jaywalking in this town." In this case it doesn't matter at all how shrill Nancy Pelosi is, but instead matters entirely on the whether or not there is an ordinance against jaywalking.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
  34. So next time you make a call by MasterCommanderZero · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just say "I'm a sex bomb". Your call will be recorded -> keyword match. Then you can pass any message you want to the governement, at least someone will be listening.

    1. Re:So next time you make a call by l33t.g33k · · Score: 1

      Person 1: "I'm a sex bomb."
      Person 2: "Yes, I know, you are always so totally on fire. Totally extreme."
      Gov't agent (listening in): [silence]
      Person 1: "You know, every time I post on Slashdot, I feel like I'm high on LSD."
      Person 2: "Yeah dude, it's like massive anarchy, except it's online."
      Gov't agent: [silence]
      Person 1: "So anyway, back to the subject. You want to come to my house so we can do our chemistry project on nuclear power?"
      Person 2: "Sure, I'll be right there. No need for directions, I know where you live."
      Gov't Agent: [crackles...] "So do I... pwnage!"

      --
      My sig is permanently on strike.
    2. Re:So next time you make a call by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can do better than that...

      Person 1: "George Bush is a sex bomb."
      Person 2: "Yes, I know, he is always so totally on fire. Totally extreme."
      Gov't agent (listening in): PFFFT! BWHAHAHA! ha..
      Person 1: "Did you hear that?"
      Person 2: "Must have been some line noise."

  35. Party Politics issue? by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1, Troll

    This is freedom vs. police state. If your party is for the latter, fuck off.

  36. The Alternative by EdwinBoyd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Alternative is called picking your battles. The EFF is taking a Hail Mary pass approach to it's lawsuits. Sure taking on AT&T looks great and gets you a lot of press but you're just not going to win unless they make a huge tactical error.

    Instead you take a page from the *IAA Big Book o' Lawsuits. Go after the bottom of the food chain (Grokster anyone?). Find cases where smaller independant or regional telecoms/isps have given up data, and go after them, building precedent to use for later cases.

    1. Re:The Alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm afraid you're confused by the EFF's goal in filing such lawsuits. By being the first body to file them, they gather publicity to keep themselves alive with support from folks who care about this sort of thing: the ACLU does the same sort of thing.

      But they also help set the precedents and rules where the EFF leaders feel they should be set. The original and current leadership feel these standards should be sane, legislated, and protecting the rights of people in the electronic world. It was only under Jerry Berman that they became complete Washington lobbying whores and signed onto the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, hoping for lobbying money from the telecoms by selling their souls to put in the weird pornography and other provisions and arrange funding for telecom pork barrel lobbying that got cut in the final drafts.

      Fortunately, Berman is gone now: people like John Perry Barlow have helped guide the EFF back to its original purposes. And the warrantless searches were in fact a huge tactical error by our current administration. It's a direct violation of the checks and balances in the constitution to say "oh, we're going to ignore the precedents and procedures in place simply to make our lives easy".

    2. Re:The Alternative by TopSpin · · Score: 1

      The Alternative is called picking your battles.

      Why not attack a communications company? Drag their asses into court and make them face judges. They can be made to respond. Get what you can into the public record. Time has a way of using such evidence. Find out if there is any low hanging fruit. If not then maybe this isn't worth pursuing.

      I'm glad to see that the EFF has the confidence and resources to pursue such things. Props to the EFF. Enjoy.

      --
      Lurking at the bottom of the gravity well, getting old
    3. Re:The Alternative by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      you're just not going to win unless they (AT&T) make a huge tactical error.

      I don't mind being corrected on this, but I'd think helping the National Security Agency execute illegal warrant-less wiretaps against American citizens is well on the way towards being a huge tactical error...

    4. Re:The Alternative by d474 · · Score: 1
      "...but you're just not going to win unless they [ATT&T] make a huge tactical error."
      Umm, like breaking the law? So you think EFF is going to win, me too.
      --
      Authority questions you. Return the favor.
    5. Re:The Alternative by Bimo_Dude · · Score: 1
      It may be that the cases where the EFF loses are publicized more than the cases the EFF wins.

      While they may sometimes pick the wrong battle, they also pick many that they can win. Besides, the goal of the EFF isn't only to choose issues that they can win, but to take on issues that affect people's privacy (regardless of the chances of winning). I would rather they continue doing what they're doing (which makes more people aware of the issues even if the EFF loses), than burying their heads in the sand because they might lose.

      The more people who know about these issues, the better chance we have of electing officials that are cognizant of people's privacy.

      --
      "Teleporting Rodents with D-Cell Battery Displacement" theory -- IgnoramusMaximus (692000)
    6. Re:The Alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Like DRED SCOTT. Dred lost the suit, stayed a slave. Nobody should
      have done anything to stop slavery, like John Brown, no, he shoulda stayed home. Yeah and like BLOODY KANSAS, they should been a slave state. And Lincoln would not have been shot, shoulda stayed home and picked his battles.

      And that punk KING, shoulda stayed on the back of the bus, instead he went to jail, got beat and shot.

      Hey, chickenshit, stay home.

  37. I think it's more of the by IAAP · · Score: 5, Interesting
    "if you're doing nothing wrong, then you have nothing to worry about" mentality. I have heard this come out some relatively educated people's (college) mouths. Unfortunately, a lot of people have complete trust in the Government (US Citizens) and they don't remember the abuses of Gov. power in the past: McCarthy (sp?), Hoover and the FBI, Nixon, etc... Nor do they remember abuses of Government power by other Governments.

    It's kind of sad. I once had a Biz Law class and when the prof (JD) asked the class if the folks who are arrested for "terrorism" deserve due process, the only people who raised their hands were the Naturalized citizens and me - born 'N raised AMerican - Fuck Yeah! The prof asked the few who raised their hands what their background was - that's how we knew they were naturalized. Sad.

    1. Re:I think it's more of the by run4ever79 · · Score: 1

      "if you're doing nothing wrong, then you have nothing to worry about" This philosophy also presents a problem because the definition of wrong tends to be slippery. Also I have yet to meet some one whose idea of right things and wrong things deviated from that of his neighbors/community in at least some important respects. Therefore one can reasonably conclude that is it not possible to do "nothing wrong" at least as judged by one's peers, but if these peers have sufficient political power one can end up being held accountable for an act that one does not regard as wrong at all. For example in the precivil war U.S. one might be judged by one's community as doing "wrong" by assisting a slave to escape bondage, while one could reasonably beleive himself not to be doing wrong. Beyond this problem, as other posters have mentioned, due to corruption one does not even necessarily have to do actual wrong to suffer the accusation of such. Look at the abuse of characters like Richard Jewell who was labeled a so called "Person of Interest." One might point out that an accusation does not carry the legal consequences of an actual convection. It does trigger many of the social consequences.

      --
      Linux : Hotrod :: Windows : Yugo
    2. Re:I think it's more of the by obarthelemy · · Score: 1

      1- Who judges if I'm doing right or wrong ? If it's the church, an activist group (healthy living, political correctness, environmentalists, ....), I'm sure I'm doing a bunch of things wrong in their eyes

      2- How does Society find the facts about the rightness or wrongness of my behaviour ? If it only takes the whim of a bureaucrat trying to boost his numbers, or of a politician trying to look tough for the next election, or of a pissed-off ex to condemn me, I am sure going to miss due process...

      --
      The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
  38. Re:Not illegal. by ZaMoose · · Score: 1

    A huge part of making war in a modern context is signals intelligence (SIGINT). An army or a nation can grok how best to defend themselves against their enemies if they know what their enemies are planning.

    I think the major issue facing the population of the US is a difference in mindset. President Bush and those who agree with him see the current world situation as one of war - the radical Islamists have stated their enmity openly and declared war on us. Thus, any actions that would be appropriate in a time of war are appropriate now. Those who disagree with Bush see the problem of Islamist terrorism as primarily a law enforcement matter, meaning that actions that would be reasonable in a time of war are not viewed as reasonable by this set.

    I, personally, fall on the President's side. I believe the Islamo-fascists when they say they want to kill me and my entire family, neighbors, friends and coworkers simply because we're kaffirs living in Dar al Harb. I want the President taking the necessary step of surveiling our active stated enemies in order to have a shot at preventing the nutcases from taking another 9/11-esque shot at me and mine.

    I don't see how it can be any other way, given the state of the world.

    --
    I wish I had a kryptonite cross, because then you could keep Dracula and Superman away.
  39. Re:Not illegal. by kfg · · Score: 2, Informative

    The president was granted this power by congress and congress knew all along about it.

    Nonsense. Congress knew nothing about it. The wiretaps were "authorized" by the Office of Legal Council, an arm of the Justice Department full of appointed judges, appointed by. . .Guess who?

    Nor was there a lot of agreement within the OLC about the legality of the wiretaps:

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11079547/site/newsweek /print/1/displaymode/1098/

    These are the same people who said that just because we signed the Geneva Convention doesn't mean we're bound by it, but can still bitch about anyone else not obeying it, because it's the law.

    I've not seen that anywhere.

    Really?

    http://www.rense.com/general69/legit.htm

    Well, now you have.

    KFG

  40. Just how much by n6kuy · · Score: 1

    ..will the EFF squeeze out of AT&T, if they win?

    What are the damages? Did anyone lose their livelihoods because of this? Or even a nickel?

    What are the class members going to claim?

    --
    If you disagree with me on social issues, then it's pretty clear that you are a narrow-minded bigot.
    1. Re:Just how much by Lothsahn · · Score: 1

      They're going to claim their loss of privacy, a right supposedly ensured by the fourth amendment and reinforced by other clauses in the Constitution.

      Amendment IV

      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.

      --
      -=Lothsahn=-
    2. Re:Just how much by lanced · · Score: 1

      That is completely NOT the reason for suing in this case; money is not the reason. Property damages in this case are pretty much nil. This suit, this action brought by the EFF is not about TAKING from ATT, but rather GIVING ATT a BUSINESS reason for rejecting warrentless FBI/NSA/CIA/HRMGWB(His Royal Majesty) orders. The EFF is looking for eight or nine figure punative damages to raise the cost of just rolling over.

      Currently, the accountable cost -- those costs that can be expensed and planned for in actuarial tables -- of allowing the searches is paltry. Fighting it has a real cost, specifically lawyers fees and court costs. The cost of doing nothing will make cooperating an easy choice for ATT executives until the twerps are shown the cost of violating MY rights. I say my rights because I doubt they would acquiesce if it was their phone in the order.

      You need to remember that justice is sometime about more than correcting a wrong, but also about prevention.

  41. Re:Not illegal. by BetaJim · · Score: 1

    Here's the problem:

    They already have the power to do these things without a warrant so long as they go back and get the warrant within 72 hours. This gives them the ability to act on a lead immediately without the hassle of waiting on a judge. They don't want to do even THAT much -- they want whatever they are doing to be SECRET and to be UNACCOUNTABLE for it. Ultimately, I believe we will find that it is going well beyond communications where one side is 'al qaeda' and the other side is in the U.S. I think if we get to see what they are REALLY doing, we'll find investigations against anti-war and anti-Bush organizations and their members.

    This absolutely on the spot! I have not seen any major news outlet utter this simple bit of insight. The only thing you keep hearing from Bush's press secretary is that the wiretapping is "targeted". BS. I won't believe it until there is some proof that is it targeted. Oh, but the administration can't provide any proof can they, because they never got any warrents to begin with! We have checks and balances in our governent for a reason Mr. President!

    --

    "Drug related crime" is a misnomer, "prohibition related crime" is the more accurate and correct phrase.

  42. Re:Not illegal. by thule · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From what I've read, there isn't much real knowledge of the NSA program. There is quite a bit of speculation though. We do not know if it was US Citizens, it may only be US Persons, or people simply living in the US and are not citizens. We do no know if it is real taps, or simple data mining. Data mining as in connecting the dots between known enemy phone numbers and connected calls inside the US. Since the administration apparently still used the FISA court in some cases, some have speculated that once enough dots were connected FISA would have to get involved so that calls could be monitored and recorded. Then again, why would it be illegal for the Commander in Chief to order taps on known enemies on the battlefield (the US is part of the battlefield)?

    For a history of how the US government dealt with communication during wars, read up on Ben Franklin on the NSA web site. Interesting reading.

  43. More, MORE! by harris+s+newman · · Score: 0

    I for one praise the EFF for going after companies that thumb their nose at the law. The king, er, I mean president may be above the law, but not corporations.

  44. Want to help? Join the EFF today! by toby · · Score: 5

    That clinches it... I have thought about contributing before, but this clinches it. I'm going to join.

    --
    you had me at #!
    1. Re:Want to help? Join the EFF today! by pistis · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yep - that clinches it. EFF gets all upset because some of their Al Qaeda buddies (contributing members themselves, no doubt) can't have private phone conversations. Not a penny from me....

    2. Re:Want to help? Join the EFF today! by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      I sent them money for the first time just a couple months ago. I'm glad to see it's being well-spent.

      Of course, I'm going to have to deal with them asking for more money after a while...but I'm OK with that.

    3. Re:Want to help? Join the EFF today! by itsdave · · Score: 1

      this had the opposite effect on me... this lawsuit has caused the eff to lose all respect and support from me.

    4. Re:Want to help? Join the EFF today! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fascinating. An EFF member who doesn't beleive in the concept of privacy or the rule of law. Pray tell what exactly DID you support the EFF for previously if it wasn't to protect your electronic rights?

    5. Re:Want to help? Join the EFF today! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm going to join.

      What, is the Slashdot membership not doing it for you anymore?

    6. Re:Want to help? Join the EFF today! by Bill+Of+Rights · · Score: 1

      Want to help more? In addition to donating to EFF, consider canceling any services you may be purchasing from AT&T. Don't just cancel them; speak to a company representative and make sure AT&T understand why you are cancelling.

      Besides just hitting AT&T where it hurts, and perhaps getting them to not do this again (or at least not do it for a little while), such an action may get AT&T to do what a greedy corporation would be expected to do: start pointing fingers. I suspect, in addition to pointing at the government, AT&T would point to any competitors who are doing the same thing with the ol' "well, they did it, too". It's actions like that that would blow the lid off things.

      Your one vote may not matter anymore, because of the corporations in Congress. But your one dollar may matter, because of the corporations in Congress. Use your wallets, people. Contribute to organizations fighting in the courts, and wage the battle directly by boycotting companies complicit in this crap!

      --
      Sometimes you're the bug. Sometimes you're the windshield.
    7. Re:Want to help? Join the EFF today! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny because I was in the same situation but have now decided to never support the EFF. Read the whole discussion to understand why.

      Enjoy your membership in a dangerously shortsighted organisation :)

  45. Re:this is a mistake by EFF by brxndxn · · Score: 1

    Maybe you're a Republican, but you're not being conservative here. I'm a Republican also, but I really do not see this as 'clearly a party politics issue.'

    If the government is violating Americans' guaranteed Civil Rights, then us Americans should know about it. The government is not above the law in the US..

    Nowhere in the article is the President or any political party mentioned. I don't see how anyone could make the connection that this is 'pissing on the NSA' or anything but the EFF fighting against ILLEGAL wiretaps.

    With your posting as an anonymous coward and stating that you're a Republican stating you're for civil rights while ranting against the EFF for fighting for those civil rights with baseless connections, it seems more likely that you're just someone who is trying to portray Republicans as idiots. So therefore, you're a super-liberal doing nothing but pissing on Republicans. Okay, so my connection was as baseless as yours.. but it is for illustrative purposes.

    Either you're the type of Republican that makes Republicans look bad, or you're the non-Republican acting like said Republican.

    --
    --- We need more Ron Paul!
  46. That's OK. by IAAP · · Score: 1
    Seems like BoingBoing.com is trolling for hits with several recent articles

    They plugged /. on PBS: News Hour with Jim Lehrer the other night when discussing the NY Times bringing their site down for a couple days.

    Man, their spokesperson really needs a make-over, too! It was Goth meets Suzy Orman!

  47. No such information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I am not even going to provide a link. Just go to Google News a enter "NSA Wiretapping". There is a ton of information that US Citizens were the subject of wiretaps, sans warrant.

    I can't find any. All I can find is people speculating that American citizens who were not on one end of a link to someone overseas might have been subject to wiretapping.

    Provide a link. I think you have been reading the stories with purple-colored glasses where you see what you have preconceived to be the content of the story -- not the actual story.

  48. Re:Not illegal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    First of all these weren't for domestic wiretaps. From the (admittedly vague) descriptions it sounds like if someone they're listening to overseas calls someone here they don't have to get a warrant for the person here, just for that call.

    Warrantless searches are something the president does actually have considerable power to conduct. Clinton authorized warrantless searches for at least one case we know of (Aldrich Ames) and spoke of expanding it to non-national security matters (ie. purely domestic.

  49. Re:Not illegal. by SilverspurG · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I don't know which bothers me more. Bush's exercision of wartime powers without any formal declaration of war, or AT&T's Daytona database.

    From one of the deep-linked pages:
    For example, Daytona is managing over 312 terabytes of data in a 7x24 production data warehouse whose largest table contains over 743 billion rows as of Sept 2005. Indeed, for this database, Daytona is managing over 1.924 trillion rows; it could easily manage more but we ran out of data.
    I'm all for letting companies collect necessary customer information but there's just something about a database that large which really makes me doubt that it's used solely for business-related purposes. There's nothing which an oppressive government regime enjoys more than a database which contains so much information that, at any time of any day, they could probably massage the database into providing damning evidence against anyone.
    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  50. Re:Not illegal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    don't forget to mention who these "citizens" were talking to at the other end of the line.

  51. Re:If AT&T is innocent, they have nothing to h by speed-sf · · Score: 3, Informative

    This arguement is common and dangerous. Not only do unlimited wiretaps destroy our privacy they destroy our anonymity. Free speech means I can communicate over any medium and say anything I want. Including criticism of the current government. In the private sphere of my house I cannot be prosecuted for ANYTHING I say. But these days, the Patriot Act and other dubious pieces of legislation allow the government to hold me without cause, brand me a terrorist and destroy my life. AT&T is now making that even easier, I'm not sure the best way of protecting your people and a way of life lies in destroying that which makes it free. I'm sure the American Revolution would never have happened if gov't had known about it.

    --
    All your database are belong to us
  52. what should AT&T have done, exactly? by Marsmensch · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What exactly is the process of having the wiretaps executed by AT&T? Is the EFF expecting AT&T to determine if the taps are legal or if the warrants are valid? Shouldn't that be a judge's job or is there some standard procedure AT&T neglected to follow?

    Not trolling here, this is a serious question.

    --
    Slashdot: news from nerds.
    1. Re:what should AT&T have done, exactly? by HairyCanary · · Score: 1

      I think part of the problem is that there are no judges or warrants involved...

    2. Re:what should AT&T have done, exactly? by jefu · · Score: 1

      IANAL. I suspect that the government could hint that a company should do this and then have the company comply and voluntarily hand over anything of interest they might find. Then, naturally, it would not count as a government wiretap request and would thus not require a warrant.

  53. Re:Not illegal. by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
    Who says it was US Citizens ? I've not seen that anywhere.

    Then you haven't read a single article on the subject, obviously if it were international calls only, there would not be a Constitutional issue.

    The president was granted this power by congress and congress knew all along about it.

    This is a nice talking point, but utter bullshit.

    Nothing to see here, move along.

    Good to see that you care so much for the Constitution.

    Why am I answering such an obvious troll?

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  54. you serious? by c6gunner · · Score: 1

    There's been plenty of debate on that already. The concensus - at least, amongst those actualy qualified to examine the controversy - has been that the president did nothing illegal. Even Wikipedia , which has a tendency to be left-leaning, states that "an actual evaluation of FISA reveals that the President does have the legal authority to order electronic surveillance without court order, even on conversations taking place between folks inside of the US and folks outside of the US".

    Even if by some miracle you could show that what the government did was illegal, how does suing AT&T help? If the government DID do something illegal, then AT&T was a victim of fraud. If the government didn't do anything illegal, then neither did AT&T. Either way, the lawsuit is frivolous.

    1. Re:you serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Are you serious? There is hardly a concensus. From your Wikipedia link: "FISA ... makes it very clear that this is not the case. It allows the President to authorize electronic surveillance without a court order so long as, "there is no substantial likelihood that the surveillance will acquire the contents of any communication to which a United States person is a party." (1802 B)" A link to the FISA law in question: http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/casecode/uscodes/50/ chapters/36/subchapters/i/sections/section_1802.ht ml

    2. Re:you serious? by terrymr · · Score: 1

      I thought that FISA allowed wiretaps without a warrant up front, provided that you obtain the warrant within 72 hours.
      Obviously the tapes can't be used in any legal proceeding until the warrant is approved.

    3. Re:you serious? by ksheff · · Score: 1
      Section 1801.h.4 is probably what you're thinking of.
      notwithstanding paragraphs (1), (2), and (3), with respect to any electronic surveillance approved pursuant to section 1802(a) of this title, procedures that require that no contents of any communication to which a United States person is a party shall be disclosed, disseminated, or used for any purpose or retained for longer than 72 hours unless a court order under section 1805 of this title is obtained or unless the Attorney General determines that the information indicates a threat of death or serious bodily harm to any person.
      It seems to me, that would allow trolling for data and if something interesting pops up, they have 3 days to get a FISA warrant, otherwise it is purged. They may also use the definition of "United States person" to wiggle out of having to get a warrant too.
      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
  55. Nice, Except by AoT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Constitution does not allow for warrantless searches. Read the fourth amendment, it is pretty clear. This means that the president does not have the power to order them and the congress does not have the power to permit them.

    1. Re:Nice, Except by rewt66 · · Score: 1

      The Constitution doesn't allow for martial law, either, but it's been done. By Abraham Lincoln, no less.

      The key thing is that, when the crisis was over, he ended martial law. Will Bush end this stuff? Well, it's hard to say - this "crisis" may be with us for a while...

    2. Re:Nice, Except by delong · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Constitution does allow for warrantless searches.

      The Fourth Amendment has two clauses - 1. no unreasonable search and seizures, and 2. the warrant clause. Not all searches and seizures require a warrant. For example, searches incident to arrest, "open container" vehicle searches, and (importantly for this discussion) foreign intelligence signals intelligence.

      What's more, not all searches and seizures are forbidden, only those that are unreasonable. The interception of the communications of known foreign enemies of the US is per se reasonable.

    3. Re:Nice, Except by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But who gets to decide what "known foreign enemies of the US" means? The ones performing the search? I don't think so. That's what the warrent is for: it ensures that some (theoretically) impartial observer agrees that the search is not unreasonable.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    4. Re:Nice, Except by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whatever state of affairs makes him and his daddies buddies more money, will continue until he is stopped. Nobody in the United States is willing to stand up to him.

      Guess what happened to citizens that stood up to Adolf in Germany? A bullet.

    5. Re:Nice, Except by Rich0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Fourth Amendment has two clauses - 1. no unreasonable search and seizures, and 2. the warrant clause. Not all searches and seizures require a warrant. For example, searches incident to arrest, "open container" vehicle searches, and (importantly for this discussion) foreign intelligence signals intelligence.

      Uh, I don't see the text "arrest," "open container," "vehicle," or "signals intelligence" anywhere in the text of the 4th ammendment.

      Obviously there is a need for balance in times of war, but is it really that horrible to ask the president to at least check in with a secret court within 72 hours of starting a tap? The very concept of a secret court in itself is pretty bad, but to not even require that?

      Terry stops and pat-downs are reasonable enough since they're limited to looking for obvious signs of weapons while the police stop somebody, and in general police aren't allowed to go digging for admissible evidence. The idea that you can search a vehicle on a whim is completely against the constitution (whether or not it happens to be established precedent).

      You either have probable cause or you don't. If you have it, then it is a simple matter to obtain a warrant. If you're hunting a guy who plants bombs in trunks then checking trunks for bombs would also be reasonable since there is a compelling need for public safety, but I'd make anything else found in trucks inadmissable unless there was a warrant.

      Just think about why the 4th ammendment was actually written, and perhaps the need for it will become more clear. It was written by folks who actually used to be considered terrorists by the powers in charge, who were on a quest to flush them out by any means necessary. That isn't to condone terrorism, but if somebody really is a public threat it won't be hard to get a warrant to search their belongings...

    6. Re:Nice, Except by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      What's more, not all searches and seizures are forbidden, only those that are unreasonable. The interception of the communications of known foreign enemies of the US is per se reasonable.

      Foreign persons are not citizens of the US, and are thus for the most part, outside the scope of the forth ammendment, so long as they remain outside the jurisdiction and control of the US.

      Once within it however, the forth ammendment applies. You cannot wiretap their phone without due process. The president has no authority to do so, no matter how much of a threat they pose to national security. Without legal authorisation to contuct a wiretap, the president can't do jack.

      If Osama Bin Laden himself was running his ultra high tech global Al-Queda control network with 52 metre display screen showing nuclear bomb locations in real time from staellie topography, right across from the White House, the president could not order a wiretap of the facility with due process.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    7. Re:Nice, Except by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, nowadays they can spin the consitution 180 degrees to get their way. Observe the widely-accepted lie which claims the 2nd amendment secures "government's right" to assemble a standing army, instead of the individual's right to bear arms. Better yet, the consitution is obsolete in times of war. That's exactly why the US is currently fighting a perpetual "war" (even Bush has admitted it will never end).

  56. Re:Not illegal. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    It worries you not at all, you don't see anything wrong, with setting a legal precedent which says that for all practical purposes... we might as well conduct ourselves as a nation at war from now until the end of the world? In my opinion there's something seriously wrong with a nation which needs to declare indefinite war on an indefinite for to justify actions which amount to little more than blatant paranoia.

    There is always going to be some fringe group someplace which, given half the chance, will start spewing hate speech. Many of them can be found in low-income communities right here in the US. I'd much prefer that we investigate why these people feel oppressed, used, and underpriveleged rather than tracking them like animals just waiting for the excuse to spring on them.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  57. not speaking the truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    terming the wiretaps as illegal is not rooted in any law
    nor any court decision but the opinion of the author.
    personally, I am favor the NSA spying on enemies. every
    president since Geo. Washington has spied on the enemies of
    this country. but I suspect the enemy the writer sees is
    our elected president, not the guys trying to kill us.

    1. Re:not speaking the truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the 4th Amendment of the Constitution law enough for you?

      Conservatives love to be "strict constructionists" of the Constitution except when it is inconvineient to them.

    2. Re:not speaking the truth by dashersey · · Score: 1

      Enemy?
      Let's see...
      Anyone who has unfettered rights to spy on me (regardless of whether I have anything to
      hide) and is not accountable to any body of american citizens for their actions, and does so at my expense as a taxpayer IS a direct threat to my freedom & security.

      So tell me, who's my enemy again?

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages; all alike.
    3. Re:not speaking the truth by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      It's illegal under FISA.

    4. Re:not speaking the truth by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >terming the wiretaps as illegal is not rooted in any law

      You're joking, right?

      http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode50/u sc_sec_50_00001809----000-.html

      (a) Prohibited activities
      A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally--
      (1) engages in electronic surveillance under color of law except as authorized by statute; or
      (2) discloses or uses information obtained under color of law by electronic surveillance, knowing or having reason to know that the information was obtained through electronic surveillance not authorized by statute.
      (b) Defense
      It is a defense to a prosecution under subsection (a) of this section that the defendant was a law enforcement or investigative officer engaged in the course of his official duties and the electronic surveillance was authorized by and conducted pursuant to a search warrant or court order of a court of competent jurisdiction.
      (c) Penalties
      An offense described in this section is punishable by a fine of not more than $10,000 or imprisonment for not more than five years, or both.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
  58. Re:Not illegal. by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

    Obviously use of FISA wasn't feasible when your intention was to scan through ALL traffic, be it voice or internet data, looking for keywords. Even a FISA judge would never authorize that, hence the need for an executive order. I personally think the administration is intentionally trying to misdirect people into thinking that a) only voice calls were tapped and b) only calls between select people inside the US to select people outside the US were monitored. Of course, this was all done in the name of National Security, so any objection or disclosure would be treasonous!

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  59. with cause, you can get a *warrant*. by javaxman · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Doesn't this procedure fall under probable cause?

    Short answer, no.

    Long answer, even if you have cause, *to wiretap, you need a warrant*. A warrant which is really, really easy to get, can be obtained after the wiretap is done in most cases.

    This is the reason why even right-wing folks are having a hard time swallowing this whopper. The only reason that makes sense to anyone for doing this type of work in a secret program without asking for judicial approval is that they're doing something fundamentally wrong, like spying on domestic citizens without discrimination, i.e. no ( reasonably, possible ) probable cause. Most likely, they're casting the net really, really wide... I'm not sure we should buy the "only calls originating outside the U.S." statement, but even in that case, uh, are they monitoring *all* calls from outside the U.S. ? That wouldn't fall under the guidelines, sorry... but it might be possible to get a huge number of warrants every day for all of the calls you actually monitored. The only issue is that it *could* get out that you're doing that ( FISA lets us know how many such warrants are issued ), people would complain that you're wasting resources/invading privacy, and terrorists would stop making phone calls into the U.S., defeating the program. Really, though, if they weren't doing something wrong, it wouldn't be secret, it's that simple. Also, think about it for a minute : if it was something G.W. thought Congress ( and the public ) would approve of, he could get the autorization needed, right ?

    If the issue is really calls originating from outside the U.S., and the current law leaves the legality of tapping those calls when they connect in the states in doubt, how hard would it be for some PATRIOT rider to explicitly authorize that? Somehow, I and plenty of other critical thinking people don't believe that's the reason this program is secret and avoids the judicial review rubber-stamp process we've set up.

    The whole "probable cause" thing AFAIK ( IANAL, either ) is a slippery-slope type argument along the lines of "any reasonable judge anywhere would give you a warrant ( given the obvious evidence), so you can act as if you have one in this case"... but I've only ever heard of it applied in cases of searches where clear evidence is present ( though the definition of "clear" has been getting lower and lower ), and in cases where it's abused, the searching law officer can open themselves up to charges or, more often, end up with evidence being thrown out as a result of unlawful search ( again, this happens less and less ).

    My best guess ( without knowing how the secret program operated ) is that they're randomly intercepting any and all foreign-routed calls ( and maybe others ), in such a way that even the most pro-government judge would hesitate to authorize so many unfocused, unfounded wiretaps, and for whatever reason, they decided that asking Congress for permission to do what they wanted either wasn't needed or wouldn't work. They're claiming it's not needed, but they might only be right with Alito on the supreme court... which I guess does make this whole thing a bit of a moot point. It's not like the administration is going to be punished for doing *anything* wrong, no matter what it is, now...

    1. Re:with cause, you can get a *warrant*. by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      Actually, FISA warrants are very hard to prepare, and require a lot of paperwork and bureaucracy, and the involvement of many people. The slowness of FISA is one reason that some critical information about 9-11, pre-9-11, was not acquired soon enough to prevent the attacks. Other reasons were similar civil liberties fetishism which paralyzed the FBI - preventing counterintelligence from communicating with criminal investigations, thwarting a different path to preventing 9-11.

      Without the *excess* civil liberties restrictions (as opposed to truly necessary ones), there is a very good chance that 9-11 would have been prevented. The "firewall" within the FBI between counterintelligence and criminal investigations was one of those, and ironically was raised higher in a policy written by a lawyer who later served as a member of hte 9-11 commission.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    2. Re:with cause, you can get a *warrant*. by javaxman · · Score: 1
      By what standards do you think FISA warrants are hard to prepare ? Would you care to link to an article or other source that describes the difficulties law enforcement has in obtaining FISA warrants ?

      Looking at the most recent FISA report to congress, it doesn't look like it's too difficult for law enforcement to get over 1700 FISA warrants in a single year, without a single one being denied. There's a special 11-judge panel that approves these things. It seems to me you could essentially have a department of people in the NSA filling out forms with names and numbers and get as many of these approved as you needed.

      How easy do you want it to be ? In order for someone at the NSA to get a FISA warrant, they have to provide what, 8 pieces of somewhat unique information ? Here's what's outlined in the law:

      1) name of officer
      2) some indication that the request is approved by the executive branch ( I'm going to guess that's *really* a no-brainer )
      3) why the agent thinks the person or facilities being targeted are agents of a foreign power
      4) "a statement of the proposed minimization procedures"- boilerplate
      5) "description of the nature of the information sought and the type of communications or activities to be subjected to the surveillance" - again, a template could be used in most cases.
      6) ertification or certifications by the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs or an executive branch official or officials designated by the President from among those executive officers employed in the area of national security or defense = you need your boss' boss' stamp.
      7) a statement of the means by which the surveillance will be effected and a statement whether physical entry is required to effect the surveillance - again, boilerplate unless you're going into someone's house.
      8)a statement of the facts concerning all previous applications that have been made to any judge under this subchapter involving any of the persons - could just as easily be boilerplate "none that I know of". Is the judge going to turn it down if it's wrong? They approved over 1700 of these last year alone.
      9) a statement of the period of time for which the electronic surveillance is required to be maintained, and if the nature of the intelligence gathering is such that the approval of the use of electronic surveillance under this subchapter should not automatically terminate when the described type of information has first been obtained, a description of facts supporting the belief that additional information of the same type will be obtained thereafter - again, boilerplate could be used "as long as it takes, additional operatives could be detected, bla bla"
      11) whenever more than one electronic, mechanical or other surveillance device is to be used with respect to a particular proposed electronic surveillance, the coverage of the devices involved and what minimization procedures apply to information acquired by each device. Again, serious boilerplate material.

      The only possible way that this could be looked at as "difficult" is if the agency in question isn't used to making such requests and/or lacks the resources to do so. Somehow, I think that's not the case here, and again, how easy do you want to make it ? You think question (3) above is asking too much ? You want to grant wire taps because someone "would like to see if I hear anything suspicious" ?

      Of course, I'm not going to change your mind here, I don't think- you've decided already that you do nothing wrong and don't mind Big Brother listening in on your phone calls. You're sure we have *excess* civil liberties in the U.S.

      More oddly, you *really* think more survellance by the government could have prevented a few guys from hijacking a jet ? That's a fantasy. Even if that particular group could have been caught, someone could have done it- the failure was

    3. Re:with cause, you can get a *warrant*. by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      I don't keep my sources in my pocket. I would suggest you check a recent issue of The Weekly Standard for details. There was an article in the last week or two by someone who used to have to get FISA warrants, and it details the actual, not theoretical, process that is involved.

      Oh, and I have always considered it likely that the other side will gain the presidency. In this regard, my main concern is that, like under Clinton the First, they will put too many obstacles in the way of surveillance, or they will fail to appreciate the gravity of the threat from our enemies.

      Regarding whether surveillance would have prevented 9-11, the answer depends on how competent the people who got the information were. Remember that procedural barriers designed to "protect civil liberties" absolutely prevented reading Zacarias Moussaoui's hard drive (according to http://www.courttv.com/trials/moussaoui/background .html , it was a FISA court that did so). Read the article I just mentioned and notice the other clues that could have been obtained.

      Furthermore, if you knew anything about war fighting (or counterintelligence), you would understand that there are no absolutes. You fight with what you have, and you erect what barriers you can against the enemy. To expect those barriers to be perfect is utter folly. Likewise, to argue that since they aren't perfect, we shouldn't erect them is silly. Those barriers have to be consistent with the level of threat and the cost (including the cost to civil liberties). I am simply weighing those costs differently. I recognize that privacy has always been violated by our government, and there are really very few instances of abuse - especially of people who really were innocent. Just as war cannot be fought without casualties, surveillance measures cannot be erected without mistakes and perhaps some level of abuse. That is simply not an excuse to not do so.

      As for your utterly unsupported assertion that the NSA and CIA are only competent at domestic surveillance, all I can say is: you have really got to be kidding. The CIA is certainly not the most competent organization, although we don't really know about the NSA (and we really *shouldn't* know).

      Yes, surveillance could have prevented 9-11, and probably would have. It *might* have gotten enough information to show the depth of the plot, and it was clear just from the Moussaoui arrest that the target was commercial aircraft. There are a number of informational threds tying him to others involved in the plot.

      As for the big brother stuff, I don't particularly like the idea of Big Brother listening in on my calls, but then I don't have regular chats with foreign Al Qaeda agents! And that is what this program was targetted at.

      Furthermore, don't forget that Congress was overseeing this activity from the time it started.

      And yes, I think we will eventually discover, at the cost of many lives, that we do indeed have too many of certain civil liberties - specifically privacy, to adequately defend ourselves in a war we did not declare.

      Let me ask you: do you truly believe that Al Qaeda and friends, and the state sponsors who cooperate with them, are not planning on causing grievous damage to America, causing much death and economic damage? Do you really want us to avoid what are reasonable (and long established) measures to attempt to stop them?

      Or are you one of those who seems to believe that our privacy rights are so gosh darned important that we should simply let the terrorists do whatever they want once they get into our country?

      In other words, do you think we are at war or not?

      Just as happened with the Vietnam War, our enemies are counting on many people in the US to weaken us. It worked for the North Vietnamese, and it may very well work for Al Qaeda (not to mention nuclear Iran, etc).

      Attempting to have some degree of balance between civil liberties absolutism, and a total

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    4. Re:with cause, you can get a *warrant*. by javaxman · · Score: 1
      I would suggest you check a recent issue of The Weekly Standard for details.

      Hey, they're online... though not exactly a respected unbiased news source, I'd be happy to read the article... don't suppose you remember the title? Still, you didn't answer my question ( and it wasn't rhetorical ), how easy do you think it should be for law enforcement to wiretap, search, or seize property ? What needs to be streamlined in FISA, and why didn't G.W. get that put into PATRIOT rather than potentially break the law with a secret program?

      I don't have regular chats with foreign Al Qaeda agents! And that is what this program was targetted at.

      The truth is, you don't know who this program was targeting. I could be targeting you, or democratic national party members, or anyone else, and nobody would know. Somehow, you don't see a problem with that? You trust the government that much? What did G.W. do to earn such trust?

      I don't take phone calls from Al Queda ( or anyone overseas, actually ) now that you mention it... but I do care about freedom, and I do know that it's not just a slogan. It's worth dying for, though... when it's actually threatened. Right now, I'm afraid, Al Queda doesn't pose a threat to our freedom near as much as ( admittedly well-intentioned ) guys like you. Al Queda threatens the lives of some of our citizens- not our freedoms. I do think we can protect the lives of our citizens without forcing them to give up their freedoms.

      Go ahead and ask me if our right to privacy is not worth the lives of a few thousand Americans; I think it is worth our lives, and from what you're saying, it's not. But I'm also thinking you believe privacy to have nothing to do with freedom... and that leaves me wondering what you think freedom is and how it comes to be...

      Remember that procedural barriers designed to "protect civil liberties" absolutely prevented reading Zacarias Moussaoui's hard drive (according to http://www.courttv.com/trials/moussaoui/background .html , it was a FISA court that did so).

      No, that was the fault of an incompetent investigator who thought they had a warrant which covered searches it did not cover, not the fault of "procedural barriers". But... was Moussaoui convicted, or not? Did not being able to use the information on his hard drive at trial stop him from being convicted ? Are you really trying to convince me that the FISA court stopped investigators from reading his hard drive? I'm pretty sure they just said it couldn't be used as evidence *in his trial*... let's not exaggerate the facts here. BTW, the link you posted is invalid.

      When you put "civil liberties" in quotes like that... replace it instead with the word freedom and consider if that changes how you feel... because you really can't separate the two.

      Your appeal to the memory of Nixon is as lame as the canonical use of Hitler or Naziism in internet debate.

      No, it is directly on point. Do you want to give the executive branch the ability to tap anyone's phone, any time, for any reason? Answer that question before you acuse me so, please.

      If your answer is not "yes, the government should be able to wiretap anyone, any time, and should be able to search anyone, any time, and should be able to seize any property, any time", then please elucidate what civil protections you do support. Remember, I asked, "how easy do you want it to be ?"... it wasn't a rehtorical question. Apparently FISA isn't easy enough. How easy should it be?

      So what are you proposing? That we should end this program? How will that make you safer?

      Has this program made anyone safer ? The program is *illegal*, it should never have been started, and those responsible should be *prosecuted* to the full extent of the law.

      How would it stop evil Hillary or Tricky Dick of the future fr

  60. Re:If AT&T is innocent, they have nothing to h by gpw213 · · Score: 1
    Just like a citizen who is not guilty of any crimes should welcome the friendly government agent asking for his papers...

    I have a problem with the "friendly government" requiring me to have proper identifcation papers on my person at all times, so that their agent may ask me for them at his convenience. It is not a matter of guilt or innocence, but one of a budding police state.

    --
    However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results. -- Winston Churchill
  61. "if you're doing nothing wrong, then you have noth by Andrew+Tanenbaum · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The "If you're doing nothing wrong, then you have nothing to worry about" position is completely correct, but you would be foolish to apply this maxim to any living person. Everyone does things wrong, everyone has something to hide, and everyone is a criminal. It's time that we recognized this in our public discourse instead of pretending.

  62. national security at what cost by plbg32 · · Score: 1

    seems to me this whole national security thing has been tried before. and when it was it had disasterous effects and brought down an entire goverment. sure is funny how history repeats itself, but gee its only been twenty years or so since communist russia fell..........

  63. Anonymous wiretapping by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

    Would anonymous electronic wire-tapping be seen as ok? For example you can have a computer sniff out the data, but require a warrant to humanly read the content and see who is associated with that data.

    I don't appreciate my rights being trampled on, but I do prefer a proper discussion about an issue, rather than a knee jerk reaction.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    1. Re:Anonymous wiretapping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      back in the 30/40s when hitler was taking a spin around europe (no, that's not invocation of godwin's law, it's a valid example) he rounded up a ****load of people he didn't like. I've read that what was a help in this was phone records that linked people together. Who had these records? phone companies, the one people you'd actually expect to have the data. It was available and it was used. Who's to say there won't be a crackpot in a few years (*mumbles something about current US govt*) who won't do the same thing with access to this data? what requires a warrant now, may not require one at that time because of "oh noes! TEH TERRORISTS!!11ONEONE"

      This applies to the EU with its data retention laws as well as to the US. Fuckers never learn :(

    2. Re:Anonymous wiretapping by run4ever79 · · Score: 1

      It would depend on the implementation. A sufficiently advanced and INDEPENDENT AI might not be a bad thing. I would trust it more than any live person, but serveral conditions would have to be in place. For example the system should immedately and irrecoverably destroy any data relating to calls that it initially finds unremarkable. Second its judgement about what's important should be independent after its initial creation so that some corrupt government official could not intentionally manipulate the results it generates.

      --
      Linux : Hotrod :: Windows : Yugo
  64. Re:If AT&T is innocent, they have nothing to h by NullStmt · · Score: 1

    You, my friend, just fell for a troll or at least a very sarcastic comment. This is the argument commonly given by many of the defenders of the administration. "If you are innocent then you should have no problem with the gov't going through everything you say/do/own whenever they feel like it". Anyone with a functional brain cell knows that this argument is bogus, but some idiots swear by it.

  65. EFF Establishes Standing? by notcreative · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How is the EFF going to establish that it has the standing necessary to bring this suit? That seems to be the central Catch-22 in this story; it's plainly illegal, but the only way to take the NSA to court is to prove you were monitored, but the people who were monitored are secret, which means you can't take them to court, which means it must not be illegal. How do we establish standing when the victims are secret?

    1. Re:EFF Establishes Standing? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      a) They're not suing directly; they're just providing the lawyers.
      b) The target of this lawsuit is AT&T, not the NSA.

  66. LOL! by jd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ok, here's a challenge. Write a summary of the entire article using only three letter actonyms, punctuation symbols and mathematical notation.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:LOL! by Traa · · Score: 4, Funny

      NSA==GWB
      NSA>EFF
      :-(
      FU AT&T

    2. Re:LOL! by jd · · Score: 1

      YOU WIN! YAY!

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  67. next up on the list of frivolous lawsuits: by c6gunner · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    31 Jan 2006
    C6gunner sues NYTimes for "reckless endangerment".


    C6gunner, claiming that by releasing classified information during a time of war the New York Times has knowingly endangered the lives of not just Americans, but all residents of North America, has launched a class-action lawsuit demanding $10,000 for every individual legaly residing on the North American continent.

    Whether the ammount requested was in Canadian or US currency was unclear.

    Film at 11.

  68. Yes illegal. by isotope23 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Amendment IV

    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.

    Nowhere within the delegated powers does it say the president can violate
    the 4th amendment. There is zippo, zero, nada authority to do so.

    If we go with your rationalization, we are in a war with no clear enemy, no clear objective, no clear ending. This means we are effectively in a perpetual war. It also means that every president is effectively above the law until the war ends. As much as I detest Hilary Clinton, I hope to god she becomes president just to watch all the neo-cons squirm as she abuses the powers they have given bush.

    Even if we assume that this :

    "That the President is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons" is his justification, guess what?

    Congress HAS NO LEGAL AUTHORITY to give the president the power to suspend the 4th amendment.

    The only way either Congress or Bush can do so is to amend the constitution to allow it.
    Regarding your last point :
    "I want the President taking the necessary step of surveiling our active stated enemies in order to have a shot at preventing the nutcases from taking another 9/11-esque shot at me and mine. I don't see how it can be any other way, given the state of the world."

    Simple, stop poking our nose in other countries business. I bet you that Americans would react violently if the chinese had replaced our government with a new one (after they supervised the elections). Terrorism does not happen in a vacuum. It happens because our government is playing empire in someone elses land.

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    1. Re:Yes illegal. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1
      Congress HAS NO LEGAL AUTHORITY to give the president the power to suspend the 4th amendment
      I'm happy to see that more people are beginning to recognize this. Congress, the President, and the Supreme Court have been reaffirming each other for decades--yet nobody seems to notice that none of the three branches had the authority to give to the other to begin with.
      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    2. Re:Yes illegal. by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Simple, stop poking our nose in other countries business. Terrorism does not happen in a vacuum. It happens because our government is playing empire in someone elses land.

      We tried that. 1939. Didn't turn out so well.

      And this is coming from me as a libertarian who agrees we should not be so entrenched overseas... but there are places where our nose does belong. Iran is probably trying to create nuclear weapons. Their public policy is that Israel should be blown off the face of the Earth. Is it OK for us to intervene now?

      But I think you're implying that it's OK for Osama bin Laden to kill 3000 innocent Americans because the US had bases in Saudi Arabia. Is that what you're saying? Because that was the main reason Osama was supposedly pissed at us. Then Saddam Hussein attacked Kuwait and we went to war to push him back, and then Osama said he was mad because Iraqi children died then and in the aftermath. Did he blame Saddam? A little, but mostly us.

      Or does he just want to spread militant Islam across the globe?

      See, it's hard to tell exactly what Osama wants, because he's said all of these things and more, depending on what he thinks will go over best with the current group that would like to appease him. The latest is that they will stop plotting to kill Americans if we pull out of Iraq. Right...

      We weren't in Iraq or Afghanistan when 9/11 happened. Nor when they bombed the embassies in Africa. Nor when they originally tried to bomb the twin towers.

      There is no rhyme or reason to madmen, so please, spare us the attempt to try and suggest that if we just appease the terrorists, they'll leave us alone. It has never worked.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    3. Re:Yes illegal. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to defend Saddam as a person but, in terms of Kuwait, he was set up.

      He had a legitimate quarrel over political boundaries which were being exploited for someone else's financial gain. He took it to the proper authorities who shut him out, at best, or teld him to cope, at worst. He notified people ahead of time that he was going to be forced to take military action if the issue could not be resolved peaceably. The international community sat back and said "do whatever you feel you have to do." When he moved then he was trumped up as having acted completely out of the blue without any instigation.

      There is not a single issue of international politics which can be broken down to "these people are the innocent victims" and "these people are the unrepentent aggressors". The more the US tries to claim being the shining paladin in white armor the more I'm suspicious of everything they do.

      And other than a few vague tapes stating a desire to take revenge on the US regime I have never been convinced that ObL, or his organization, was truly responsible for that incident. I'm not subscribing to some conspiracy thoery and I'm certainly not on the Michael Moore bandwagon. Where I am, though, is on a skeptical middle ground where it's just too plain obvious that ObL's tapes are taken out of context and misinterpreted on a regular basis.

      I don't know what did happen, and I don't have any real good theories of my own, but what I do know is that the current popular theory blaming this on some vague organization across the globe stinks like shit.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    4. Re:Yes illegal. by jcr · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to defend Saddam as a person but, in terms of Kuwait, he was set up.

      Oh, gag me! He attempted a land-grab so that he could avoid the debt he owed to Kuwait, from the OTHER war he started as a land-grab, thinking that Iran would be a pushover.

      Why are so many people willing to make excuses for every perp?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    5. Re:Yes illegal. by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      I don't know what did happen, and I don't have any real good theories of my own, but what I do know is that the current popular theory blaming this on some vague organization across the globe stinks like shit.

      Let's see. We know who did it, they were al Qaeda members. We know Osama has never denied doing it, even though the blame has been laid at his feet. We know he orchestrated the original attempt to blow up the twin towers. We know al Qaeda like to strike again at targets if it doesn't first succeed. We've caught other al Qaeda members that helped plan it. And no other group fits the puzzle.

      I'm sorry if you have some reason to think it "stinks like shit," but Occam's Razor applies here.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    6. Re:Yes illegal. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      That's the point. We don't really know. I had this discussion with a fellow at work who was confident that he had copies of all the Osama tapes which showed irrefutable proof that Osama was involved. So we made an evening of it one time to watch the tapes. If you listen to them with a critical eye then the evidence is circumstantial. Half of them are passed through an American interpreter and just changing verb tense in many situations, given the context of the addresses which ObL was making, even my staunch government supporting friend agreed that it would have been very easy to create ObL's supposed claims of responsibility by nudging the translation.

      There simply is not a single piece of objective irrefutable evidence tying the whole situation together. Passports which were found weeks after the fact in only marginally connected residences. Passenger lists which changed several times within the first 48 hours. I watched a special on A&E just last night, I only watched about 20 minutes, but the Port Authority had initially told everyone in the 2nd tower that they could go back inside because there was no further threat. What the heck? How does one miss a second plane flying at low altitude out of its legitimate flight pattern?

      There are far too many parts of that entire situation which are easily fabricated, easily misinterpreted, and easily subjective. There's just no way it can be as nicely and neatly blamed on ObL and Al Qaeda as we're supposed to believe.

      Like I said. I don't know what the scam is but anyone with an even marginally objective eye can see that there's an awful lot with the whole thing which isn't quite right. Lots of people are hiding lots of somethings... and it isn't for our own good.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    7. Re:Yes illegal. by jr87 · · Score: 1

      no we didn't...I mean technically we were neutral but we supported the allies with more trade and embargoed Japan. I think it is right we went in during WWII but still, we weren't out of it in 1939. Here is the problem with the "War on terror" Terrorism has been around for a very long time, and will continue to be around for a very long time. WE CANNNOT WIN!!!!! It's not ok for Osama bin Laden to finance and possibly help plan an attack that killed many people. However, we should not bend over backwards and give up our most cherished freedoms because we are scared. Yes, our freedoms keep us somewhat more open to attack, but at the same time, to violate them is to destroy what we stand for. Shit happens, live with it.

    8. Re:Yes illegal. by isotope23 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      We tried that. 1939. Didn't turn out so well.

      And this is coming from me as a libertarian who agrees we should not be so entrenched overseas... but there are places where our nose does belong. Iran is probably trying to create nuclear weapons. Their public policy is that Israel should be blown off the face of the Earth. Is it OK for us to intervene now?


      first, we helped create the situation in 39 with the punative versailles treaty. If the west had not destroyed
      gernmany's economy hitler probably would not have come to power.

      Second regarding Iran. The first big case of blowback. The CIA supported a coup against
      the first democratically elected government in iran in 1953.

      I think their public policy stems from that, our support of the shah, and our unquestioning support of israel.
      isn't it interesting that israel has nuclear weapons, but isn't brought up to the security council for it?

      But I think you're implying that it's OK for Osama bin Laden to kill 3000 innocent Americans because the US had bases in Saudi Arabia. Is that what you're saying? Because that was the main reason Osama was supposedly pissed at us. Then Saddam Hussein attacked Kuwait and we went to war to push him back, and then Osama said he was mad because Iraqi children died then and in the aftermath. Did he blame Saddam? A little, but mostly us.

      Nope I'm saying nothing of the sort. I am saying you reap what you sow.
      The freaking CIA helped create Osama.

      Then Saddam Hussein attacked Kuwait and we went to war to push him back

      Yeah, after this guy went to see him while he was gassing people with our knowledge, and after the reagan administration gave iraq the bio weapon starter kits and after our ambassador told saddam we had no interest defending kuwait

      So yeah, there is no rhyme or reason to terrorism. There is no cause and effect relationship between our foreign policy and terrorism. Our government is lilly white, and bears no blame for its actions. Am I excusing the terrorists? No. I am saying there is only ONE way to win, leave them alone to govern their own affairs. We taught the british that in 1776, the french learned it in algeria and indochina, (we got the same lesson in indochina but it didn't stick)

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    9. Re:Yes illegal. by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      How does one miss a second plane flying at low altitude out of its legitimate flight pattern?

      That assumes that people are observant, gifted at making quick connections, and capable of getting through twenty levels of bureaucracy in ten minutes. Would you have ordered F16's to splash a commercial airliner in a populated area based on the word of one guy in Poughkeepsie?

      If not ObL, just who do you suspect?

    10. Re:Yes illegal. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      As far as I understand, air traffic control is usually automatically alerted when an airliner gets even a thousand feet out of its proper flight path. Flying an airplace at ~800 feet down a main boulevard of New York is probably at least few thousand feet out of the proper flight path.

      Your question about ObL is what's known as "blind man's bluff". I don't know what the scam is but the evidence is far too suspicious for everyone else involved in the game to be innocent.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    11. Re:Yes illegal. by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      And the drop off radar was noted. It doesn't mean we know where the damned thing is - there isn't ATC-level radar all over the country.

      And I don't need a treatise. Just who do you suspect?

    12. Re:Yes illegal. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Don't know. What I do know is the current set of evidence relies far too much on subjective interpretation and, in some cases, outright misrepresentation. I don't have access to the Congressional archives or the intelligence community papers. Heck, even the 9/11 Commission couldn't get access to everything they wanted. If they couldn't then how can anyone just blindly accept their conclusions to be perfect fact when even the Commission recognizes that there was plenty of information withheld?

      Too many questions. Too many questions. If ObL was, truly, involved then there's no way that he was exclusively involved. Probably find money interests tying half the UN to the event if you could get all the real data.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    13. Re:Yes illegal. by squidguy · · Score: 1


      Ok, so he was set up and decided to invade Kuwait. So by your premise did the Iraqi Army and Mukhabarat (intelligence apparatus) thugs have to rape and pillage too? Oh, he was ignored by the "International Authorities" so that means mayhem is ok? So the US and the rest of the Coalition should have let him stay in Kuwait City? Come on!

    14. Re:Yes illegal. by BobSutan · · Score: 1

      While I agree with everything you said, I feel we still need to consider the effect we're having on potential threats. By inflaming the situation with our very presence in the region we're begging every nutball without a cause to rise up, find a cause, and strap a bomb to their back. Iraq is quickly turning into my generation's Vietnam, and that's not a good thing. What's worse, this entire situation from the time Bush declared the end of the war on the aircraft carrier, right up until present day has been fought almost in its entirety by foreign interests. Only a small number of Iraqis are involved in today's insurgency. That's got to count for something. My point is, if we sacked up, pushed the Iraqis to get their shit together by a deadline, we'd be out of there much quicker than the wait and see approach we have today. Then and only then can we have a bird-eye-view of the situation as to who is our actual threat and who's just being drawn to an empty cause, for whatever reason that may be.

      --
      "On a scale from 1 to 10, people are stupid"
    15. Re:Yes illegal. by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "But I think you're implying that it's OK for Osama bin Laden to kill 3000 innocent Americans because the US had bases in Saudi Arabia."

      Man A robs Man B of $20. Man B then shoots Man A in the back. Man B is guilty, but does that somehow retroactively make Man A innocent?

      It is rationally, coherently possible to be outraged at the attacks of 9/11 while still pointing out that it wouldn't have happened to begin with if we were't propping up the Saudi regime.

    16. Re:Yes illegal. by tabbser · · Score: 0

      Since when is wiretapping a search and seizure issue ?
      It's got nothing to do with the 4th.

    17. Re:Yes illegal. by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      I think that having had the first tower hit, bureaucracy would have been minimal for air traffic controllers who would have aircraft on their radar making a beeline for the same towers, considering they had radio channels open to nearby airforce installations.

    18. Re:Yes illegal. by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      We tried that. 1939. Didn't turn out so well.

      Godwin's Law Invoked.

      Iran is probably trying to create nuclear weapons. Their public policy is that Israel should be blown off the face of the Earth. Is it OK for us to intervene now?

      Iran is trying to create nuclear weapons. Also, they are currently flanked on two of their borders by the army of their grentest nemesis, the US. All the while, they share no land border with Israel at all. It's clear that Mutually Assurred Destruction, rather than territorial ambitions, is at play here.

      But I think you're implying that it's OK for Osama bin Laden to kill 3000 innocent Americans because the US had bases in Saudi Arabia. Is that what you're saying?

      You're putting words in the grandparent's mouth. Words that came out of nowhere. Please take the rotting corpses of 9/11 victims off your waving banner. It's disrespectful.

      We weren't in Iraq or Afghanistan when 9/11 happened. Nor when they bombed the embassies in Africa. Nor when they originally tried to bomb the twin towers.

      That's correct. The US was instead in Saudi Arabia, propping up an oppressive dicatorship. It's still there. A lot of "terrorists" actuall come from Saudi.

      There is no rhyme or reason to madmen, so please, spare us the attempt to try and suggest that if we just appease the terrorists, they'll leave us alone. It has never worked.

      Demonstrably false. Look at Northern Ireland. By implementing reforms, the British Government has turned a virtual permanent warzone into a reasonably stable society. If they had continued to inflame sentiments by perpetuating their previous policies, bombs would still be going off in Belfast to this day.

      Coercion and reform are required to quell any popular uprising. The only other solution is to kill everyone. The US didn't do that in Vietnam, and it's not going to do it in Iraq. The current situation in Iraq is a quagmire because they have only the coercion without the reform. Both are needed.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    19. Re:Yes illegal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Is it OK for us to intervene now?

      Can you say with reasonable certainty that if the US attacks Iran, innocent civilians will die? Yes? Then no, it is absolutely NOT ok for "us" to intervene, because then "we" become the criminals, just as "we" have in Iraq. There are better ways of solving problems, if they exist, than force. Force is a moral option in cases of self defense, and ONLY self defense.

      You don't have the slightest right in the world to say whether a peaceful man has the right to live or not. Nor does a group of 10 people, 1000 people, or a million people. Nor does the voting ballot. Nor does government. You do consider yourself exactly equal in human rights, and no better than any other man, don't you?

    20. Re:Yes illegal. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Well, any time you trash the UN you'll win my support. Kinda like the EU in that respect: a large, unelected, unaccountable bureaucracy with extraordinary opportunities for fraud.

    21. Re:Yes illegal. by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      We tried that. 1939. Didn't turn out so well.

      Are you saying that if the USA had a different attitude then (non insolationist), WW2 would not have happened? That is a completely preposterous statement. At best the war might have ended more quickly, but NO NATION had the resources to fight in 1939.

      I think you're implying that it's OK for Osama bin Laden to kill 3000 innocent Americans because the US had bases in Saudi Arabia. Is that what you're saying? Because that was the main reason Osama was supposedly pissed at us

      "Supposedly"? There is no doubt about it! The USA army is in Saudi Arabia propping up a corrupt repressive dictatorship.

      Or does he just want to spread militant Islam across the globe?

      No. While some asshats like him want to see the global rule of islam, that's not the goal. They are reacting to us spreading capitialism (without the freedom) by backing corrupt governments with cash and weapons. We went there are started messing about first.

      People like you always remind me of Starship Troopers, were one guy points out that they started the war and gets ridiculed as a result. Even though it's plainly obvious what the cause was.

      The latest is that they will stop plotting to kill Americans if we pull out of Iraq. Right...

      And stop staging coops in other countries. That's pretty much been their goal since day one, but our leaders tell us "they hate freedom" and we accept that unquestioningly.

      There is no rhyme or reason to madmen

      Oh yes there is, and you are the one who is mad if you dismiss your enemies as "madmen" without the slightest background in how the current situation came to be.

      People don't just wake up and decide to strap a bomb to themselves. Kill a few family members, overthrow their governent and then you have the makings of a suicide bomber.

    22. Re:Yes illegal. by m50d · · Score: 1
      We tried that. 1939. Didn't turn out so well.

      I seem to recall it was going fine for you until you embargoed a particular foreign power, which then attacked you. Not that I wish the US hadn't been involved in WWII, but it would be better for the US had it not.

      And this is coming from me as a libertarian who agrees we should not be so entrenched overseas... but there are places where our nose does belong. Iran is probably trying to create nuclear weapons. Their public policy is that Israel should be blown off the face of the Earth. Is it OK for us to intervene now?

      If by intervene you mean invade, certainly not. There are possible grounds for sanctions in that they may be violating a treaty, but you've been pissing all over said treaty so I don't think you're in any position to talk about such. As for their policy, talk is cheap. By all means respond in kind - the US could make a public statement that it will obliterate anyone who uses nuclear weapons against Israel - but what they've said is no justification for an invasion.

      But I think you're implying that it's OK for Osama bin Laden to kill 3000 innocent Americans because the US had bases in Saudi Arabia. Is that what you're saying?

      Is it OK for a burglar to take stuff from someone who leaves their door open? Of course not, but it's still their own fault.

      Then Saddam Hussein attacked Kuwait and we went to war to push him back, and then Osama said he was mad because Iraqi children died then and in the aftermath. Did he blame Saddam? A little, but mostly us.

      That's because the sanctions were pretty much all your fault. Sure, Saddam invaded another country and he shouldn't have, but that's no justification for what happened afterwards.

      --
      I am trolling
    23. Re:Yes illegal. by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      I want to know specifically what freedoms have you lost?

      Please don't regurgitate what you've read on slashdot, actually list freedoms you've lost.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    24. Re:Yes illegal. by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 0

      first, we helped create the situation in 39 with the punative versailles treaty. If the west had not destroyed gernmany's economy hitler probably would not have come to power.

      Second regarding Iran. The first big case of blowback. The CIA supported a coup against
      the first democratically elected government in iran in 1953.


      Again, let me re-iterate that I think the US is too involved in everyday proceedings in foreign countries. However, the versailles treaty doesn't mean it's ok for Hitler to create a holocaust, and a coup d'etat in 53 doesn't mean it's OK for Iran to create nuclear weapons to destroy Israel. Just because we helped Kuwait send back an attack from a dictator, or made agreements with the Saudi Arabian government for military base placements doesn't mean its OK to kill 3000 innocent people.

      I think their public policy stems from that, our support of the shah, and our unquestioning support of israel. isn't it interesting that israel has nuclear weapons, but isn't brought up to the security council for it?

      No, why should it be? Israel's stated policy is not to destroy Iran or Palestine. Israel has been making an effort at peace, which is more than I can say for Palestine or Iran. Israel has had nukes for how long, and how many times have they nuked Palestine or Iran or any other country? Zero times. Iran has UN sanctions against it forbidding it from pursuing nuclear activity for very good reason. In addition, the UN is overwhelmingly pro-Muslim and anti-Israel, just based on its membership alone.

      How on earth are you comparing Israel and Iran?

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    25. Re:Yes illegal. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Invoking nuclear weapons is really silly anyway since the only nation ever to have shown its willingness to use them is the US.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    26. Re:Yes illegal. by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      Again, let me re-iterate that I think the US is too involved in everyday proceedings in foreign countries. However, the versailles treaty doesn't mean it's ok for Hitler to create a holocaust, and a coup d'etat in 53 doesn't mean it's OK for Iran to create nuclear weapons to destroy Israel. Just because we helped Kuwait send back an attack from a dictator, or made agreements with the Saudi Arabian government for military base placements doesn't mean its OK to kill 3000 innocent people.

      You are missing my point. It is not that the holocaust is happened, nor that 911 happened. My point is they do not happen in a vaccum. There are reasons WHY they happen. In order to stop terrorism, you must take a look at the root causes.

      Now, is it likely that arabs IN GENERAL see our troop presence in the region as imperialism? I would say yes. This is the same reaction we would have if china had troops either here or in mexico. Am I excusing the violence? No. I am saying you need to look at the reasons behind the violence in order to stop it.

      Israel's stated policy is not to destroy Iran or Palestine. Israel has been making an effort at peace, which is more than I can say for Palestine or Iran. Israel has had nukes for how long, and how many times have they nuked Palestine or Iran or any other country? Zero times. Iran has UN sanctions against it forbidding it from pursuing nuclear activity for very good reason. In addition, the UN is overwhelmingly pro-Muslim and anti-Israel, just based on its membership alone.

      First off, israel has long claimed palestine. The only reason they have backed off, is the continuing violence which made it politically unpalatable to continued posession. Don't think terrorism doesn't work either. The founders of Israel knew full well it can.

      Now, I think Israel has a right to exist, but they do not have the right to stop the palestinians from having a state either. In regards to nuclear weapons, if previous use is the determining factor, then why should we have them? Especially when Cheney has put plans in place to NUKE IRAN if we have another terrorist attack in the US. (Regardless of whether or not it is their fault!)

      My point is that we slap sanctions on India and pakistan for having nukes and being non-signatories to the proliferation agreement, but do not do so for israel. It is a double standard, and thus arabs will see this and believe we are not a neutral party.

      Second, under the non-proliferation agreement, Iran is FULLY within it's rights to enrich uranium for nuclear power.

      Now do they have a clandestine weapons program? Probably IMO. If I were leading Iran, I would indeed do so. The reason is simple, Iraq- no nukes, attacked and invaded. North Korea - nukes, no attack nor invasion.

      Will they use them once they get them? Probably not. The real use of a nuke is solely its deterrant value. Two good examples are the USA vs USSR and India vs Pakistan.

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    27. Re:Yes illegal. by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      Except that most US ATC radar installations can't track a plane whose transponder is off. That takes a lot more juice, and it doesn't reach as far, and it's a lot harder to spot something going low and slow when there are mountains (e.g., the Catskills) in between.

      Remember, there was widespread confusion about just what had happened; go watch the newscasts. It wasn't until the second tower was hit that terrorism went to the forefront of everyone's mind.

  69. Re:Not illegal. by SQLz · · Score: 0
    "domestic spying" (which is a complete misnomer, btw)

    It happened in the USA right? Do you call that "foreign spying"...or have you quaffed so much coolaid you call it 'wiretaps for freedom and liberty'.

  70. Felonies? by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

    List them and cite some of the "virtually every legal scholar(s) who has spoken out on this matter".

  71. Illegal and extremely scary if you know about FISA by Valdrax · · Score: 5, Insightful
    You can pretty much guarantee that it is US citizens based on the known surveillance and infiltration of US anti-war groups.

    Let me tell you two reasons to fear the side-stepping of FISA courts both dealing with the already scary nature of the secret courts. The first is that of about 19,000 applications for permission to wiretap from 1979-2004 only four have ever been rejected by the court. Obviously, in legitimate cases of security issues, the FISA court doesn't stand much in the way.

    The second reason is that according to 50 U.S.C. Sec. 1805(f)(2), the Attorney General has up to 72 hours after starting wiretapping to get approval. If they get a legitimate hot tip, then they can start tapping immediately and get approval afterwards. If not approved, then the evidence can't be used in court but as mentioned above only 4 applications have ever been rejected.

    Given that FISA extremely rarely rejects requests put before it and that you don't have to get permission before you can start, there are only two reasons possible why Bush doesn't want to go to the court.

    1. They are spying on people unrelated to domestic security issues like political opponents and anti-war protesters.
    2. They are going on automated fishing expeditions against "suspicious" people, the vast majority of which are probably innocent or who have so little evidence against them that even FISA wouldn't support it.

    Lastly, the President was NOT authorized by Congress to do this under any legitimate interpretation. He was given authority to use force against terrorists. He was not given authority to wipe his rear end with the 4th and 6th Amendments like he claims he is. If it even were possible for Congress to authorize this, then there are effectively no limits on what powers he may assume.

    Incidentally, regardless of your stance for or against abortion, the limits of executive power is the number one reason to give a damn about Judge Alito. The man is a fascist who does not accept any reasonable limits on executive power and police power. Just look at two of his rulings. (1 2) (But hey, we can always rely on the media to cover the important stuff like his equivocation on abortion and the padding of his resume with an elitist, racist group, right?)
    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  72. Re:Not illegal. by dweller_below · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Ultimately, I believe we will find that it is going well beyond communications where one side is 'al qaeda' and the other side is in the U.S.


    The administration is being extremely sneaky with their words. You have to realize that there are at least 3 seperate sets of actions being discussed:

    • What actually happened.
    • What they want to justify.
    • What they intend to do in the future.

    Notice how they describe this as 'terrorism survelience'. They say, they want to know when 'al-Qaida' calls. The problem is, from a constitutional perspective, the only way they can claim that 'al-Qaida' is calling is if the call originates from the US penal system.

    What they really seem to be doing is monitoring calls from: "Might be al-Qaida" to "Less likely to be al-Qaida".

    The gotcha is, everybody in the USA fits somewhere in this range, AND they have discarded all the legislative and judical safeguards.

    Don't worry. As long as you can rat out 3 other 'terrorists' when they come for you, you will get off easy...

    Miles

  73. IANAL, but by einhverfr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Taking a view of who wins and loses these lawsuits is a very myopic view, IMO. In the end, it is not who wins and looses but the precidents that are established, and these are often far more moderate than a simple loss might suggest.

    For example, how many here actually went out and read the Supreme Court's opinion in the Grokster case? I did. And I was struck by how this was a real victory for the technology industry for two reasons:

    1) The Supreme Court refused to revisit the Betamax precident.

    2) The Supreme Court only allowed one to look for liability based on active inducement, so while this might not protect Grokster, Kazaa, etc who build their business models around the premise that people are going to violate copyrights, it does protect BitTorrent and others who build their business models arround legal uses of the technology. IMO, Betamax really wasn't intended to protect those who, in bad faith, actively encourage copyright infringement.

    So while Grokster lost the appeal to the Supreme Court, the EFF did us all a service in helping to ensure that the previous precidents protecting our ability to invent new technologies and communiciations media continued to stand.

    So you can't just look at raw numbers as to who the final judgements favored. You really have to read the opinions. The EFF is doing us all a great service in their representation. It is unfair to characterize them as harmful.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:IANAL, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No matter what your view on the good and bad of government snooping:

      Win or lose, the fact that someone says, "Hey, you can't do that" and uses the system to complain is precisely one of the good things about the U.S. system. It keeps people from resorting to illegal actions during the dispute, and, hopefully, comes out with a just resolution, making the country stronger, or keeping it from being abused.

      When people remain silent about their dislike of government's actions, people stop trusting the government, and a resentment builds which is dangerous in the long term.

      There is a very good reason why people say that a requirement for a longer term successful democracy is a "loyal opposition."

    2. Re:IANAL, but by vodkamattvt · · Score: 1

      Thats definately correct. I had been waiting on the Grokster decision, being an avid P2Per and I have a love of constitutional law. After reading the sites about how terrible the decision was, I read the actual decision and thought it was pretty damn fair.

    3. Re:IANAL, but by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree, and I am watching a very large number of cases that I see as important.

      Among these are the current EFF v. AT&T and Padilla v. Hanft.

      In general even if I don't agree with the way cerain judges rule, I have to admit that most of them really try hard. I would note the way in which Judge Luttig and his pannel first ruled in favor of the Bush Administration in Padilla in an opinion that appeared to unconditionally defer things to the executive and then later refused to allow the Administration to reclassify Padilla as something other than an enemy combattant so that the Supreme Court could review the case. Though I think they got it wrong the first time, I think they did the right thing in trying to prevent the Administration from circumventing the Supreme Court's oversight.

      IANAL, of course.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    4. Re:IANAL, but by elmarkitse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But I think part of his concern is that losing cases on weak lawsuits may negatively impact the chances of a stronger case as once there's established precident that discounts the foundation upon which a subsequent and potentially stronger challenge might arise the threshold or bar is raised and the chance of that subsequent case legitamately having a postive impact on our lives is thusly diminsihed by the earlier case, filed for the sake of fighting the good fight without regard for the greater good achieved by giving ground initially.

    5. Re:IANAL, but by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
      And the whole problem with snooping is that our federal system is based on "injury" if you aren't "injured" adaquately they won't hear your case... Privacy is a really hard thing to measure, because they are collecting the information to use against somebody later. Once they single you out for somthing, they don't have to admit in court They ever spied on you if they bring up enough other evidence. There has to be SOME fight before they analyse the data an start creating laws that are targeted to the "symptoms" of crimes rather than the comming them... Think Minority Report here where they arrest you because your "patterns" are indicating you're about to commit a crime. That's where the Google case is so scary because lots of people "look" for bad stuff, but not everybody DOES bad things.

      in My state of Michigan, you can petition to have the courts look at the laws immediately after it passes.. it can be denied before it's even a law. But in the federal system you have to be "injured".. usually meaning arrested, tried, convicted and serving time.. most of the time it's easier to "plead" out an get less than to fight the law... while they continue abusing it by keeping it from being "bad enough" for court. Look at the "enemy combatant" thing for a lesson in how to do this... keep the people out of "juristiction", out of court, away from lawyers, and make executive claims that you're just going to do it. We're rapidly nearing the point that the court needs guns to get the answers they need so they can presue cases rather than just wait for them to come into court on the excutive branch's whim.

    6. Re:IANAL, but by Smallpond · · Score: 1

      "the court needs guns to get the answers"

      Activist judge: Hold up thar' AG, I'm a fixin' to set some case law

      Alberto G: Over my dead body, Judge.

      AJ: Draw!

    7. Re:IANAL, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The final decision was very well grounded in Constitutional law and well supported in copyright law. I have high hopes for the new court (especially after watching tonights State of the Terror speech and watching the justices not budge an inch during Bush's wiretap apologia), but we'll see whether Bush's appointees will stick to their Strict Constitutionalist guns on Republican matters. (here's a hint, the correct answer to "Abortion yes or no?" is "The Constitution does not permit the federal government to have an opinion either way, and so the federal government must defer the choice to the states, or to the people respectively")

    8. Re:IANAL, but by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I understand the concern. And I think that there are a few cases where there is some justification here. The one that comes to mind involves the ID requirement for travelling on an airplane (the Gillmore case, where the court has left open only a fairly narrow challenge to the no-fly lists and CAPS-II programs, IMO (IANAL).

      But I think that on the whole, the EFF has done a good job in determining where to bring challenges.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    9. Re:IANAL, but by bishop32x · · Score: 1

      Couldn't they be sueing under breach of contract? I assume that theres something somewhere sating that they won't give/sell that information away. If the EFF wins this class action suite it's possible they will force AT&T to tell all their customers that they give their data to the NSA.

    10. Re:IANAL, but by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
      And the whole problem with snooping is that our federal system is based on "injury" if you aren't "injured" adaquately they won't hear your case... Privacy is a really hard thing to measure, because they are collecting the information to use against somebody later.

      That is not going to be the problem. The problem will be lack of evidence that AT&T committed a tort.

      What I expect is going to happen here is that AT&T is going to respond pretty quickly with a sworn statement to the effect that it has never participated in or facilitated any wiretap not authorized by a court order.

      The reason Bush and co had to go to the NSA rather than the FBI is because the FBI has no choice but to get a warrant. The CEO of AT&T is not going to risk going to jail, without a court order that they can easily obtain the administration has absolutely no means of compulsion.

      The NSA does not need cooperation from AT&T to conduct wiretapping any more than it needs cooperation from the local telcos when it taps foreign communications.

      So the EFF is only doing AT&T a favor here, opportunity to set the record straight.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    11. Re:IANAL, but by Anyd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "It keeps people from resorting to illegal actions during the dispute"

      Unless you're part of the Bush administration... I guess you can't break the law when you're the one picking the judges.

    12. Re:IANAL, but by SPSTech · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Bush-bashing is more important than stopping terrorists. I see. That makes sense. Perhaps those of you that are so vehemently against the NSA's actions would like to be in the next crowd of people that die from a terrorist attack when, not if, it happens? Would that make you happy if it meant dying because your whining and crying changed the law to make it illegal to wiretap a conversation from a phone outside our country to a known terrorist? If that meant that call wasn't monitored and they were able to carry out another attack and you or your family died? Would that make you happy? How about letting the terrorists know everything else we're doing to monitor them so they change their tactics and make it harder for us to stop them? Would that make you happy?

      I REALLY wish people would stop making statements of "fact" that the wiretaps were illegal. They most likely weren't to begin with and there is NO evidence that they were at all. Until this point is settled, I would like to establish a moratorium on the words "illegal NSA wiretaps" but unfortunately I can't. People seem to be forgetting that the man on the phone in the USA was a known AlQueda associate who was talking to another known associate in the middle east. Where's the problem? It's LEGAL for the NSA to wiretap that conversation! The NSA deals with people outside the USA making contact with others outsite the USA AND those outside contacting people inside our country.

      Let's get the hearings started immediately so those who keep wrongly saying this was illegal can start preparing their crow.

      --
      Sig?
    13. Re:IANAL, but by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps those of you that are so vehemently against the NSA's actions would like to be in the next crowd of people that die from a terrorist attack when, not if, it happens?

      Please, give it a rest already. First off, you're going to die no matter what. Second, if its inevitable that another terrorist attack is going to happen, then why violate well established law if its not going to stop an attack?

      Would that make you happy if it meant dying because your whining and crying changed the law to make it illegal to wiretap a conversation from a phone outside our country to a known terrorist?

      I'd be dead, so I probably wouldn't care either way anymore. At any rate, I think you need to get your facts straight; an American calling another country is STILl protected by the US Consititution. I know, you hate law, it gets in the way of whatever Bush wants to do. Lets go back to rule of man, that was a much better system.

      If that meant that call wasn't monitored and they were able to carry out another attack and you or your family died? Would that make you happy?

      What kind of idiocy is that? Your question does nothing to argue about the legality of the wiretaps, you're attempting to play on emotions to force people into action without thinking, because you're so fucking scared of dying. Like a child (or an animal), you have no thought process and act soley on your emotions. Good for you, you're being played by the terrorists like a fiddle. For a reality check, there were at least 10.5 times the amount of traffic fatalities as there were killed in the WTC attack. So you're much more likely to die in a car crash than a terrorist attack.

      I REALLY wish people would stop making statements of "fact" that the wiretaps were illegal.

      They were. You ignore the FACT that there are two people (at least) in a phone converstation, and calls going overseas involve (at least) one US citizen. A wiretap is a search, and a search is illegal unless it was authorized by a warrant. That's called Due Process and spelled out very clearly in the 4th Amendment. No warrant for a wiretap that involves a US citizen is an illegal search. It doesn't matter if its the NSA, or FBI, or the President himself, the government can't do it.

      It's LEGAL for the NSA to wiretap that conversation! The NSA deals with people outside the USA making contact with others outsite the USA AND those outside contacting people inside our country.

      The bold part is where it becomes illegal; again, try reading the 4th Amendment sometime. Your own arguement admits spying was done inside the country without a warrant. Not very bright..

    14. Re:IANAL, but by Dare+nMc · · Score: 1

      > Let's get the hearings started immediately so those who keep wrongly saying this was illegal can start preparing their crow.

      Any hearings are not likely to be about whether the wiretaps were illegal, they will focus on if the presidental order was illegal. This is where both sides are correct. IMO the order was probably not illegal, in a time of war... as the president claims. However (again IMO) using any information from the wiretaps are illegal, and their is good precident that they are/were.

      Now, I am not sure why this is a time of war authorized by congress as the Pres claims. Congress did declare the IRAQ war, the president declared a war on terrorism, and declared (IMO) a end to IRAQ as a war. President claims congress gave him the power, but as far as I know he declared a war on terror (within his power) not congress.

    15. Re:IANAL, but by ddimas · · Score: 1

      What about the peoples right to be free of unreasonable serches of their persons, possessions, or EFFECTS. Seems to me a fishing expidition without a court order constitutes unreasonable search. But hey, that constitution thing is meaninless anyhow...

    16. Re:IANAL, but by frgough · · Score: 1

      You said the word, but didn't pay any attention to it.

      "Unreasonable."

      Wiretapping known terrorist sympathizers communicating outside of the country with other known terrorist sympathizers is not an unreasonable search or seizure by any rational definition of the word.

      --
      You can tell the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
    17. Re:IANAL, but by lonenut · · Score: 1

      Obviously YANAL, if you were you would be forced to admit that the illegal NSA wiretaps constitute a violation of federal law in the form of FISA. This is not a point of debate among the right or the left. The administration would like you to believe (and it sounds like you've been suckered) that the president has the constitutional authority to break any law during wartime. (This 'president is above the law' thinking is reflected not only by the wiretap issue, but also in the administration's written statements that they intend to ignore the McCain anti-torture law recently passed.)

      The question you should be asking yourself is "Should (Hillary Clinton/Ted Kennedy/Democratic boogeyman of the day) have unrestricted powers to break any American law they choose? How about if they decided the 2nd ammendment should be ignored and took away your guns? What if they decided that all Republicans should be wiretapped (this smells a little reverse Nixon-ish)?"

      Bring the hearings on. I have yet to hear a single non-partisan expert defend the 'legality' of these wiretaps. The only people defending the program are Gonzales, Bush, Cheney, etc. within the administration and partisans hacks tweeting out the GOP approved talking points.

    18. Re:IANAL, but by ddimas · · Score: 1
      You said the word, but didn't pay any attention to it.

      "Unreasonable."

      Wiretapping known terrorist sympathizers communicating outside of the country with other known terrorist sympathizers is not an unreasonable search or seizure by any rational definition of the word.


      Are you saying that I am a terrorist sympathizer, or are you saying I am irrational? Because they have conducted a MASSIVE wiretapping excersise that probably includes me and you. I don't know about you but having my communications monitored makes me FURIOUS! If their wiretapping is reasonable in their minds they have called me a TRAITOR. If their wiretapping is unreasonable we are in the grip of criminals. Oh and BTW the fact that they did not even apply for a warrent leads me to believe that this Administration is behaving in a criminal fashion. If you don't believe me ask yourself this, would their actions be legal with snail-mail?

  74. That is insane by brunes69 · · Score: 1
    Look at how they define the class:

    All individuals in the United States that are current residential subscribers or customers of Defendants' telephone services or Internet services, or that were residential telephone or Internet subscribers or customers at any time after September 2001.

    Remember, AT&T == SBC now as well, and they specifically name them in their lawsuit. SBC and AT&T provide long distance and internet access to tens of millions of people. Basically they are asking for dasmages of billions of dollars for every day this happened.

    Such a judgement would basically bankrupt the company and leave the US's telecommunications infrastructure in a complete shambles.

    1. Re:That is insane by jcr · · Score: 1

      Such a judgement would basically bankrupt the company and leave the US's telecommunications infrastructure in a complete shambles.

      No, it would put the company into recievership, and the reciever would most likely continue business as usual. The difference is that the operating profits would go to paying the judgement, not the shareholders.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:That is insane by edgr · · Score: 1

      Well FISA provides for (in civil cases) statutory damages of $1000 per wiretap. I'm not sure how relevant that is, since I think that would be more applicable in a case against the NSA, but at least it might serve as a guidline.

  75. I'm glad the mod's by IAAP · · Score: 1
    got your drift, because it took me a while to get it. Yeah, I'm slow. Well, let me check: I think you mean is that there's too many laws legislating things that probably shouldn't be in the relm law. Correct?

    I kind of wish folks would have more the attitude of "don't fuck with me and I won't fuck with you!". But instead, there's too many folks all out to legislate morality, their belief system, and anything else that they think the Government should pass a law against. Instead of minding their own business, they want to tell others how and who to have sex with, or some such other nonsense.

    Oh, and our tax system! Oooo, there's an abuse of Government there! So much for "due process" - Nope, you owe taxes, you don't pay, we take your propert! Good luck in winning in court.

  76. The scary thing is by bogie · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's finally in the open that Shrub says he has UNLIMITED power to do what he wants and is above all other branches and beyond review. He literally thinks that he can A) do anything he wants including torture anyone for any reason B) he can pass any secret law he wants and C) we have not right to know about A) or B). Oh and D) he feels insulated enough to say "That's right I can do what I want, don't like it? Go fuck yourself."

    20 years ago any of this would have been grounds for immediate removal from office. Now everyone is just content to let that fly. WTF? What bizzaro world am I living in?

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    1. Re:The scary thing is by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the Soviet States of Amerika.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    2. Re:The scary thing is by geekoid · · Score: 1

      one where his friends and party members determine who gets punished.

      No sane man can say that Clintons acctions were worse then Bush.s actions.

      When confronted, most republicans point and clinton and say "well it's not as bad as all the stuff hedid". AS if a prior president misbehavious excuses this adminitration.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:The scary thing is by aredubya74 · · Score: 1

      What bizzaro world am I living in?

      Silly child. Don't you realize we're living in a post-9/11 world, and your viewpoint is that of a pre-9/11 Democrat? You will be assimilated.

      To be fair, I give GWB a bit of credit as to why he's doing what he's doing. It's my considered opinion that he's mortified that 9/11 happened on his watch, and so now he's lashing out to prevent a recurrance, using any means (illegal or not) at his disposal. I don't think he intends to abuse the power, but that's not the question. The reality is that he is abusing a power that he has not been delegated, and he needs to pay the price.

      --

      RW

  77. Your comment is moronic by geekee · · Score: 1

    "What can we, as individuals, really do? We honestly live in what appears to be the most well managed, well thought out, and well prepared oppressive regime in history."

    Move to North Korea and if you ever get back, write me a report comparing the Bush administration with Kim Jong Il's regime.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
    1. Re:Your comment is moronic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Move to North Korea and if you ever get back, write me a report comparing the Bush administration with Kim Jong Il's regime.


      Granted. The GP was over the top and you were responding to that.

      I still just can't help thinking that we set the bar too low for our government.

    2. Re:Your comment is moronic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Move to North Korea and if you ever get back, write me a report comparing the Bush administration with Kim Jong Il's regime.

      So we have to wait until it's that bad before complaining?

    3. Re:Your comment is moronic by VON-MAN · · Score: 1

      Well, if that were the choice, i'd stick with Georgie. He is probably more into freedom than Kim, and better looking to boot!

  78. Isn't that what Americans are already doing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Constitution is now just some shit-covered paper pulp, quietly floating down the Whitehouse sewer pipe, on its way towards the settling ponds...while Americans are saying "It's for our own good."

  79. 300 terabyte ? by MasterCommanderZero · · Score: 2, Informative
    The lawsuit also alleges that AT&T has given the government unfettered access to its over 300 terabyte "Daytona" database of caller information -- one of the largest databases in the world.


    That's 8,796,093,022,208 bit X 300 OR 1,024 Gigabyte X 300 OR if you prefer 1,048,576 Megabyte X 300.

    That's 307,200 Gigabytes(GIGS). I think they either don't know how to optimise their data or they have a hell of it.
    1. Re:300 terabyte ? by kindbud · · Score: 1

      My company owns several dozen terabyte-sized databases, and I don't see them getting any smaller. 300 Tb does not seem out of the question a year or so from now. The storage capacity of NAS servers are approaching the petabyte range. I can see having a petabyte-sized NetApp filer for backup staging in a couple years' time.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    2. Re:300 terabyte ? by MasterCommanderZero · · Score: 1

      Depend in what are you working, if it's a database of known Stars coordinates around the Universe, I can understand easly. But for custommers records, it must takes a hell lot of records. Except if they have photos or some other "non-text" data.

  80. Re:Not illegal. by plantman-the-womb-st · · Score: 2, Informative

    Congress did not declare war, and last I checked, Al Qaeda is not a nation.

    --
    Say bad words about my book, in cold oatmeal, or I shall sue!
  81. Re:New Slogan by bheer · · Score: 1

    I saw a cleverer "Your world. Delivered. To the NSA." somewhere today :-)

  82. I second that! by IAAP · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't which is sadder: his comment or the fact that he was modded to +5.

  83. Re:Not illegal. by geekoid · · Score: 1

    FISA is to be used when there isn't enough time to get a warrent. You still need to have enough evidence at the time you envoke it.

    So you can't go looking for random information, find something incremenating, then say. we found something therefore we should get a warrent under FISA.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  84. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by Lijemo · · Score: 1

    +1 Informative. Why do the posts I really want to mod up always appear the day after my mod points expire?

  85. Re:Not illegal. by cdrguru · · Score: 1

    OK, which is it?

    - do you believe that the Muslim folks do not have the ability and/or willpower to do harm?

    - do you believe there is only a small lunatic fringe group that really is responsible for mayhem and mostly Muslims are decent and peace-loving folk?

    - do you believe we are powerless to stop them?

    (a) Pakistan has nuclear weapons. Maybe not very many, but they have them. Iran clearly wants them. I would say there is certainly the possibility of great destruction if someone got the silly idea that they should actually use these nuclear weapons.

    (b) Check out Gaza in the last week and Iran anytime in the last few months. Plenty of evidence that if there is just a lunatic fringe it either isn't that small or at least includes the folks in power.

    Some people are always going to feel oppressed and underprivileged. Some people have been trying to cure that since the beginning of time. The answer is not either to bring everyone down to their level or to give them handouts to bring them up. Neither works well. It is a pretty common believe that a large percentage of these people do not want to be relieved of their "suffering", because if they did they might take constructive action to combat it. Instead, they wait for someone else to take responsibility and solve all their problems.

    We are likely to always have oppressed and underprivileged people. The problem is when they think their solution is to bring everyone down to their level. Either through taxation or bombs.

  86. Re:If AT&T is innocent, they have nothing to h by Crackez · · Score: 1

    First off, AT&T is not a citizen.

    They should not have the rights of an individual.

    Secondly, and whether you meant it this way or not, you are right because of my previous assertion. AT&T should have to put up with the "Show me your papers." mentality simply because they are not an individual citizen; yet they hold power over citizens, such as the ability to intercept their communications.

  87. Ah, yes. by jd · · Score: 1
    The bill of rights wasn't paid, so the rights were disconnected. There is a $500 reconnection fee.


    $100 per day of the offence... Well, there are those who say AT&T is an offence, but assuming they mean the wiretap saga over four years, that comes to $146,000 per class member. Of course, nobody is going to know how many class members there are, and I think there's a minimum requirement. If the courts "play safe" and assume a low number of class members (say, 10) the total cost to AT&T would probably be covered by them cutting back on office-space heating for a few weeks.


    While the effort is to be applauded, the impact is not going to be terribly significant, even if the EFF win. As such, it won't deter anyone. Hell, given the size of the black budget, the NSA can probably fund the next ten year's worth of spying from the loose change in the glove compartment.


    We need something effective, if we're to see something actually constructive done.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  88. Getting ahead of themselves by geekee · · Score: 1

    "Cory Doctorow over at BoingBoing is reporting that the Electronic Frontier Foundation has just filed a lawsuit against AT&T for helping the National Security Agency execute illegal warrant-less wiretaps against American citizens."

    No one's actually proved in a court of law that the wiretaps are illegal yet.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
    1. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      We don't need to, Bush himself has said they were warrant-less wiretaps!

      The Bill of Rights, 4th Amendment IIRC, protects us from "unwarranted search and seizure"

      So quit defending Shrub.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    2. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by mrbillk · · Score: 1

      This is absolutely silly. In a condition known as War, it is okay to attempt to intercept the enemies messages. I'm trying to picture Patton rolling toward Berlin, trying to get the ACLU to support a court order to tap the German phone lines. It's a little more confusing now, particularly for the I-want-to-pretend-to-be-stupid types, because there are cell phones instead of phone lines, and the enemy doesn't wear a uniform anymore, and the battlefield is the Whole Wide World, but the idea isn't that hard to grasp. Jeesh.

    3. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by praxis · · Score: 1

      I think your analogy is flawed. Patton authorizing a US spy agency to tap the communications of the German military on foreign soil is quit a different animal than George W Bush authorizing a US spy agency with no jurisdiction within our borders tapping the communication of US citizens without getting a warrent. If they suspect someone and have anything more than a vague hunch, any judge will gladly issue a warrent for them to further investigate within hours or minutes. I understand you don't have a problem with the government rattling a sabre and then using that excuse to curtail any and all of our freedoms with no real process in place (which a warrent provides if the government does do something fishy it shouldn't), but then really you have no business saying that those who respect those freedoms for which America is (or was) known as a bastion are absolutely silly.

    4. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by mrbillk · · Score: 1

      The change of technology makes all the difference. No longer is it a radio transmission or an actual wire cable. Surely you understand that! And the practicality of your suggestion is absurd. The phone numbers change because they buy a phone, use it once, then throw it away. And the sheer volume of traffic, coupled with the insufficiency of translators, might mean it is months before a flagged conversation will actually get listened to. Now THAT is a problem worthy of concern. Get used to it. There is no such thing as a private phone conversation anymore, or a private email for that matter. Hasn't been for years. Say hello to reality.

    5. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear mrbillk,

      We will be by tomorrow to install cameras and microphones in your home. As you are well aware, the War on Terror is a new kind of war against a new kind of enemy. The Terrorists do not respect the artificial boundaries of the nation-state, they do not respect freedom, and they could be anyone - including you. As you yourself recognize, we no longer need a warrant. We appreciate your cooperation in this matter.

      Yours Truly,
      NSA

    6. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      In that case, the law needs to be changed, not ignored.

    7. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No choice huh?
      I thought that Reality was what WE make of it...

    8. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      The change of technology makes all the difference

      No, the change of technology is irrelevant.

      The difference between Patton intercepting German comms and Bush wiretapping American phone calls is that the Germans are *not Americans.*

      So your "condition known as war" drek doesn't apply either unless Bush has managed to get Congress to declare war on thier own country.

    9. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by CharlesEGrant · · Score: 2, Insightful
      This is absolutely silly. In a condition known as War, it is okay to attempt to intercept the enemies messages. I'm trying to picture Patton rolling toward Berlin, trying to get the ACLU to support a court order to tap the German phone lines. It's a little more confusing now, particularly for the I-want-to-pretend-to-be-stupid types, because there are cell phones instead of phone lines, and the enemy doesn't wear a uniform anymore, and the battlefield is the Whole Wide World, but the idea isn't that hard to grasp. Jeesh.

      This is very confusing to those of us who lived through the cold war. Back then we were told we had to live with the risk of being incinerated in a nuclear attack in order to preserve our constitutional rights. Now we are being told that we have to live with the curtailment of our constitutional rights in order to save ourselves from being incinerated in a terrorist attack.
    10. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by vidarh · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Seeing as the US is not at war (a declaration of war requires an act of congress), this is moot.

      No matter how manytime Bush calls it a war, it is not. A declaration of war has significant legal ramifications, exactly to give the executive the powers needed to handle the special situations of warfare.

      And the broad powers granted in those circumstances is exactly why the president isn't allowed to declare war by himself.

    11. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by mrbillk · · Score: 1

      But you are assuming the law has been broken.

    12. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by mrbillk · · Score: 1

      I am of the same generation, and I don't remember being told we "had to live with the risk of being incinerated in a nuclear attack in order to preserve our constitutional rights." We could have gleefuly surrendered all our rights, and we would still be living with a nuclear threat. The two ideas were never connected. Again, I am not sure we are being asked to curtail our constitutional rights. If you carry on a felonious conversation about, say, planning to murder your boss, by shouting about it to your conspirator while shopping at Macy's, you could hardly claim that your constitutional rights were being violated if someone overheard you and told the police. Likewise, talking on a cellphone is now, thanks to technology, like shouting in a mall. I know this from painful personal experience, since I had my phone tapped by a jealous husband, and had the transcript of my private conversation read to me. Now that was clearly illegal, but also clearly available to anybody willing to fork over about $125. So this whole theatrical huffed up outrage is sort of besides the point. The train has left the station. And I am somehow, irrationally, I guess, comforted by the idea that my government is trying to stop terrorists from killing me.

    13. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      In a condition known as War,

      What "war"? Are we in the Cold War, the War on Drugs, the War on Terrorism, or any other war they fabricate this week? Tell me, when is the last time the US was at War? I'll give you a hint, War requires an act of Congress. Just because the President says we are at war, and Congress allows him military leeway does not mean War was declared, and as such the powers available under War are not available. And no, the war de jour is not War, no matter how many times the administration claims it is. As soon as an actual War is declared against an actual enemy, then I'll be willing to accept we are in a condition known as War. Until then, we are in a condition known as Propaganda.

    14. Re:Getting ahead of themselves by mrbillk · · Score: 1

      There are many layers to this, which I don't have time to elaborate on. Apparently the Congress thinks it voted for something significant on this topic. But more to the point, the idea of "declaring war" needs to be updated, since the traditional format requires that there be another country to declare war against. How do you declare war, in the formal sense of the term ( which is clearly what you are demanding), against an enemy that is nothing but an informally organized, multi-country conspiracy? That is, nevertheless, able to cause significant fatalities and economic damage? And with nuclear weapons on the loose.....? Come on people, its time to THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX!

  89. Resistance is Futile. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All citizens will be assimilated into mindless drones,
    who will service the Republican Party.

    At least Clinton was only 'serviced' by Monica!

    Won't you feel safer when you are constantly monitored by government agencies?

    Remember when we were taught that this exact type of government spying on it's own people is what made the Commies Evil?

  90. Are you serious? by hotsauce · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Talk a deep breath, and think before you post.

    There were no warrants. That's the whole problem.

    AT&T is expected to ask to see the court-issued warrant. Just like you would, when the police come to your door and ask to turn your house upside-down to protect everyone from terrorists.

  91. Re:this is a mistake by EFF by AuMatar · · Score: 1

    Thats ok- I just doubled my usual yearly donation due to this lawsuit. I'm sure it'll cover your loss.

    --
    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
  92. What can we, as individuals, really do? by winkydink · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Vote

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    1. Re:What can we, as individuals, really do? by SilverspurG · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Imagine a cancerous lump the size of your fist in your stomach. A single vote is like taking a single cell out of that lump. We've long past the point where the votes of the people mean anything. There are too many cancerous cells constantly respawning to replenish the tumor. Even movements as large as the Greens, the Libertarians, or a well funded independent such as Perot result in no real change.

      I can only assume that your attitude comes from a position of comfort and probably privelege. The nobility has never had a problem with the royalty no matter how many commoners must be imprisoned or outright killed to preserve their authority. In today's society we don't even need to be imprisoned to be rendered completely ineffective. At the wage level of the average American household the people work too much, pay too much in taxes, have too much responsibility to family and friends, to have any time left for political vigilance.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    2. Re:What can we, as individuals, really do? by (1+-sqrt(5))*(2**-1) · · Score: 2, Funny
      Imagine a cancerous lump the size of your fist in your stomach. A single vote is like taking a single cell out of that lump.
      I always thought that was one of the capital advantages of monarchy: there's someone, namely, to defenestrate; and therewith an end.
    3. Re:What can we, as individuals, really do? by inode_buddha · · Score: 1
      "At the wage level of the average American household the people work too much, pay too much in taxes, have too much responsibility to family and friends, to have any time left for political vigilance."
      No, that is the reason why they need to be politically vigilant, IMHO.

      --
      C|N>K
    4. Re:What can we, as individuals, really do? by orgelspieler · · Score: 1
      I think that's the point, though. If we're too busy working the night shift on the first Teusday after the first Monday this year, we won't be able to (or won't care to) vote out the opressors.

      I don't buy it, though. I think the real reason is just that the voting public simply doesn't realise that their rights are being taken. Or worse they realise it, but they are making a gamble that if they give up certain rights, their favorite multistory building won't go up in smoke some day.

    5. Re:What can we, as individuals, really do? by urbanRealist · · Score: 1

      I'm really tired of people pretending like Americans live in a democracy without qualification. There's a company called Diebold that ensures that the votes that matter don't count.

      --
      I've seen a lot of things, but I've never been a witness.
    6. Re:What can we, as individuals, really do? by winkydink · · Score: 1

      I'm the son of a blue-collar worker and a stay-at-home mom (who raised 4 more kids along side me). About 25% of the families in the neighborhood of my youth were on welfare.

      I've caught a few breaks along the way, but I am where I am today as the result of perserverance and hard work. So don't give me this shit about privelege and comfort or paying not paying my fair share of taxes.

      I've probably heard every excuse there is to not vote. They all boil down to either apathy or laziness.

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

  93. Re:"if you're doing nothing wrong, then you have n by wrf3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    'If you're doing nothing wrong then you have nothing to worry about" is not completely correct. I'm doing nothing wrong, but I nevertheless worry about the government doing something wrong. Governments exists to increase their power -- at the expense of freedom. Therefore, government should be limited wherever and whenever possible.

  94. What's next, Robocop ? by MasterCommanderZero · · Score: 1

    I think it's the only missing piece of a police state.

  95. I dont think it's legal. by Bruha · · Score: 1, Troll

    Americans have a right to search with warrant.. This should apply to your communications. Now if John Doe is calling Osama Bin Laden then there is ample reason to tap that communication.

    The problem is that the government is searching call record databases to see if numbers are calling their list of known bad numbers. Which means they're looking at everyone's calls and not just a select few. Once they find numbers that are calling those known bad numbers they then start the wiretapping.

    Now many people may know care that the government is looking through their call records seeing if you're calling the middle east or other places. If you dont make overseas calls then you're probably not being looked at, but it's possible they're still screening stateside calls to see if you're calling mosques or other suspected terrorist locations in the US.

    1. Re:I dont think it's legal. by MasterCommanderZero · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's what they are doing. They are probaly doing keywords search on communications. It's more practice... paterns recognizing voice, words... you know that kind of stuff. It's quite easy and not hard to do, you just need a lot of computing power.

      Now you can think I'm pulling this out of my ass, but read this http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Investigation/story?id=1 491889

    2. Re:I dont think it's legal. by SETIGuy · · Score: 1
      The problem is that the government is searching call record databases to see if numbers are calling their list of known bad numbers. Which means they're looking at everyone's calls and not just a select few. Once they find numbers that are calling those known bad numbers they then start the wiretapping.

      And then they start wiretapping the lines that called the number that called the number on the "bad list".

      And then they start wiretapping the lines that called the numbers that called the number that called the number on the "bad list".

      How many iterations do you need before you're on the wiretap list?

      Did you know that all the 9/11 hijackers had called a "Domino's Pizza" in the 6 months prior to 9/11. That's probably where they get their orders. After all, they all mentioned the word "order" in their calls. I think we should tap the lines of anyone who has ever called Domino's.

    3. Re:I dont think it's legal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "How many iterations do you need before you're on the wiretap list?"

      After five to seven iterations every American is linked to terrorism, and after eight to nine every human. When they say "linked", it's code for the process you described. 99% of people don't realize this.

  96. Re:If AT&T is innocent, they have nothing to h by sholden · · Score: 3, Funny

    whoosh. You'll need to jump higher to catch those over your head shots.

  97. Re:Not illegal. by delong · · Score: 1

    Congress did not declare war, and last I checked, Al Qaeda is not a nation

    That's what the Authorization of the Use of Force pursuant to the War Powers Act is, exactly. And Congress authorized the use of all necessary force against all nations, organizations, or persons that perpetrated 9/11, and to further protect the national security of the US.

    This is plain-language stuff. If you don't get it, you don't want to.

  98. Re:Not illegal. by delong · · Score: 1

    It happened in the USA right? Do you call that "foreign spying"...or have you quaffed so much coolaid you call it 'wiretaps for freedom and liberty'

    No, actually it happened by data mining the stream of foreign calls coming into the United States, from known terrorists. That's surveillance of foreign powers or the agents of foreign powers. The targets are foreign powers, and those foreign powers are communicating to within the US, ie agents of foreign powers.

  99. Re:Not illegal. by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, I sort of agree.

    I have no problem with the government surveilling our active stated enemies. I do have a problem with the President doing so.

    The President is not the government.

    This is one of my biggest concerns. As we've seen, the President has determined that various American organizations--organizations which, coincidentally, don't agree with his policies--are worthy of spying. No one had to go in front of a judge and say, "Hey, we want to spy on these guys because they're against the war in Iraq."

    I want the rest of the government involved in these decisions. The information as to who is being spied upon should be available to all members of the House Special Intelligence Committee and the Senate's Committee on Intelligence. There should be judges involved in looking at the government's reasons for assuming that a group should be spied upon before allowing them to do so.

    Again, the concept that the President alone shall decide who qualifies as an "enemy of the state" is a frightening thing.

  100. something must be done... by posterlogo · · Score: 1

    ...but i'm not sure what that could be. the nsa obviously asked for the records in secret and made at&t keep it a secret under threat. i'm not sure what at&t could have done? gone public and face criminal charges? i don't think anyone should be snooping warrantlessly on citizens, but what should at&t have done? if someone is holding a gun to MY head and asking for some data from my computer, i'm going to say take it and don't hurt me. at&t had no recourse precisely because it was a state secrets issue. google is defending their search data against government intrusion because it's all out in the open. if the government has already taken from google in secret, we just wouldn't know about it. when we find out, should we then sue google? i think the legal battle should focus on the government's illegal actions.

  101. 5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by mcguyver · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Also important. How is it that 20,000 requests can be made through FISA and only 5 were rejected? It would seem that any request made through FISA would be approved - if that's the case then why have FISA and how does this differ from warrant-less wiretaps?

    1. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by topham · · Score: 1


      It -should- mean that they are conservative enough in their submissions that they obviously meet the criteria.

      Of course, I doubt that's the case.

    2. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that the warrants for the warrant-ed wiretaps go on file, so maybe in 20 years-- or 2, if a court needs to know for some reason-- we get to go through and find out who those 20,000 people wiretapped actually were.

    3. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by kansas1051 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For a FISA "warrant" you need to identify an entity and establish a "reasonable" nexus between the entity and foreign intelligence. Basically, as long as you can identify an entity and point to some foreign connection, FISA will grant a warrant. It is speculated that the current administration elected to forgo the FISA court because the NSA was/is not listening to any specific entity which could be identified as required by FISA. For example, the NSA is listening to all of us at the same time, so there isnt anyone to identify in a FISA warrant request.

    4. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by monkaduck · · Score: 1

      But surely there must be some sort of rule to cover a non-specific entity to tap, right? Or else there's a hole in the coverage where, if you're not targeting a direct one-on-one link, you can't get a warrant. I think someone on here said it best where they bypassed to avoid accountability. IANAL

      --
      Napalm is nature's toothpaste
    5. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by weisen · · Score: 1

      This was addressed in an article that I read recently. The indication was that the DoJ is conservative with their requests because of the FISA court. i.e., they don't ask for things that they're not going to receive. So there's some thought behind it. You can't take it as random chance and say that 5/20,000 is the fraction of all possible requests that would be denied. It's only the fraction denied of those that were actually made.

    6. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ohh ok I get it now. The EFF wants to fuck the DoD by getting proof of domestic wiretaps through discovery in the AT&T trial. Smart if it works. It's not about getting AT&T its about getting the DoD through a backdoor. If the DoD was taken to trial they could just say the taps are National Securty and put a big Top Secret stamp on everything. Time to donate to the EFF.

    7. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by Myopic · · Score: 1

      when authorities go to a court to ask for a warrant, they have to bring along a little bit of evidence, so if there is no evidence, they won't even bother. the police (or FBI/NSA) know the standard of evidence they have to meet, so if they can't satisfy that standard, they will not waste their time.

      so it is still useful to make them jump thru a procedural hoop even if not a lot of warrant applications are actually rejected, because the hoop itself is part of what protects our liberty.

    8. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Because FISA actually rejected some requests. Without FISA, nothing gets rejected.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    9. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but I do believe that the DoD could file a "friend of the court" thingy, mention National Security nad put a big Top Secret stamp on everything anyway. The government's not going to let you get away with exposing ostensible national secrets just because you file a civil suit.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    10. Re:5 rejected out of 20,000 requests by nocomment · · Score: 1

      Except FISA doesn't really work very well. It takes weeks for the courts to respond and often by the time it responded with an "OK" it was too late, or the target had moved or was using something different and the process would have to be repeated.

      http://www.9-11commission.gov/report/index.htm

      --
      /* oops I accidentally made a comment, sorry */
      /* http://allyourbasearebelongto.us */
  102. Unfortunately partially correct by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

    The parent is mostly correct, but simply fails to note the main strength of our current "oppressive regime": It's extremely easy to live in. Whoever made up this system realized that the only people they actually need to oppress are those who want a new or different society. Everyone else can be left to their own devices.

  103. Re:If AT&T is innocent, they have nothing to h by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't be too hard on the poor guy. The GGP did leave out the ... tags, after all. It's not the reader's fault that the comment was encoded in an obsolete, ambiguous data format.

  104. would this be grounds for terminating a contract? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So if one has an existing contract with such a firm and they pull something like this, can one expect to use this as grounds for terminating a service contract without penalty for early termination?

    How does one as an individual act in the face of this?

    Change your service provider to one that has not rolled over in such a fashion.

  105. at&t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If what is reported is fact that conversations between would-be terrorists are being listened to, by all means, it should be done.

    The U.S. doesn't need the islamofacist camel humpers trying to win a spot in allah-land by killing as many kafir infidels as possible. Who does? If the walking death sticks who hijacked the planes and flew them into the WTC, Pentagon and Penn. field had been monitored more closely, they'd been stopped. That's just common sense.

    If big brother is watching, I'd be mad as hell. But there is no big brother watching. It's a war. The targets are specific. It's the ignorant religious zealots who we should fear. Not the government trying to stop their insanity.

    1. Re:at&t by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1
      If the walking death sticks who hijacked the planes and flew them into the WTC, Pentagon and Penn. field had been monitored more closely, they'd been stopped. That's just common sense.
      I can't imagine how more monitoring would help when a memo that says 'bin Laden determined to strike!' gets ignored. The government bureaucracy had the information to stop 9/11, but the intel services failed to share the information effectively. Like a typical bureaucracy it took a catastrophe to get them off thier asses and en route toward fixing the problem, much like it took the equally avoidable Titanic disaster to get maritime safety rules up-to-date.

      This is a *bureaucracy*. They will do anything, including alter the orbits of entire planets and utilize higher dimensions, to keep doing things exactly as their narrow interpertation of 'the rules' specifies. They will fight any change in 'the rules' (as well as change in general) like Spartan warriors on crack, until a massive loss of life forces a change:
      • Titanic :: Maritime safety
      • Triangle Shirtwaist fire :: New York fire code
      • Flooding of New Orleans :: Levee upgrades
      • 9/11 :: Sharing intel between agencies?
    2. Re:at&t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'bin Laden determined to strike!'

      That memo, unfortunatley, was like someone writing 'the sun's gonna rise, and it's gonna rise tomorrow.' It wasn't ignored. It's relavence, at the time, was zero since the information it contained was well-known. In hindsight it's relavence is simply amplified. Hindsight aids but does not equal wisdom.

      What is wise, IMO, is monitoring WHO is talking to WHOM and WHAT is being said. I do not get worked up fearing that the government is at all concerned or interested in what I am saying or what I might say over the phone. If I am calling relatives in Iran, I wouldn't fear that either. No relative of mine is a blood-thirsty coward.

  106. Accountability is a beautiful thing by c0d3h4x0r · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is pure genius because it utilizes such a simple, basic concept: accountability.

    Every group or individual has an ethical responsibility to do no harm to others. If someone asks you to do something harmful to someone, and you choose to carry out their request, you are responsible, period.

    Bravo to the EFF for this creative, yet totally legitimate, approach.

    As a Microsoft employee, I already donate to the EFF year-round through the company's charitable giving campaign (and the part that really tickles me is that Microsoft matches whatever amount an employee contributes to any organization, so I'm getting Microsoft to help fund the EFF), but I may very well increase my donation amount during the next cycle. The EFF keeps fighting for the right positions when no one else is there to stand up and fight for them.

    --
    Moderator hint: a comment is neither "Flamebait" nor "Troll" if it is true.
    1. Re:Accountability is a beautiful thing by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      This is pure genius because it utilizes such a simple, basic concept: accountability.

      A pity that accountability is an anethema to our current capitalist systems. That's why they call it a "limited" company. The shareholders can just walk away after the companies puts babies in cat food for pasta's sake!. Total immunity.

      Expect laws against these suits to be passed forthwith.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    2. Re:Accountability is a beautiful thing by c0d3h4x0r · · Score: 1

      Well, a lot of people falsely assume that if you like or work for Microsoft, then you must be against freedom or ethical corporate behavior. I assume your response is rooted in that false assumption.

      Yes, I'm a Microsoft employee. No, that doesn't mean I think Microsoft does everything right, and no, that doesn't mean I've compromised my ethics.

      Microsoft is a huge company with a lot of people and its hands in a variety of areas, and so of course sometimes one individual or one small group will make a bad choice or enact a bad policy. When that happens, it looks from the outside like all of "Microsoft" (the entire company) is to blame, but that's just not fair. Most of the people who work here, and the general company policies, are ethical and very concerned with pleasing end-users, but of course that's not what makes sensationalist headlines. People on the outside tend not to realize that "Microsoft" is more like a loose collection of independent product/technology/business teams than a monolithic company. The culture on one team can be very different from the culture on another team. Just because someone over on team X does something questionable, that doesn't mean everyone on team X agrees with the decision or was even aware of it, and it certainly doesn't mean that people over on team Y had anything to do with it.

      If, as part of my job, I was ever asked to do something I fundamentally disagreed with on ethical grounds, I would fight it through every avenue at my disposal, not just to not be party to unethical behavior, but to try to stick up for customers and end-users. If all avenues were exhausted (all the way up the path of management escalation to SteveB or BillG, if necessary) and they were going ahead with their bad decision anyway, I'd just pick up and go work on a different team. I'm a very principled person who believes in not doing bad things, and Microsoft generally encourages its employees to be critical thinkers and raise their concerns appropriately.

      As for working here rather than working for some FOSS project, that doesn't mean I'm against FOSS either. FOSS and commercial software are both free to coexist, and it's up to users to choose what they want to use. I think FOSS has one set of pros/cons, and commercial software has another set of pros/cons. Neither is good, and neither is evil, they're just different with different motivations behind them, and it's up to market forces to decide what gets used most.

      Microsoft is a good company to work for. And I'm not talking about pay, benefits, or other rewards, although those are solid. It's a great place to work because of the people. Most people here are smart, friendly, ethical people who are all enthusiastic about creating the best stuff they can for the benefit of customers and users. Plus, Microsoft donates to the EFF on my behalf, which in my opinion is a very ethical cause to support, so simply by working here I'm helping to combat technology-related badness.

      --
      Moderator hint: a comment is neither "Flamebait" nor "Troll" if it is true.
  107. Not two reasons, three by MasterCommanderZero · · Score: 1

    It's the only way to conduct keywords search on communications.

  108. Re:The Alternative Makes No Press by mpapet · · Score: 1

    Sure taking on AT&T looks great and gets you a lot of press

    That's the most positive outcome they can have in almost any situation. The minimum purpose then, it to raise awareness of the issue and promote the EFF.

    Go after the bottom of the food chain
    How would they discover the illicit activity at the smaller telcos? Either way they get laughed at by the big telcos.
    They want to fight the big guys, so let them! If anything it teaches them what it takes to win. This is a classic problem in sports. If an athlete does not play outside their comfort/skill set, they stand much less of a chance at getting better.
    I think it's very safe to say the right hand doesn't know what the left is doing at ATT. Even in the legal department.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  109. Suing the wrong people by nurb432 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I dont think AT&T had a choice. if the feds come to your door you have to let them in. They are a regulated industry remember. The rules are different.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Suing the wrong people by Captain_Chaos · · Score: 1

      if the feds come to your door you have to let them in.

      Even though I don't live in the US, I'm pretty damn sure that if the feds come to your door you do not have to let them in, unless they have a valid warrant.

  110. Sue Peter to get to Paul by ackthpt · · Score: 1
    It's not at all clear that AT&T has done something illegal, if for no other reason than if they had, this lawsuit would not be necessary. The whole point of a lawsuit, after all, is to try to prove that somebody did something illegal. In fact, if the EFF loses this case, it will establish a precedent that what AT&T did is not illegal.

    Sometimes you pursue one party to lay the groundwork to get to another party, in this case the NSA. Exposing AT&T's activities exposes the NSA's.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  111. follow the cookie trail by SuperBanana · · Score: 1
    Nice to see someone finally starting some backlash for the tapping, even if it's not against the government.

    Do you seriously think the EFF doesn't have bigger fish to fry?

    This is like the equivalent of going after Al Capone for tax evasion. Tax evasion gets you into his books. His books get you into his racketeering. His racketeering gets you into murders. Etc.

    Going after AT&T for illegal wiretaps gets records of said wiretaps coming from the NSA, FBI, and (one hopes not, but who knows) the CIA. That gets you in the door to challenges against those agencies.

  112. I will never give money to the EFF again. by Cryptnotic · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    This issue is ridiculous. The government has always had the authority to monitor international communications without a warrant. Bush didn't make up that power. It just happened that in the past those communications were generally broadcast radio transmisisons and not internet or telephone communications. The power hasn't changed, only the technology. Also, the communications in question are phone calls originating overseas by known Al Qaeda members. If the NSA wasn't monitoring those conversations, it would be gross negligance and they would be ignoring their duty to the country. I would probably agree that there should be oversight on this program to make sure there are no abuses, however I would strongly disagree that it should be stopped.

    EFF is on the wrong side here. It is like they are turning into the ACLU.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
    1. Re:I will never give money to the EFF again. by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "The government has always had the authority to monitor international communications without a warrant. "

      no, it did not.

      "Bush didn't make up that power. "
      no, but he has expanded it to include far more things then ever before.

      That said, the NSA can not go snooping there citizens files, and then find something and say "Well it's ok becasue we happened to find something."

      There is the issue of the government demanding records without a warrent or court order. Now if they were on a time criticle case, they cuold ahve gotten a FISA warrent after the fact, assuming the had proper evidence before the fact.

      But I ma sure people like you wouldn't mind if the goverbnment stormed your businees, riffled all you records, gather person infomration on all your phone records becasue they say they are hunting Al Queda. No proof, evidence, wittness, needed.

      ". I would probably agree that there should be oversight on this program to make sure there are no abuses, however I would strongly disagree that it should be stopped."
      there is an oversite, but they completly disregarded it.

      "EFF is on the wrong side here. It is like they are turning into the ACLU."

      oh, I see, you only think people should have rights that you agree with, gotcha.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:I will never give money to the EFF again. by buss_error · · Score: 4, Insightful
      This issue is ridiculous.

      Yes I can agree with that. Imagine the nerve of someone sworn to uphold the constitution thinking he can simply order a government agency to violate constitutional rights without consequence.

      The government has always had the authority to monitor international communications without a warrant.

      I will accept that statement only after you provide a citation to a legal theroy that propounds it. In contravention of your point, I cite the FISA of 1978, the FISA court which has, in it's ENTIRE HISTORY, declined only four requests for a wiretap.

      Bush didn't make up that power.

      I suggest he did, out of whole cloth. The solicitor general (Alberto Gonzales) has been quoted on CNN saying he and President Bush did not seek specific authorization from Congress on exactly this point because they didn't think they'd get it. So he made a wild power grab and got away with it for many years. Now the lights are starting to come on, and they are scurring away from it like cockroaches in the kitchen.

      Just let me point out, if you substitute "Clinton" for "Bush", I suggest you'd be barking at the moon for not just removal from office, but criminal prosecution as well. I tell you true, if Clinton tried pulling something like this, I'd have screamed for his head.

      It just happened that in the past those communications were generally broadcast radio transmisisons and not internet or telephone communications.

      Ahhh. Therein lies the rub. It was still illegal even then. Look up the law on interception of communications absent a warrent. Now, "they" (in this case, the NSA, DIA, MI6, and ANZAC) have to touch what they want to snoop on. In the past, they could just stick a wire in the air and break the law. Now they have to have cooperation. Regardless, it was still illegal since 1932.

      The power hasn't changed, only the technology.

      I argue that they never had the legal power. Tech has changed, that is self evident. That they have the absolute power is obvious. They can kill you if you refuse to cooperate. And likely bill your family for the bullet too. Doesn't make it legal.

      Also, the communications in question are phone calls originating overseas

      Incorrect. NSA is tapped directly into the Datona database. This includes ALL calls made through the PTSN, internal to the US, external, either initiated from inside or outside the US, and most Internet connections. They have SUGGESTED they were interested in only overseas initiated calls, however, I question if that is the case, and if it is, if they have the legal authority to do so even then.

      by known Al Qaeda members.

      Again, this is incorrect information. These are not "known" members of a terrorist orgisanation. These are SUSPECTS, some of them citizens (although I strongly believe that we should NOT be making distinctions about what civil liberties (aside from voting and holding office) should be granted to a non-citizen verus a citizen while within US jurisdiction. We then in turn expose ourselves to having to prove at every street corner that we are citizens. Think a Nazi SS Trooper shouting "PAPERS!" at every bus stop, airport (oops, too late!), train station, and highway blockade. And God help you if you don't have official permission to go to another city.)

      If the NSA wasn't monitoring those conversations, it would be gross negligance and they would be ignoring their duty to the country.

      Part of their duty is to make sure they aren't breaking the law themselves while trying to get the "bad guys". That's how you tell a good guy from a bad guy. The good guys always obey the law. The bad guys don't. It is an important distinction to remember. Or else you'll just have to accept someone is a "good guy" because they tell you to. And if they don't, they take you to jail.

      I would probably agree that there should be oversight on this program to make sure there are no abuses,

      T

      --
      Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    3. Re:I will never give money to the EFF again. by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1
      (although I strongly believe that we should NOT be making distinctions about what civil liberties (aside from voting and holding office) should be granted to a non-citizen verus a citizen while within US jurisdiction. We then in turn expose ourselves to having to prove at every street corner that we are citizens. Think a Nazi SS Trooper shouting "PAPERS!" at every bus stop, airport (oops, too late!), train station, and highway blockade. And God help you if you don't have official permission to go to another city.)

      I do not think I have seen this very basic point ever been made around here.

      The consensus seems to be that non-US-citizens do not enjoy (most of?) the rights US citizens do. This appears to be supported at every level. I find it extraordinarily regressive. The idea that citizenship is required to be granted right to privacy, for example, seems to me something not compatible with a elementary understanding of basic human rights.

  113. Agreed, but by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    there is more to participation than just voting in the right people.

    If you vote in very intelligent, wise people, and the only people that are talking to them are corporate lobbyists, then what do you expect to get out? Laws favoring corporations.

    Participation starts with letters to congressmen and ends with a vote. Everything else needs to be done to support the letters :-)

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Agreed, but by fashionfirst · · Score: 0

      It is extremely simple to solve this problem. Make it illegal for corporations to even speak to our representatives in any shape form or fashion! Make it's a federal offence for a corporation to give money to our representatives! Make one fund and split it all evenly among all those running for office. Take back our country from the big corporation, crooked politicians and those that seek only to profit from the American people by extorting us with our own representatives in our government. Fund this all how? Publicly with the billions of dollars we will gain when the mega corps can no long bend us over and make us take it. Shame on you Exxon and others for your record profits when gas was at its highest in history and the nation was hurting. I applaud EFF for atleast trying to slap the mega corps and drawing attention to this ever growing problem.

      --
      Karma: a way in which to silence those with an unpopular viewpoint regardless if the view is correct and just.
    2. Re:Agreed, but by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      To every problem there is a simple solution that won't work.

      In Ohio, one of the real factors that lead to the Bush victory was campaign finance reform and the changing way that corporations were using their voice to affect election results. Since buying ads on TV was now illegal, they simply told their workers that a Kerry victory would endanger their jobs. Right or not, it had an effect.

      A second important point to keep in mind is that corporations, for better or worse, are important factors in the economy and their representatives may have important insight into certain areas of regulation.

      A final point is where one draws the line. Is one to say that Bill Gates is not allowed to write his congressman (Jay Inslee, iirc) because he is an executive at Microsoft? Are we to strip individuals of political rights as soon as they become involved in the senior management at corporations? And if not, where do you draw the line between contact as a corporation and contact as an individual?

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  114. Re:Not illegal. by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 1

    The wiretaps were "authorized" by the Office of Legal Council, an arm of the Justice Department full of appointed judges, appointed by. . .Guess who?

    Santa?

  115. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by thule · · Score: 2, Informative

    What do you call a person within the boarders of a country, not a citizen of the country, during the time of war, without any sort of uniform, receiving communication from the enemy? This is the type of person that 150 years ago would not be arrested by the police, and not tried by citizen courts. If you look at things this way, it is very easy to see why the administration went to Congress and informed them on what they were doing, and nothing was done. It would also explain why the administration believes they are doing the right thing, within the law.

  116. Re: ATT Cries Like a Baby... by mpapet · · Score: 1

    and the courts know better anyway.

    Obviously, the judgement even if they win would not be such that it puts them out of business. There are so many examples of this in recent history I'm surprised to see a comment like this.

    -"asbestos settlement" on google will get you plenty of examples.
    -"Exxon Valdez" is another one.
    -"tobacco settlement"

    Even if they got a big number, they tie the judgement up in court for decades, negotiate down the settlement or any one of a million other options.

    Lastly, the "big number" that Media corps publish basically qwell citizen revolt. It looks like something is being done. Actual penalties are big fractions of the published numbers (1/2-1/10) minus other accounting maneuvers.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  117. Cutting Past Uncomfortable Logic by hotsauce · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The whole point of a lawsuit, after all, is to try to prove that somebody did something illegal. In fact, if the EFF loses this case, it will establish a precedent that what AT&T did is not illegal.

    Go on, go on... I know you can do it! The next logical step is... If the EFF /wins/ this case, it establishes what AT&T did was illegal! And possibly even the order itself! Maybe that's what the EFF is trying to do! Now you can argue that they do not have the track record to do this, but I can't see how you miss the whole point of their lawsuit... and get modded +5.

    There's the question of the wisdom of arbitrarily curbing the Executive's constituional authority, which would make it more difficult for the Executive to fulfill its constitutional responsiblities.

    Nothing arbitrary about it. Either the Executive has that power, or not. The courts tend to decide such matters. You seem to be trying to create grey areas where there are none. And dropping the word "constitutional" repeatedly in your statement seemingly supporting the Executive tapping whoever they want does not show it has that power. What next, the Executive can do whatever they want, no balances, no protections, no laws?

    I hope that the EFF does lose this suit, thus bolstering Bush's case for Executive freedom of action in military matters during wartime

    Oh good god, that /is/ what you're "arguing"! Sad when statements like these come from Americans, and then we tell the rest of the world that we're going to teach them how to run Republics, and what freedom is about. So the prez can tap whoever he likes without court approval? How about jail whoever he likes (if he calls them terrorists, of course)? Indefinitely? And as this DOJ has argued, these terrorists will just use lawyers to pass messages to other terrorists, so we deny them lawyers, too? In fact, we can't let anyone know we have them, so we take them in secret, and don't even admit we have them (of course, real terrorists would notice that their operatives have been "disappeared"... but don't confuse me with logic!). You know what would help the war? Internment camps! Hey, worked for us before! Let's jail everyone of the ethnicity we declare war on this week (of course, war wasn't really declared... but don't stop me, I'm on a roll!), and their lawyers, and anyone else who supports these terrorists... like those kids with their anti-war signs, and their anti-Bush signs. Hell, let's jail anyone with anti-Bush signs! You either with us or against us, ya know! Why does this all sound so familiar, though? I feel like I've read this all before... Oh, right, those history books, in the chapter usually titled "The Start of Great Police States".

    You raid a cell in Pakistan, find a U.S. phone number on a computer there. In criminal justice terms, that's not probable cause to tap a phone line.

    Don't be silly. Of course it is. Especially with our secret, rubber-stamp FISA court. The least we can do is keep track of what the Executive is doing. What next? A secret Executive? Nevermind, don't reply, it will just depress me.

  118. Re:this is a mistake by EFF by Azreal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Like most people, there are issues which I take the conservative viewpoint and others where I take a more liberal view. In full disclosure, I consider myself Democrat only because I tend to lean very slightly more towards their views on certain issues than the Historical Republican Party/Grand Old Party and lean very far away from the views of "neo-conservatives"/"Grand New Party". The historical Republican Party was for individual rights and the corresponding limited government, entrepreneurship, and fiscal conservatism and to a point I would concur with these views. The neo-republican party seems to be a "do as I say not as I do" party that preaches the GOP but seems to act with an agenda of more government, fiscal irresponsibilty and caters to primarily "big business" like Walmart while mom and pop stores are pushed to the side. To get to the point, as a citizen who has a vested interest in individual rights, the individual rights to privacy and against unreasonable searches and seizures is clearly not a "party politics" issue and frankly is an offense to what the original GOP stood for.

    --
    $sys$droids
  119. Failure of the media by Brushen · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The media does not believe in providing extensive coverage of information now. I particularly mean the visual media, but other types are guilty as well. First, the visual media does not have time for broadcasting 10 page news reports. Forget that they are a 24/7 news network. They want to repeat the same headlines over and over, beginning the cycle every thirty minutes, for viewers just tuning into the network. This leads to thirty second news briefs, with a tiny fast-moving screencrawler at the bottom for those that, for whatever insane reason, are looking for more of today's less privilaged headlines.

    Explaining the reasoning behind Bush's position, that he and Alberto Gonzales think Congress allowed it when they passed the authorization of military force in 2001, yet that Alberto Gonzales refused to ask for legislation to amend the authorization because he knew that the legislation would not pass. Explaining that this interpretation would depend entirely on whether or not an authorization to use military force is included in the definition of a declaration of war will not make the news. Talking about Supreme Court precedents related to this, like East District of Michigan v. United States, I think it was called, would not make the news either.

    The most I have ever seen any of this in the media was in a written two page report carried by the written MSNBC, with only two paragraphs of Bush's lawyers explaining about the authorization and declaration of war part, which to my knowledge did not air on the television network.

    With CNN's very frequent recycling of headlines, and the bottom crawler, it is very obvious they want to be as accessable to people just tuning in as possible, trying to talk about as many current issues as possible, meaning to me that CNN is just trying to be a poorly performed version of CNN.com. The Internet, or the newspaper, if you can bother figuring out how to flip through the pages now days, will always trump TV for that reason. CNN borrows nearly all congressional footage from C-SPAN with permission, and cuts to them frequently, but it seems very, very wrong to me to advertise to watch the Alito hearings on CNN where there is a version not punctuated by advertisements and Woolf Blitzer saying, "This is the Situation Room. Stay tuned. You're watching CNN."

    In year 1984, you listen to your phone. In year 2004, your phone listens to you.

  120. Re:Not illegal. by kfg · · Score: 1

    He knows if you've been bad or good.

    KFG

  121. Ahh yes... by gamenfo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Okay, so the EFF sues AT&T for letting them do the wiretapping. Lets just say they win. Do you really think they will stop tapping the phones? Instead the NSA has to move the wiretapping from easy (ie, AT&T handing them the keys) to a bit more covert (ie, splicing in somewhere remote) which will cost tons more to the taxpayer than the original plan.
     
    I am sure they already do plenty of covert splices as it is now. When I was working for a major internet backbone provider a few years back, I always found it interesting that in the office right below where we did all the long haul network designs was an office for the Dept. of Defense. Anytime we were walking through the halls and one of their employees were punching in the code to gain entry, they'd "accidentally" punch in the wrong code. I did some research, but couldnt find any info on what was done in that office... So, by no real logic, that means it had to be the NSA and they were intercepting all of our network designs so that they could find a repeater in the middle of no where to attach their monitoring equipment. Its only logical...

    1. Re:Ahh yes... by daigu · · Score: 1

      Holy leap to conclusions Batman. Another plausible guess: maybe they were a secret weapons lab trying to recreate the Joker? =)

    2. Re:Ahh yes... by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      Here is the thing: A real terrorist/covert agent isn't going to be sending unencrypted information. Mr. Terrorist and his friends can create pairs of one time pads for each of their contacts that they need to communicate with. They can then burn those one-time-pads to CD's and make them look like audio CDs... they can store them as images on their digital camera... They can drop them onto their iPods... And bring those on person into the U.S. without arrousing suspision. Then, they can simply send unbreakable encrypted messages to each other via email, usenet, web sites, etc.

      So you see, the NSA spying it has NOTHING to do with catching specific terrorists, or counter intelligence, or whatever. It has everything to do with collecting massive amounts of information from the public, then aggregating it to create a profile of each person based on there communications. While this could be very useful in the Soviet Police State way (tracking dissadents, classifying people based on political beliefs, etc.), it serves no legit purpose in a free society. And so if the government has to do splices instead of grabbing vast amounts of data wholesale, then that is a victory... it DOES at least make it more difficult for the government from doing the bad things that we don't want it doing.

    3. Re:Ahh yes... by Myopic · · Score: 1

      i'm interested in hearing more about that, if you care to elaborate

  122. Re:Not illegal. by hunterx11 · · Score: 1
    Your line of reasoning seems to rest on the assumption that American citizens are more threatened by terrorists than by the government.

    This is a deeply flawed assumption.

    --
    English is easier said than done.
  123. American Values by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A lot of people born elsewhere love their countries, but there's a reason for them to love the U.S.A. Or at least, there used to be. While it was never perfect, the ideals of the rule of law, limited government, individual freedom were worth emulating. Take it away and you've got the Soviet Union with a better economy, Iraq with less history. Nothing special, just big.

    We used to have a heritage of civilian control of the police and military. Now that civil government no longer exercises that control, it's a short step to reversing it. Betraying that heritage is treason against not just the country, but humanity. Bush has done more to hurt our country than bin Laden could dream of.

    1. Re:American Values by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right. I wish I could say something more substantive, but you've pretty much covered it. Here's hoping that enough people realize it.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    2. Re:American Values by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Bush has done more to hurt our country than bin Laden could dream of.

      Some say this was one of bin Laden's objectives. He would bring down western society by making it tear itself apart chasing shadows.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    3. Re:American Values by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Iraq with less history.

      umm, dude Iraq was mesopotamia. They have a waaay logner history than the u.s.

    4. Re:American Values by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

      Uh, that was my point. Without the values of true liberty we are no better than other nations, including a 3rd world basket case.

      We would be Iraq, but with less history.

      Clearer? Not sure how you could parse the original and miss that, but oh well.

  124. Re:Not illegal. by Methuseus · · Score: 1

    Naw, Dickie-boy had it written up over a week ago, I think, and I been practicisin on it since then. Plus the telemaprompters are gonna have it on there so I just gotta listen to them 'n' I'm fine.

    --
    Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
  125. Re:What's Illegal? Who Said? by mpapet · · Score: 1

    There's nothing illegal about what they are doing!

    According to the Bush Administration, no crime has been committed. So, no criminal offense. If it's ever substantially evaluated by the Courts or Congress I'd be very surprised.

    Whether or not that is correct is beyond my level of interest, as executive office authorized domestic spying is simply the tip of a proverbial iceberg that's been going along quite well all by itself.

    I still do not understand why /.'ers get so upset at all of this.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  126. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    If you look at the US colonies before 1776 as an example then the people receiving communication from the enemy were, most likely, the people in positions of legal, political, and business authority. The governors were on the British payroll, the judges were on the British payroll, and the major international traders were on the British payroll. On the other side of the pond the colonial representatives, such as Ben Franklin, were watched but never, to my knowledge, formally arrested by the British.

    I think that the nation has once again reached the circa 1750 state--where the best interests of the governing class are so far removed from the best interests of the governed class that situations like the current one shouldn't be at all surprising.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  127. Join EFF by samj · · Score: 3, Informative

    Like what you see? Want to see more of it? You can. Join EFF.

  128. Moderation?!! by flynns · · Score: 1

    Not that I disgree.. +5 is just fine... ..but +5 WHAT? Apparently you just post at +5 :\

    --
    'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
    1. Re:Moderation?!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he got modded entirely as "Underrated", which does not show up as anything other than points.

      http://slashdot.org/faq/com-mod.shtml#cm2500

    2. Re:Moderation?!! by Nazmun · · Score: 1

      It was purely +4 underrated. Underrated and overrated don't show on descriptions.

      --
      Hmmm... Pie...
  129. Re: A hearty laugh by mpapet · · Score: 1

    they apparently have decided they can't prove that the NSA is breaking any laws

    That is so true it's positively funny!

    EFF: Yes, we'd like your records concerning domestic spying
    NSA: No.
    EFF: Why not?
    NSA: I can't tell you.
    EFF: Your honor, I demand the records be released!
    Judge: It's a secret.
    Judge: Case dismissed on lack of evidence!

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  130. Such as this one. by IAAP · · Score: 1
    Police IDing folks

    Now the cops will be more embolden to ask, "Papers please!"

  131. Plus they call my house and talk in silly voices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and block all my booty calls!

  132. Re:If AT&T is a ***corporation*** by mpapet · · Score: 1
    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  133. Not a foregone conclusion by octaene · · Score: 1

    Disclaimer: I'm a privacy advocate. Is it not true that the illegality of the NSA's wiretapping is still being debated?

    1. Re:Not a foregone conclusion by SETIGuy · · Score: 1
      Disclaimer: I'm a privacy advocate. Is it not true that the illegality of the NSA's wiretapping is still being debated?

      The illegality of the NSA's wiretapping is obvious. It is only being debated by those that think "is not!" is a strong argument.

  134. EFF sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The EFF has always sucked, and always will.

  135. on the impossibility of AT&T enforcing FISA by j1m+5n0w · · Score: 1
    I dont think AT&T had a choice.
    Also, the NSA are allowed under FISA to get a warrant after the fact (within 72 hours). How can AT&T possibly be responsible for knowing if the NSA will get a warrant later (assuming that it's AT&T's job to make sure the NSA is following proper procedures)?
    1. Re:on the impossibility of AT&T enforcing FISA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They ask for it in 72 hour time. And if they don't get it, they report the NSA to the FBI for breaking the law.

    2. Re:on the impossibility of AT&T enforcing FISA by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Yea, it's just like how when you pay with a bad check, the company has no way to know that it really won't get them any money, so even after they know this, they can't do anything to stop taking more checks from you. I mean, it's not like there's anyone they could call or even make a blacklist with your picture. Now excuse me while I rack up an outrageous phone bill and print out some fake money.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
  136. Y RLY by mobby_6kl · · Score: 2, Funny

    01001001 00100000 01110111 01100001 01110011 00100000 01100111 01101111 01101001 01101110 01100111 00100000 01110100 01101111 00100000 01100100 01101111 00100000 01100101 01111000 01100001 01100011 01110100 01101100 01111001 00100000 01110111 01101000 01100001 01110100 00100000 01111001 01101111 01110101 00100000 01110011 01110101 01100111 01100111 01100101 01110011 01110100 01100101 01100100 00101100 00100000 01100010 01110101 01110100 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100101 01101110 00100000 01110010 01100101 01100001 01101100 01101001 01111010 01100101 01100100 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100001 01110100 00100000 01101001 01110100 00100111 01110011 00100000 01100001 01101100 01101101 01101111 01110011 01110100 00100000 00110011 00100000 01100001 01101101 00100000 01101000 01100101 01110010 01100101 00100000 01100001 01101110 01100100 00100000 01001001 00100000 01101000 01100001 01110110 01100101 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100110 01101001 01101110 01100001 01101100 00100000 01110100 01101111 01101101 01101111 01011110 01010111 01110100 01101111 01100100 01100001 01111001 00101110 00100000 01010011 01101111 00100000 01001001 00100000 01101010 01110101 01110011 01110100 00100000 01101000 01101111 01110000 01100101 00100000 01111010 01100101 01110010 01101111 01100101 01110011 00100000 01100001 01101110 01100100 00100000 01101111 01101110 01100101 01110011 00100000 01100011 01100001 01101110 00100000 01100010 01100101 00100000 01100011 01100001 01101100 01101100 01100101 01100100 00100000 01101101 01100001 01110100 01101000 01100101 01101101 01100001 01110100 01101001 01100011 01100001 01101100 00100000 01101110 01101111 01110100 01100001 01110100 01101001 01101111 01101110 00101100 00100000 01100001 01101110 01100100 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100001 01110100 00100000 01110011 01101001 01101110 01100011 01100101 00100000 01111001 01101111 01110101 00100000 01100111 01101111 01110100 00100000 01110100 01101000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01100110 01100001 01110010 00101100 00100000 01111001 01101111 01110101 00100111 01100100 00100000 01101010 01110101 01110011 01110100 00100000 01100001 01110011 01110011 01110101 01101101 01100101 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100001 01110100 00100000 01110100 01101000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100101 00100000 01100001 01110010 01110100 01101001 01100011 01101100 01100101 00100000 01110011 01110101 01101101 01101101 01100001 01110010 01111001 00101110 00100000 01000001 01101110 01101111 01110100 01101000 01100101 01110010 00100000 01101001 01101110 01110100 01100101 01110010 01100101 01110011 01110100 01101001 01101110 01100111 00100000 01110100 01101000 01101001 01101110 01100111 00100000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01110100 01101000 01100001 01110100 00100000 01110100 01101000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01110000 01101111 01110011 01110100 00100000 01100100 01101111 01100101 01110011 01101110 00100111 01110100 00100000 01110010 01100101 01100001 01101100 01101100 01111001 00100000 01110011 01100001 01111001 00100000 01100001 01101110 01111001 01110100 01101000 01101001 01101110 01100111 00100000 01110101 01110011 01100101 01100110 01110101 01101100 00101110

    1. Re:Y RLY by u16084 · · Score: 1

      01001001 00100000 01001000 01101111 01110000 01100101 00100000 01011001 01101111 01110101 00100000 01100100 01101001 01100100 00100000 01110111 01100101 01101100 01101100 00100000 01101111 01101110 00100000 01111001 01101111 01110101 01110010 00100000 01000110 01101001 01101110 01100001 01101100 00101100 00100000 01000111 01100101 01110100 00100000 01110011 01101111 01101101 01100101 00100000 01110011 01101100 01100101 01100101 01110000 00101110

      --
      -- I Dont Deserve A Sig I Have Bad Karma
  137. Vote for Clueless by toby · · Score: 1

    You're not a big history student, are you?

    --
    you had me at #!
  138. I'd like to add... by IAAP · · Score: 1
    that we're in a "time of war" and the Executive branch is grabbing plenty of power. I don't know what ATT had to go through with the Feds. But please remember, when someone comes knock'in at your door with GUNS, you kinda let'em have their way.

    Then again, they're a big corp, and as such a big bureaucracy, they have absolutley no concern for their customers. Bureaucrats follow the rules without question. And ATT, being a bureaucratic organization, will follow those rules - without question.

    1. Re:I'd like to add... by fuckface · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While we may be "in a time of war", we are not AT war. The President did not declare war. Said non-declaration (having never existed) was not ratified by Congress. I wish people would pay attention to that fact.

  139. Lincoln didn't end martial law... by benjamindees · · Score: 1

    Martial law didn't end until Rutherford B. Hayes was granted the presidency in the Compromise of 1877. It was during this time that the reconstruction amendments were imposed on the South.

    --
    "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
  140. I have one hing to say. by IAAP · · Score: 1

    I think that it's great that this being settled peaceably in a court of law and NOT with a bunch of people running around shooting each other!

    1. Re:I have one hing to say. by nagora · · Score: 1
      I think that it's great that this being settled peaceably in a court of law and NOT with a bunch of people running around shooting each other!

      Well, that's what they tell us!

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  141. You do that and then... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    You do some legwork - find out who owns that phone line.

    The terrorist just made three calls, found out the guy with the laptop was gone, and then left the place where the phone number was.

    The whole point of these things is that they find the number and sometimes have just minutes or hours to tap before the loss is noticed and the line is useless for intelligence.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:You do that and then... by topham · · Score: 1

      And they have the ability to file for a warrant AFTERWARDS.

      Look, I think the whole truth is rather simple. They are collecting all the phonenumbers and subsequent phonenumbers from those. They are datamining the whole collection and it isn't a few hundred, or a few thousand calls a day. It's hundreds of thousands of calls a day.

      And there is no possible way for them to file the paperwork to cover it.

      And in those calls that are legitimate there are a few thousand that relate to the democrats (for example).

      But hey, if you don't want anyone outside of the current administration double checking that there is at least SOME legitimacy to the task, who am I to argue. I'm not american. They can monitor all my calls legally.

      (It wouldn't do them any good ( politics ain't my thing, and the only 'building' I hate is ATI headquaters as they owe me a few hours of my life back for a botched video card driver, but it's a Canadian company so I doubt the U.S. government cares.), and I'm pretty sure they would be bored with my conversations.).

      Oversite, even after the fact, is significantly better than none.

    2. Re:You do that and then... by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      The terrorist just made three calls, found out the guy with the laptop was gone, and then left the place where the phone number was.

      Hey, anybody make up movie plots. If the people involved really believe that is going to happen, then they do have probable cause. Of course, if they don't believe that and just want to fiddle their bits instead of following up on the hundreds of other stronger leads that the same raid generated -- why are we paying them?

      The whole point of these things is that they find the number and sometimes have just minutes or hours to tap before the loss is noticed and the line is useless for intelligence.

      The whole point of the FISA court is that they have 72 hours to retroactively clear such a wiretap. So where is the problem?

    3. Re:You do that and then... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Look, I think the whole truth is rather simple. They are collecting all the phonenumbers and subsequent phonenumbers from those. They are datamining the whole collection and it isn't a few hundred, or a few thousand calls a day. It's hundreds of thousands of calls a day.

      Wow. Kevin Bacon is SO fucked.

  142. Re: ATT Cries Like a Baby... by Qwell · · Score: 1

    Lastly, the "big number" that Media corps publish basically qwell citizen revolt.

    I think you mean Quell... (if you don't get it, don't bother asking)

    --
    As of 10/06/03, I hate COBOL developers.
  143. Re:The Ultimate Reply by mpapet · · Score: 1

    to what you were saying.

    If you really didn't like your situation, you wouldn't be in it. So, the way out is as follows:

    1. Live below your means
    2. Take control of your life!

    Everyone, and I mean everyone serves somebody. So, that part will never change. But if you live below your means, then you make many more choices available for yourself.

    In this situation, the people at the EFF are doing #2 and they are doing it using the tools the system provides. Please use the EFF as a source for inspiration.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  144. Re:Not illegal. by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

    True, and true. However, we've declared War on Drugs, Poverty, Education, and Secularism, so I think they already have enough prior art.

    --
    I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  145. what? by Flunitrazepam · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I don't understand how this relates to GOOGLE at ALL.

    --
    1) Your analysis is based on bad assumptions so your result is way off. 2) You're a sick bastard for fucking a horse.
  146. Oh, PLEASE!! Get A Grip People!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .. get better when nobody bothers to object?

    When has that ever happened?

    Laws against warrantless spying on US citizens exist for a reason. History demonstrates that when the government has this power, they don't just use it on terrorists. First they use it on terrorists, but then they use it on drug dealers. Next come child pornographers. After that, conventional pornographers. Then, "radical" artists and dissidents.

    Before long, they're spying on the modern-day heirs to the radical legacy of Martin Luther King and John Lennon.


    Excuse me for raining on your rant (or psychosis) but...

    Do you actually have any idea what this so-called "domestic spying" actually consists of? Here's a clue..they are NOT listening to you or I calling anyone inside the U.S.A.. They ARE listening in on foreign terrorists in foreign countries, FROM a foreign country, or by satellite. The only way this becomes "domestic" is if, say, UBL calls YOU or YOU call HIM.

    So, the focus of the eavesdropping is on foreign terrorists, being conducted from a foreign country. The only way a U.S. citizen could be "spied on" is if they call up an Al Queda operative already under surveilance in a foreign country, or he calls the citizen in the U.S. from a foreign country.

    I'd say that if you're calling a suspected terrorist already under surveilance in a foreign country, or he's calling you from a foreign country, and the NSA/CIA DIDN'T listen in, then they aren't doing their job.

    This has nothing to do with any monitoring within the U.S. This is simply a ginned-up issue (not ginned-up by the EFF,,they just seem to have bought the partisan version of the situation) to embarass and damage Bush and the U.S., and damage the ability of the government to protect it's citizens from terrorist attacks.

    I have great respect for the EFF, even contributed money. However, I feel they are tilting at windmills here, and it also makes me afraid the EFF could degenerate into another politically-driven partisan attack machine.

    Or almost as bad, allow themselves to be painted as such, and lose vital credibility and effectiveness that damages the EFFs' ability to affect any of the other serious issues they champion.

    1. Re:Oh, PLEASE!! Get A Grip People!!! by Smallpond · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So if they are only wiretapping foreign terrorists, then why is it a problem to get a warrant?

    2. Re:Oh, PLEASE!! Get A Grip People!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if they are only wiretapping foreign terrorists, then why is it a problem to get a warrant?

      Since when was a warrant needed to monitor a self-declared foreign enemy during wartime contacting an agent of a foreign power within the U.S.? Should troops get a court order before firing that Paladin at an enemy bunker?

      This is war. They are the enemy, attempting to contact an agent within our borders. This is SOP for every government of every country at war since there were communications to monitor. This is a normal step to take in a war.

      The U.S. end of the communication doesn't require a warrant, as the very act of a foreign hostile power in time of war contacting someone inside the U.S. declares that person is an agent of a foreign power, and vice-versa. If someone inside the U.S. is attempting to contact an enemy in time of war, that act of itself declares that person an agent of a foreign power.

      Cheney had it right..some have a pre-9/11 worldview that wants to fantasize that a war can be conducted with police, lawyers, and the ACLU. Others that wish the U.S. ill encourage these idiots and laugh like hell at them for helping bring down their own country.

      The very fact that this is even being debated at all is proof that the U.S. is more free than anywhere else. No other country would even hesitate to go much farther under similar threat, and would imprison or kill anyone who revealed the existance of any such program.

      I bet I know which side the enemies of the U.S. are cheering for in this case.

    3. Re:Oh, PLEASE!! Get A Grip People!!! by Bimo_Dude · · Score: 1
      Here's a clue..they are NOT listening to you or I calling anyone inside the U.S.A.. They ARE listening in on foreign terrorists in foreign countries, FROM a foreign country, or by satellite. The only way this becomes "domestic" is if, say, UBL calls YOU or YOU call HIM.

      How do you really know this for sure? Because Bush said so? Because the NSA said so? Because some pundit on tv said so?

      These people have proven time and again that they cannot be trusted; they consistently lie to the American people. The administration usually does the exact opposite of what they say they're going to do. Personally, I find it impossible to believe anything they say. I do not trust this government; they lost that trust a long time ago and have done nothing to regain it.

      --
      "Teleporting Rodents with D-Cell Battery Displacement" theory -- IgnoramusMaximus (692000)
    4. Re:Oh, PLEASE!! Get A Grip People!!! by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Rather than continue to hide behind the curtain of terrorists, let's consider who else is making international telephone calls:

      Any international business. Insurance companies, military contractors, GM, Ford, pharmaceutical companies
      Colleges and Universities. Checking references for international applicants.
      Military. Yes, every phone call that Johnny gets to make home is probably being listened to (but we really already knew that)
      Embassies. No political motivation here, eh?
      Vacationers. Calling family back home.
      Family. Plenty of people in the US have family or in-laws who live in Europe.

      No. I'm not frightened by "big brother" surveilling. I'm disappointed and suspicious that it's being done so far under the table.

      But at least the people who support it so staunchly should quit using the buzzword "terrorist" to rile up the troops. It's getting to be so overused that it is losing its effect.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    5. Re:Oh, PLEASE!! Get A Grip People!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      self-declared?

      firing that Paladin?

      This is war?

      foreign hostile power?

      You live in the right-wing dream world with good guys and bad guys. Fortunately, you already know that anyone who doesn't agree with you is the bad guys, which makes us easy to spot. This terrorist "war" that is going on in your head, with missiles and troops, fascinates me. Is there some relation between it and the war in Iraq? Please enlighten me.

  147. Thing. One THING.. by IAAP · · Score: 1
    God, I can't spill when I'm pised!

    I'd like to also add - [not shooting] like many other countries in this world. Even in troubled times like these, I really appreciate our Founding Fathers for their foresight in creating our governmental system. So that these issues can be solved without the violence that we see so often on our news screens.

    Ok, mod me sappy!

  148. Perhaps it never occurred to anyone... by FellowConspirator · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But, whether the wiretaps are legal or not isn't relevent to the complaint. Assuming the wiretaps are relevent, providing access to the consumer information in AT&T's database would still violate a number of laws still on the books. This is actually a good complaint specifically because it's a peculiar case whereby it strikes at a place where the government hasn't actually asserted any authority.

    However, I would guess that the prize for the EFF is not in wining the case, but what they may find in discovery.

  149. The question is "who is the enemy"? by DECS · · Score: 1

    Nobody is accusing the government (or AT&T) of spying on terrorists.

    The question is instead: can an administration that lied to start a war be trusted to take further illegal actions against American citizens, based on unknown goals?

    - The administration lied to start a war which is both killing thousands of innocent civilians and killing/wounding/shell-shocking a new generation of young American soldiers.

    - The war serves no purpose to secure American people or interests, but rather inflames terrorism against Americans.

    - The original lie was told to start a war that would enrich specific corporations by rebuilding the destruction with Iraqi money, but backfired when we started losing the war, and it turned from a quick invasion to a Vietnam style boondoggle, and is now clearly a long term police state that will generate a new breed of terrorism.

    - American soldiers are now dying and suffering to support and contain a tragic mistake the administration made to divert interest from real terrorist threats (like Osama bin Ladin IN AFGHANISTAN, who was left alone !! and N. Korea, which has the capacity to nuke people rather than just crash planes) and instead create a patriotic smoke screen and enrich corporate friends.

    - Does this shamefully incompetent, dishonest and inept administration deserve some blind trust that any investigations it handles need not ever follow any of the basic rules of law, rules designed to protect against abuses of power against American citizens?

    People with the capacity to think, whether they are conservative, moderate, or liberal, should question an administration that thinks it is above the law, particularly when it HAS A HISTORY of using wartime hysteria to mask over illegal, destructive and unethical behavior.

    The illegal acts of the administration are far beyond Nixon's; it's just that the current president thinks he has enough unthinking supporters to do whatever suits his objectives and those of his corporate partners. The 2005 US is looking a LOT like Hitler's pre-war Germany.

    It's not really the time to be unthinkingly supportive of illegal government actions, which are wrapped up in criminal arrogance and hiding behind a flag. Wake up!

  150. Great except by reedk · · Score: 1, Informative

    They aren't (currently anyway) illegal.

    1. Re:Great except by SwashbucklingCowboy · · Score: 1

      That is not the opinion of the majority of legal scholars who've weighed in on the issue.

    2. Re:Great except by vidarh · · Score: 1

      That's for a court to decide, not you.

  151. In Soviet Russia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The government wiretaps YOU! Oh, wait...

  152. Yes!! I second the parent!!! by IAAP · · Score: 1
    While we may be "in a time of war", we are not AT war. The President did not declare war. Said non-declaration (having never existed) was not ratified by Congress.

    Exactly! Unfortunately, the "in a time of war" is being used as a rational for many of this shit that's going on.

    I'm sure that Bush will be using/used that phrase tonight.

  153. He doesn't? by RiffRafff · · Score: 1

    There's the question of the extent of the Executive's power to conduct military operations during wartime.

    Uh, I believe the President *does* have that power. To a fair extent, anyway.

    Did you mean "during peacetime?"

    --
    "I might have made a tactical error in not going to a physician for 20 years." -- Warren Zevon
    1. Re:He doesn't? by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      No, I meant during wartime, a state of affairs Congress acknowledged shortly after 9/11.

      In the passage you quoted, I said that the question was about the extent of the President's wartime authority, not its existence.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  154. Re:What's Illegal? Who Said? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

    They think that the NSA will stop doing this if the court says not to. They're quite wrong, and we might as well just code it into law that this is fine as long as you don't try to use any of this in court.

  155. I disagree, in multiple ways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They admit cooperating. There were no warrants. Thus it was illegal. A civil lawsuit is not something used to prove a crime; in fact it does nothing of the sort. It is a way to make a harmed party whole by forcing another party to change conduct, forfeit property, etc.

    Saying that they are unneeded if a crime was committed is a fundamental misunderstanding of the law. Civil and crimial cases are almost completely unrelated: for example, the OJ case where he was not guilty of the crime, but found civilly liable for the deaths.

    Also, you seem to assume the government prosecutes every crime that has been committed. Let me be the first to tell you that is not the case. In this instance, because it is their own program which created the illegal behavior, there's a good incentive for them to look the other way.

  156. I hope they've (EFF) done their homework by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cause the relationship between many contractors and orgs like No Such Agency could be officially classified.

  157. Really stupid questions... by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    1. Do they have any evidence that AT&T has actually been helping the NSA conduct warrentless wiretaps?

    2. Do they have any evidence that AT&T has been sharing their customer records with the NSA?

    3. Do they have any evidence that they have been harmed by #1 and #2?

    Because, last time I checked, they would have to have proof of all these things in order to file suit....

    1. Re:Really stupid questions... by SwashbucklingCowboy · · Score: 1
      #1 and #2 can be handled via depositions (though, quite frankly it shouldn't be a problem as the admitted scope of the program REQUIRES that AT&T be involved).

      #3 goes straight to the fourth amendment. They don't have to prove harm, they have to prove it's unconstitutional. They'll probably ask to depose AG Gonzalez.

  158. Re:Not illegal. by SQLz · · Score: 0

    I thought the 'war on terrorism' doesn't invole 'foreign powers'? Who determines if the call is coming from a known terrorist? Anyone can be classified as a terrorist for simply saying bad things about the US.

  159. can't wait until the eff sues google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google is in deep with the NSA and has been since the beginning.

  160. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The tree of liberty will grow only when watered by the blood of tyrants." - Bertrand Vieuzac

  161. What crap. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Yes, the government has always had the right to gather foreign intelligence - including wiretaps - without a warrant. It's right in the Constitution. (Here's a hint: the 4th ammendment applies to U.S. Citizens, not citizens of other countries.) FISA was actually the first attempt to limit that authority:

    However, the authorization granted by President Bush to the NSA apparently uses neither FISC approval nor the one-year foreign surveillance authority granted by FISA. Instead, the administration argues that the power is granted by the Constitution and by a statutory exemption. Case law supports the idea that the President has the "inherent authority to conduct warrantless searches to obtain foreign intelligence information." Article II of the Constitution of the United States of America makes the President Commander in Chief with the responsibility to protect the Nation. This authority extends to the "independent authority to repel aggressive acts... without specific congressional authorization" and without court review of the "level of force selected." Campbell v. Clinton, 203 F.3d 19 (D.C. Cir. 2000). Whether such declarations apply to foreign intelligence has been examined by few courts.

    Moreover, the FISA court itself has ruled that Bush has that authority, as recently as 2002.

    The only question of illegality is whether or not Bush has been wiretapping Americans and legal U.S. residents without a warrant. And, to that question, we have lots of people making claims but no one has shown evidence of a single case where he has.

    1. Re:What crap. by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

      I disagree with you on every point, but only have time for the following question right now. Perhaps more later.

      The only question of illegality is whether or not Bush has been wiretapping Americans and legal U.S. residents without a warrant. And, to that question, we have lots of people making claims but no one has shown evidence of a single case where he has.

      Without oversight of any kind of a classified project, what is the evidentiary source someone could point towards?

  162. At least by Mycroft_514 · · Score: 1

    Having been part of project to deal with some of that data a while ago, 300 terabytes sounds about right. You do not just do major searches against the whole thing, you have to be going after specific things. And that much data *only* lists the connect points and the billing and the time. That has nothing to do with recording the conversations themselves. There is not enough storage on earth to record all the conversations.

    Unless you have dealt with AT&T and some of this data, you have no idea how much data is neccessary just to hold the billing information for a huge network like AT&T.

  163. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't buy it. Congress was briefed on something, but it is not at all aparent that they were told about this. In fact, the administration says the reason they did not try to pass a law to make this legal is that Congress wouldn't pass it. Does that sound like something they would do to a program they had approved?

  164. There you go, case closed. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    So obvious you don't even have to produce evidence that that is the case, right?

    Quick question:

    Please provide evidence that bush has actually spied on Americans and U.S. residents - because every link I've followed claims that he has, even claims that he has admitted it, but I can't find any transcripts or documentation of such.

    1. Re:There you go, case closed. by Smallpond · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, you are right. Bush didn't do the spying. He authorized the NSA to do it for him.

      "In the weeks following the terrorist attacks on our nation, I authorized the National Security Agency, consistent with U.S. law and the Constitution, to intercept the international communications of people with known links to Al-Qaeda and related terrorist organizations."

      -- G. W. Bush, Radio Address, Dec 2005

      Now lets look at that Constituion, shall we?

      "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."

      -- Former 4th amendment to the US Constitution (now obsolete)

      Oh, and I should point out that "the people" has been interpreted not just to mean US citizens. See Landon v. Plasencia, 459 U.S. 21, 32-4 ('82).

    2. Re:There you go, case closed. by SETIGuy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So obvious you don't even have to produce evidence that that is the case, right?

      Sorry, the way the Constitution and the U.S. Code are written there is supposed to be judicial and congressional oversight of wiretapping. Since the President, in violation of the Constitution and the U.S. Code, refuses to allow oversight, we can presume he is violating the law.

      The presumption of innocence belongs to the people, not the government which (in theory) works for us. When the government witholds information from the people, we can presume it is working against our interests.

      The concept of liberty is just lost on some people.

  165. Evidence, please. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    We don't need to, Bush himself has said they were warrant-less wiretaps!

    Please provide direct evidence that Bush has admitted to the warrantless wiretapping of Americans. Don't bother with admissions of warrantless wiretapping of overseas calls - because he doesn't need a warrant for those.

    1. Re:Evidence, please. by Seanasy · · Score: 1
      Please provide direct evidence that Bush has admitted to the warrantless wiretapping of Americans.

      Maybe he hasn't but he hasn't denied it either. He's quite adept at talking around the issue.

    2. Re:Evidence, please. by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      He is definitely very adept at that, and at not saying anything at all.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
  166. Re:Not illegal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who says it was US Citizens ?

    The 4th amendment doesn't say US Citizens. It says people.

  167. Doesn't work that way. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Because the post man can't accidentally hook into the trunk line and eavesdrop on your phone calls.

    On the other hand, if I was working on a problem with the e-mail server, and I find e-mails talking about dope shipments, I'm pretty sure I can turn those over to the police and they can use them as evidence.

  168. Please provide even a shred of evidence by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    They didn't just tap the phones of immigrants? but of US citizens who were communicating with people abroad. This includes noted journalists, politicians, and others. The taps invaded the privacy of thousands of people.

    Please provide even a hint of evidence that any of these claims is true. Because I'm betting that you can't.

    here's a hint: Just because you read it on the internet doesn't make it true.

  169. What connection does that have by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    to the subject under discussion?

    DoD != NSA, monitoring activists != warrantless wiretaps.

    Your comments == FUD.

    1. Re:What connection does that have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      to the subject under discussion?

      DoD != NSA, monitoring activists != warrantless wiretaps.


      Gee, I wonder if both the DoD and the SNA are controled by the same powers, you assclown.

      Your comments == FUD.

      No, they were factual. That you're not bothered by government agencies spying on citizens with no probable cause only demonstrates what a waste of DNA you are.

  170. Re:"if you're doing nothing wrong, then you have n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Monolithic kernels are better.

  171. Actually not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In this case, because we are talking about international communications and national security, the government could have waited up to two days after the wiretap to get a warrant. And for thse "FISA" warrants, the requirements are really really low. I mean, they have approved all but one or two requests since the late 1970s when this law was created.

    It's just really hard to imagine any exigent circumstances which would not allow them to ask for a warrant days after the fact, and would permit them to continue to monitor phone calls and email for months (years?) on end.

  172. Re:Not illegal. by camperslo · · Score: 1

    White House statements have been pretty vague on reasons for avoiding use of available court authorizations. While they imply it only affects those on the end of overseas calls, court authorizations could have covered those. Court authorizations don't scale well. How big could this be? Phil Zimmermann showed considerable insight in his statement on why he wrote PGP. Here's a portion:

    "The 1994 Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) mandated that phone companies install remote wiretapping ports into their central office digital switches, creating a new technology infrastructure for "point-and-click" wiretapping, so that federal agents no longer have to go out and attach alligator clips to phone lines. Now they will be able to sit in their headquarters in Washington and listen in on your phone calls. Of course, the law still requires a court order for a wiretap. But while technology infrastructures can persist for generations, laws and policies can change overnight. Once a communications infrastructure optimized for surveillance becomes entrenched, a shift in political conditions may lead to abuse of this new-found power. Political conditions may shift with the election of a new government, or perhaps more abruptly from the bombing of a federal building.

    A year after the CALEA passed, the FBI disclosed plans to require the phone companies to build into their infrastructure the capacity to simultaneously wiretap 1 percent of all phone calls in all major U.S. cities. This would represent more than a thousandfold increase over previous levels in the number of phones that could be wiretapped. In previous years, there were only about a thousand court-ordered wiretaps in the United States per year, at the federal, state, and local levels combined. It's hard to see how the government could even employ enough judges to sign enough wiretap orders to wiretap 1 percent of all our phone calls, much less hire enough federal agents to sit and listen to all that traffic in real time. The only plausible way of processing that amount of traffic is a massive Orwellian application of automated voice recognition technology to sift through it all, searching for interesting keywords or searching for a particular speaker's voice. If the government doesn't find the target in the first 1 percent sample, the wiretaps can be shifted over to a different 1 percent until the target is found, or until everyone's phone line has been checked for subversive traffic. The FBI said they need this capacity to plan for the future. This plan sparked such outrage that it was defeated in Congress. But the mere fact that the FBI even asked for these broad powers is revealing of their agenda.

    Advances in technology will not permit the maintenance of the status quo, as far as privacy is concerned. The status quo is unstable. If we do nothing, new technologies will give the government new automatic surveillance capabilities that Stalin could never have dreamed of.
    "

    Of course mining of other types of data should be expected too. Even the average person can do some surprising things with public data.

  173. The cloud of debate by pooh_zen · · Score: 1

    With all respect, it seems that the certain groups have been successful at obviscating and blurring the essentials of the wiretap issue. With that said; let me take my swing at it... The argument that Presidential Power overshadows the scope of FIZA is mute; whomever framed the FIZA statutes took war into account when they intentionally placed in WAR TIME PROVISIONS of 15 days. Another argument is that the FIZA process is too slow and to catch the terrorists requires FAST and FLEXABLE so FIZA unacceptably encumbers the process needed. We can eavesdrop on virtually every form of electronic communication WORLD WIDE at a moments notice, but we can't manage to have a computer automatically submit a retro-active request to the court in 15 days ??? Yet a further argument is that 'we only listen to people with known links to terrorists and our enemies'. First, HOW CAN WE KNOW THIS ? The adage 'Trust your government' doesn't hold water. Today it is the terrorists. Well, how about GreenPeace ? Some would consider them a terrorist group, so can we also listent in on them ? How about the ACLU ? How about a potential political opponent ? (oh, that's right, we already went down that road... ) Where does the line get drawn ? Lastly; "Other presidents have done this also... " I would suggest that the entire proclamations of these past presidents be read IN FULL; especially the part just after the lines saying that domestic intelligence gathering can be done, where it continues to say ' within and following the statutes outlined but the Domestic Surveillance and FIZA statutes. (Thanks to CNN and MSNBC for doing so...) My point is simple; FIZA was established to provide OVERSIGHT. OVERSIGHT is not telling 6 Congressmen, and then telling them that its illegal for them to discuss it with anyone. Why was FIZA circumvented ? To avoid OVERSIGHT. Why do we ship prisoners to other countries ? Because torture is illegal in the United States. Just as the provision on torture and other Patriot Act elements that allow anyone that is considered a threat to be taken off the street without legal recourse. Is the next presidential opponent going to be considered a threat ? How can we know ? People far wiser than me realized long ago that a government must be transparent and responsible to the public they serve. That begins and ends with OVERSIGHT. This particular administration has done a great deal to remove themselves from oversight under the guise of protecting us from the 'evil empires' and terrorists. Remember Communism ? - The government spys on it's citizens at will with no oversight - Anyone disagreeing was considered ' un-patriotic ' - People were tourtured while in custody - People were held in prison with no formal charges being brought - People were 'disappeared' without legal recourse It's odd that all the freedoms we used to hold so proud as Americans are now being eroded by our politicians under the guise of Patriotism. No wonder the rest of the world is no longer impressed by us. A just man acts in the light of day, not scurries around under the cover of darkness and shadow.

    1. Re:The cloud of debate by squidguy · · Score: 1

      FIZA ...I think you mean FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act). Not sure where the Z came from.

  174. Are you talking smack about US intelligence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    including the terrorists who were being tapped that have since found other means of communication

    Like what, sport? Smoke signals? Wooo, the terrorists KNOW that US Signals Intelligence is trying to listen in on their phone calls/email/faxes and any other form of electronic communications they can get their 40 foot dishes on! Oh Noes!!1!ONE1!ELEVENTY1!

    Do the words "No shit Sherlock" hold any meaning for you? Any terrorist that didn't already know this was already killed or captured long before 9/11 or any other major event. It's just common sense. Terrorist darwinism. If you are too f'in stupid to stego-encrypt your plans to blow up the White House in an apparent P3N15 enlargement spam, you were a dead terrorist already. The ones that aren't dead are the ones that know better. Either that, or you're saying the good men and women of our nation's intelligence agencies are incredibly stupid, endangering American lives with negligent job performance, and deserve to be fired.

    Wait a minute... that's exactly what you're saying... That's it isn't asshole? You're talking shit about our CIA/DIA/FBI/KGB/SIGINT/STASI/NSA/NRO/DHS, aren't you, you mother fucking unpatriotic piece of horse shit!!! You're saying there are terrorist sending plain text email that haven't been captured! You mother fucker... Call in the jack boots and kick itsdave's ass. You're with us or against us you unpatriotic towel head son of a bitch. What's it gonna be 'dave' or should I say Akmed?!?!

    ... there, now you know how stupid you sound to the rest of the free world.

    1. Re:Are you talking smack about US intelligence? by mpontes · · Score: 1

      Picturing someone enraged jumping around and yelling "mother fucking unpatriotic piece of horse shit!!!" made me actually laugh out loud. Somehow, the unexpected and excessive swearing turned the parent's post hilarious. I swear, I even saw his face turning red in my mind. Someone mod this Funny, I just spent my mod points a few hours ago.

      --
      Bored? Browse Slashdot with a +6 modifier for Troll comme
    2. Re:Are you talking smack about US intelligence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As far as the rest of the free world are concerned, "US Intelligence" is an oxymoron and George W is just a moron.

  175. Article II by chihowa · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I know you're trolling, but humor me... Which part of the Constitution gives the president that right? I know that the fourth amendment denies the government the right to conduct surveillance without warrants, where's the exception for the president?

    Sorry for the long quote, but here's Article II (from The U.S. Constitution Online). I don't see this supposed right anywhere in there.

    Article II. - The Executive Branch Note

    Section 1 - The President

    The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America. He shall hold his Office during the Term of four Years, and, together with the Vice-President chosen for the same Term, be elected, as follows:

    Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress: but no Senator or Representative, or Person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States, shall be appointed an Elector.

    (The Electors shall meet in their respective States, and vote by Ballot for two persons, of whom one at least shall not lie an Inhabitant of the same State with themselves. And they shall make a List of all the Persons voted for, and of the Number of Votes for each; which List they shall sign and certify, and transmit sealed to the Seat of the Government of the United States, directed to the President of the Senate. The President of the Senate shall, in the Presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the Certificates, and the Votes shall then be counted. The Person having the greatest Number of Votes shall be the President, if such Number be a Majority of the whole Number of Electors appointed; and if there be more than one who have such Majority, and have an equal Number of Votes, then the House of Representatives shall immediately chuse by Ballot one of them for President; and if no Person have a Majority, then from the five highest on the List the said House shall in like Manner chuse the President. But in chusing the President, the Votes shall be taken by States, the Representation from each State having one Vote; a quorum for this Purpose shall consist of a Member or Members from two-thirds of the States, and a Majority of all the States shall be necessary to a Choice. In every Case, after the Choice of the President, the Person having the greatest Number of Votes of the Electors shall be the Vice President. But if there should remain two or more who have equal Votes, the Senate shall chuse from them by Ballot the Vice-President.) (This clause in parentheses was superseded by Amendment XII.)

    The Congress may determine the Time of chusing the Electors, and the Day on which they shall give their Votes; which Day shall be the same throughout the United States.

    No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.

    (In Case of the Removal of the President from Office, or of his Death, Resignation, or Inability to discharge the Powers and Duties of the said Office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President, and the Congress may by Law provide for the Case of Removal, Death, Resignation or Inability, both of the President and Vice President, declaring what Officer shall then act as President, and such Officer shall act accordingly, until the Disability be removed, or a President shall be elected.) (This clause in parentheses has been modified by Amendments XX and XXV.)

    The President shall, at stated Times, receive for his Services, a Compensation, which shall neither be increased nor diminished during the Period for which he shall have been elected, and he shall not rece

    --
    If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    1. Re:Article II by workindev · · Score: 0

      You can find out exactly what authority is being asserted from this 42-page DOJ Whitepaper. Read the document to fully answer your question. From the summary:

      -The Constitution gives the President sole authority to conduct warrantless surveillance of enemy forces for intelligence purposes to detect and disrupt armed attacks on the United States
      -On 9/18/2001, Congress gave the President authority to "use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided" in terrorist attacks and to "prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States."
      -The supreme court rule in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld that warrantless electronic surveillance was included in the joint authorization passed on 9/18/2001
      -FISA specifically states that Congress can authorize surveillance by a statute other than FISA. The USSC confirmed in Hamdi that the 9/18/2001 joint authorization was an allowable statute.
      -The NSA activities all fell within the 4th Amendment exception to the warrant requirement and satisfies and the fundamental requirement of reasonableness

      Read the entire document for complete case references and quotes.

    2. Re:Article II by chihowa · · Score: 1
      I'll read your linked document when I get home tonight, but a few thoughts:

      The Constitution gives the President sole authority to conduct warrantless surveillance of enemy forces for intelligence purposes to detect and disrupt armed attacks on the United States

      • This is a pretty big assertion here. The Constitution isn't a very long document, read it. It seriously doesn't say that. But it does say that
        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.
        so to bring your second point to consideration, Congress can't issue any law or resolution that gives the President this power.

      FISA specifically states that Congress can authorize surveillance by a statute other than FISA. The USSC confirmed in Hamdi that the 9/18/2001 joint authorization was an allowable statute.

      • I'll certainly have to double check this, but I believe that FISA actually states that it is the sole statute dealing with the subject of foreign intelligence wiretapping.

      The NSA activities all fell within the 4th Amendment exception to the warrant requirement and satisfies and the fundamental requirement of reasonableness

      • With all due respect, this is certainly a case for the SCOTUS to decide. That's a pretty bold assertion.
      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    3. Re:Article II by workindev · · Score: 1

      I want to be pretty clear that these are not "my" points -- they are the points of a team of DOJ lawyers that reviewed the program and gave it their approval.

      This is a pretty big assertion here. The Constitution isn't a very long document, read it. It seriously doesn't say that. But it does say that ...
      so to bring your second point to consideration, Congress can't issue any law or resolution that gives the President this power


      I would refer you to the document again, particularly their response:

      In United States v. United States District Court, 407 U.S. 297 (1972) (the "Keith" case), the Supreme Court concluded that the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement applies to investigations of wholly domestic threats to security--such as domestic political violence and other crimes. But the Court in the Keith case made clear that it was not addressing the President's authority to conduct foreign intelligence surveillance without a warrant and that it was expressly reserving that question: "[T]he instant case requires no judgment on the scope of the President's surveillance power with respect to the activities of foreign powers, within or without this country."

      There are several more case citations in the document to back up this point.

      I'll certainly have to double check this, but I believe that FISA actually states that it is the sole statute dealing with the subject of foreign intelligence wiretapping.

      No, FISA prevents the government from "engag[ing] . . . in electronic surveillance under color of law except as authorized by statute". SCOTUS case Hamdi v. Rumsfeld referred to in the document confirmed that the AUMF is such a statute.

      With all due respect, this is certainly a case for the SCOTUS to decide. That's a pretty bold assertion.

      SCOTUS already did decide it in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld.

  176. Insane? by rabel · · Score: 1

    This is insane? Ummm, yeah, maybe.. but, ahh... how can I get signed up to be a part of this lawsuit? I been oppressed I tell ya!

  177. The who is important by Scareduck · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Unfortunately, a lot of people have complete trust in the Government

    These people used to be called "liberals" until the Bush administration got hold of the reins of power. When will people learn that you don't give government the kind of power you wouldn't want your worst enemy to have?

    --

    Dog is my co-pilot.

    1. Re:The who is important by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      I agree. I was just thinking a while after the wiretapping
      story broke, wondering if President Bush realized he was
      potentially setting a precident, and that at some point in
      time, a Democrat *would* hold the presidency.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    2. Re:The who is important by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, too many people are utterly paranoid about government actions that have nothing to do with suppressing dissent or otherwise persecuting our people, and everything to do with trying to stop a terrorist from, say, setting off a nuke in downtown Mountain View.

      As a conservative, I don't trust the government to do things very well. But I know that we need them to do some things that involve collective security - otherwise we could just disband them and have anarchy.

      We didn't choose this enemy - they chose us. And their tactics and declared intent involves the use of agents within our borders. To not be able to intercept their international communications because of some paranoia is idiotic. A democratic government which cannot defend its citizens will not survive.

      Get a clue: these people want to kill lots of us (they have a dispensation from Allah to kill 4,000,000 innocents). To do so, they need agents in the US. To stop them, we need to detect those agents.

      Anyone criticizing the interceptino of international communications should, for intellectual honesty, at least tell us how *they* plan to deal with this threat. Otherwise its just juvenile bloviating.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    3. Re:The who is important by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      a Democrat *would* hold the presidency.

      Given their recent performance, he probably figures that's not much of a threat in the foreseeable future. As much as I hate it, I find myself agreeing, given the current Dems' wank-fest over the idea of "Hillary 4 prez."

    4. Re:The who is important by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Um, we could deal with it the legal way. You know, with the special court we set up to grant wiretaps 24/7, and even gave ourself the ability to set up the tap and then come to it within 72 hours?

      There are three ways to do this: The legal way, the illegal way, and the Bush way, which is just the illegal way with some talking points thrown in to confuse the issue.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    5. Re:The who is important by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      To not be able to intercept their international communications because of some paranoia is idiotic.

      First, its not paranoia, the government is clearly breaking well established laws. Second, there is a good reason that law exists. The abuse of power has ALREADY happened. The framers weren't dealing with hypotehtical abuses, they had real examples from their time to use, and they decided its better to limit the government, even if that means catching the bad guys is harder.

      Get a clue: these people want to kill lots of us (they have a dispensation from Allah to kill 4,000,000 innocents). To do so, they need agents in the US. To stop them, we need to detect those agents.

      Indeed. However, they aren't capabile of doing it, and they weren't before 9/11 either. Otherwise, wouldn't there have been a HUGE number of attacks that day, not just in NYC and near Washington? They simply don't have (and never did have) those kinds of resources.

      You're right, we need to detect those agents. But lets do it within the confines of the law, and not let one man decide based on his whims. I prefer rule of law over rule of man.

    6. Re:The who is important by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      I am thinking of a larger timescale than you,
      I guess. The precident will wait, patiently.

      I dont know what Hillary's chances are, but I
      imagine it also depends on what the opposition
      looks like. Cheney has said he would not run,
      and I believe him on that. Bush Jr cant run.
      And his approval rating, IIRC, has slipped.

      But I agree that the Democratic party has done
      a poor job of fielding good candidates of late.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    7. Re:The who is important by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

      The only thing true about your first paragraph is the wisdom of the founders. They also called for a strong executive, specifically for circumstances involving war.

      Your second assertion is also not true, or if it is, you cannot prove it. I could construct a large number of scenarios that Al Qaeda cells could use to kill large numbers of us - even if they don't get hold of nukes (which they will one of these days).

      Re 9-11, the more people they sent in for a single attack, the more likely they were to be caught and the entire enterprise stopped. It is only because of the incompetence of parts of our government, and certain dangerous barriers to information gathering or transmission (such as the FBI firewall between counterintelligence and criminal investigation) that they didn't get caught the first time. They were lucky. And since they are willing to use suicidal attackers, they can afford to be unlucky (as they hve been in several other attacks that were thwarted).

      Project Bojinka was going to bring down a dozen airliners on the same day. It was only thwarted because the bomb lab had a fire. That was an Al Qaeda operation *before* 9-11. Do we count on such luck forever?

      The important fact that you miss is that, specifically due to modern technology, a few people, with either no state sponsorship or well hidden sponsorship, can do a whole lot of damage. They did so on 9-11. They have demonstrated that they still have that capacity in Bali, Madrid, London, Breslan and a number of other places. It is only a matter of time before they get greater force multipliers (the 767's proved to be quite good in that regard).

      Al Qaeda has attempted to use chemical weapons (London), has expressed an interest in biological weapons (which can be much more deadly and are a lot easier to get/create than most people think), and has a desire for nuclear weapons (which they don't have the ability to create but might have the money to buy).

      Furthermore, the number of people trained in terrorism by Al Qaeda while they were in Pakistan is in the many tens of thousands. Many of these people remain assets.

      Al Qaeda is patient. They can wait because their mission is an eternal religious cause. They may very well be waiting for us to cripple out counter-terrorism measures through a combination of internal opposition and the normal lack of attention that comes after awhile. Just remember how people felt and thought on 9-11 and for a while afterwards. The threat hasn't gotten smaller (although the occupation of Afghanistan and the world-wide hunt (fairly successful) for Al Qaeda leadership has disrupted them at least temporarily. But all we have bought is time. They will be back. Any day, and somewhere we don't expect them.

      For example... what if they use a few SA-14's to shoot down a few airliners at different airports around the country - let's say one a day for a week. What damage do you think that would reek? Do you doubt they can get the weapons and smuggle them into the US? Do you have any idea how to stop them?

      The best way (and it ain't perfect) is to tighten our security as much as we can.

      FINALLY, just think about what the American people will demand if bad attacks happen. Do you think they will agree with civil libertarians? I think it is better to keep credibility by NOT fighting against reasonable measures (such as the NSA program) so that when the people want to enact really strong measures, somebody will be around who can at least point out the dangers.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    8. Re:The who is important by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      The only thing true about your first paragraph is the wisdom of the founders. They also called for a strong executive, specifically for circumstances involving war.

      And we are NOT at war, no more than we are really at war with drugs, or whatever other war on XYZ is popular at the time. We didn't shift from a peacetime to wartime economy, and even Bush tells us to 'go about our everday business.' That doesn't sound like something you'd say in the middle of a war, does it? The so called war on terrorism is just another excuse for the government to abuse its power, just like the war on drugs has been.

      What we have is a group of criminals who do want to harm innocent people. But just like the mob, they are criminals, and we don't declare war against criminals, but we follow law and proceedure to bring them to justice. If we were really at war i'd be we'd be under martial law, wouldn't you agree?

      Your second assertion is also not true, or if it is, you cannot prove it. I could construct a large number of scenarios that Al Qaeda cells could use to kill large numbers of us - even if they don't get hold of nukes (which they will one of these days).

      Your assertion is much less provable (and logical) than mine. If they could have crashed planes in every city, why did they not do so? You say they 'want to kill as many of us as possible [sic]', so doesn't it logically follow that when they make an attack, they WILL try to kill as many as they possibly can? What reason would they have to hold back? Your assertion that they WILL get a nuke is also unfounded and unprovable, so you should really stop stating it as if it were fact. How do you know they'll get one? Because you said so? Because they want to? There are alot of things i really want too, yet I don't think I'll be able to get them.

      The important fact that you miss is that, specifically due to modern technology, a few people, with either no state sponsorship or well hidden sponsorship, can do a whole lot of damage. They did so on 9-11.

      9/11 was NOT 'a whole lot of damage.' Four buildings, and 2,000 lives, but comparing that the to total number of building in the US, and the number of people living here, its not much at all. Wiping out NYC entirely, that's 'a whole lot of damage.'

      The real damage of 9/11 was the panic it caused in you to make you believe that you actually might get caught in one of their attacks. Statistically, you're much more likely to die in a car crash than a terrorist attack. The US has 300 million people, and those people are pretty well spread out. Given the geography and shear size of our country, the chances of you or someone you love being involved in an attack are small.

      The other major damage from 9/11 was our civil liberties, what are supposed to be our most cheerished asset, being throw to the wind as, because people like you are acting not like a logic person, but like a frightened and paniced animal.

      They have demonstrated that they still have that capacity in Bali, Madrid, London, Breslan and a number of other places.

      And the attacks in those countries did not destroy them did they? Again, the damage they did and the lives they took were small. Its certainly wrong, and I don't think they have a right to be killing anyone, but you seem to be buying into their plan. They want us to panic and act rashly, because we will make more mistakes that way (oh, like pissing off our ally's, destabilizing the middle east and asia) and they want us to prove to them that we are hippocrites that only pay lip service to our ideals.

      Al Qaeda has attempted to use chemical weapons (London), has expressed an interest in biological weapons (which can be much more deadly and are a lot easier to get/create than most people think), and has a desire for nuclear weapons (which they don't have the ability to create but might have the money to buy).

      And they haven't been very successful either. They can want a nuke all they want, doesn'

  178. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by Valdrax · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What do you call a person within the boarders of a country, not a citizen of the country, during the time of war, without any sort of uniform, receiving communication from the enemy?

    A dangerous criminal. We have laws for dealing with them. These laws were created specifically to put checks and balances in place to ensure freedom and democracy stay alive. These laws ban the kind of things you see in dictatorships like indefinite imprisonment without charges, spying on citizens who oppose the government, torture of prisoners, and secret trials where the defendant is not allowed to have access to lawyers or to see and challenge all the evidence presented against them. These are all things that this administration has claimed the power to do (oh, but only against the bad guys, of course).

    This is the type of person that 150 years ago would not be arrested by the police, and not tried by citizen courts.

    Please justify this statement with historical examples.

    If you look at things this way, it is very easy to see why the administration went to Congress and informed them on what they were doing, and nothing was done. It would also explain why the administration believes they are doing the right thing, within the law.

    He only informed a very select few members of Congress, and we don't know how much he told them nor whether or not what he told them is true. After all, he's acted to prevent oversight that would allow fact checking. We do know however that he's presented tainted evidence to Congress before, and look where that got us. We also know that he's lied about wiretaps before.

    "Now, by the way, any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires -- a wiretap requires a court order. Nothing has changed, by the way. When we're talking about chasing down terrorists, we're talking about getting a court order before we do so. It's important for our fellow citizens to understand, when you think Patriot Act, constitutional guarantees are in place when it comes to doing what is necessary to protect our homeland, because we value the Constitution."

    --George W. Bush, during a 2004 campaign speech

    Honestly, how can you trust this man anymore? There are no legitimate reasons to evade FISA. The only other reasons are to spy on people who shouldn't be spied on or to go on a fishing expedition through a wide sea of innocent people in the hopes of grabbing someone guilty. These are the acts of man who has no respect for rule of law.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  179. Why FISA makes a difference by Gorimek · · Score: 1

    I have no insight into the FISA process, since it's Very Secret. But those numbers don't need to mean anything more than that it's very clear to both sides what rules FISA operates under, and what requests are worth submitting.

    Many an FBI agent may want to wiretap his wife, but he wouldn't bother to submit a request for that to FISA, since it is sure to be rejected. If FISA is abolished, and they can wiretap anyone at will, that would change things a lot.

  180. Once cool thing about the US by ralphclark · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm often critical of the way politics works in the US but this is one valuable thing you Yanks do have over us Brits - the ability to sue the government. In the UK we have something called "Crown Immunity" which basically means a British subject can't sue an institution run by the "Crown" i.e. the UK government (IANAL though). It's a real pisser being a "subject" sometimes. Though it hardly needs to be said there are plenty of republics where "citizens" are treated rather worse.

    1. Re:Once cool thing about the US by nomadic · · Score: 2, Informative

      We have something called "sovereign immunity", which is the same thing. The difference is in the US Congress and the Courts have carved out broad exceptions to it, by either a) explicitly waiving the immunity in a statute (for example, the Tucker Act allows persons who create contracts with the federal government to sue under contract law in disputes), or b) where the Courts will construe a statute to effectively waive it.

    2. Re:Once cool thing about the US by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      Ah. Sounds like only the big boys can play. I should have guessed.

  181. Re:Not illegal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Plus a backup radio transmitter down the back of my shirt, just in case.

    No Karl, let me finish.

  182. Here is what the president thinks of your rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Peace activist Cindy Sheehan was arrested Tuesday in the House gallery after refusing to cover up a T-shirt bearing an anti-war slogan before President Bush's State of the Union address."

    Now I spent 10 years of my life in the military defending the so called freedom and this is how that time is repaid, by supressing unfavorable opinions. I don't know anyone with a sound brain that thinks that the wiretaps should not happen. What is at issue is that they are occuring without court approval, just use the mechanisms in place to do it legally that is all we ask.

  183. Re:New Slogan by micahfk · · Score: 1

    New Government Slogan: If you can spy on our military bases through Google, then we can do the same to you!

  184. at&t = sbc by digitallysick · · Score: 0

    Its funny how sbc changed their name to at&t (to ditch the bad name of sbc). Its almost MA' bell all over again, i dont see how the FCC let these companies combine back together again. It only hurts the consumer in the end. Other than the LEC who can you go to for local and LD services? If its not voip, then you dont have much choice anymore.

  185. In other news... by squidguy · · Score: 2, Funny

    It was later revealed that the EFF was being funded by Verizon and Sprint...

  186. Re:Not illegal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    That's what the Authorization of the Use of Force pursuant to the War Powers Act is, exactly.


    Damn man, you don't even understand the War Powers Resolution.

    This is plain-language stuff. If you don't get it, you don't want to.


    You're right, it is plain-language stuff. And that's why your misunderstanding of it terrifies me.
  187. Bush admitted it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bush admitted on tape he broke the law and he admitted that he ignored warnings from attorneys that he was breaking the law. That's all the proof the EFF needs.

  188. Translated from binary - ASCII by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was going to do exactly what you suggested, but then realized that it's almost 3 am here and I have a final tomo^Wtoday. So I just hope zeroes and ones can be called mathematical notation, and that since you got this far, you'd just assume that this is the article summary. Another interesting thing is that this post doesn't really say anything useful.

    O RLY.

  189. Re:Not illegal. by sigzero · · Score: 0

    Uh, yes they did know about it. They were briefed about it, regularly. To say that the committee in Congress didn't know is a lie. They knew.

  190. Compromise by MichaelKaiserProScri · · Score: 0

    We're in a war. Like it or not we are. So... Allow the taps, restrict what can be done with the info. If they are listening for terrorist activity and hear about a drug deal, make sure they CANNOT use that information to prosecute the drug dealer. Restrict the use of the information to terrorist activity only. Clearly and narrowly define what is "terrorist activity".

  191. Ambulance Chasers by squidguy · · Score: 2, Funny

    Damn shysters... now my phone bill will be as expensive as a coronary bypass.

  192. Re:Not illegal. by kfg · · Score: 1

    To say that the committee in Congress didn't know is a lie.

    Good thing I didn't say that then. This is even alluded to in the MSN article I link. Even if I had that in no way implies it's a lie, although calling it a lie might well be. And what was it, yesterday, the day before, when I posted that detecting lies is not at all the same thing as detecting truth?

    The eavesdropping program was very closely held, with cryptic briefings for only a few congressional leaders. Once again, Addington and his allies made sure that possible dissenters were cut out of the loop.

    Are you now going to argue that the FBI knew who Deep Throat was all along?

    KFG

  193. Re:Here is what the president thinks of your right by squidguy · · Score: 1

    If you spent 10 years in the military you'd understand then that the Legistative Branch (Congress) has its own police force (Capitol Police)...they arrested Ms. Sheehan, not the President (or any police force connected to the Executive Branch. It is difficult to understand how the President comes into play with your argument here, or how Ms. Sheehan relates to the NSA or AT&T...

  194. common sense... by apocalypse76 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Where has common sense gone? Lately all I hear is accusations following partisan lines that are just ridiculous. Being from a family with a military background I regard personal liberty and freedom two of the most important privileges Americans have. An uncountable number of Americans have died in order for you to have those privileges that are taken for granted every day.

    Along with the privilege comes responsibility that people take for granted now. The most important one being the privilege of voting. Instead of learning about thier political candidates through 30 mins. of research; they rather hear what CNN, FOX or some other news agency describes them as. The most important fact to that person is if they are a republican or a democrat. That is irresponsible. Then they act as armchair lawyers stupidly defending thier views with quotes from news agencies.

    The blatant fact is over 2500 people died when it may have been prevented with wire-tapping. If wire-tapping could have saved the lives of 2500 people than I agree with it. If a political leader I helped elect in office wants to do something that has been done for years I will support it. Even if the official I don't want in office makes it I am not going to say anything against it if it's possible to save lives.

    If an agency hears an international call I make they are going to be bored out of thier mind because I have nothing to hide. Instead of saying the government is transparant maybe we should look at ourselves and see if we have anything to hide. Then think, is someone listening to my calls even on accident worth 2500 lives?

    If you know the background of your politician you will trust them with the power. Even with the opposing political party gains office your votes for senators or congressmen will keep him in check. Not to mention the media trying to gain todays big story.

    Instead of stupidly insulting leaders come up with new ideas that will do what needs to be done. Only ignorant people go around saying stupid this or idiot that. Instead of being armchair lawyers do something productive, develop ideas to find threats.

    If half the energy of griping about politicans was put toward working for the better of American society this would be an even better place to live.

  195. Here you go. by imthesponge · · Score: 1
    The President does need a warrant to tap overseas calls (where one party is in the US). See http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/casecode/uscodes/50/ chapters/36/subchapters/i/sections/section_1802.ht ml
    1802(a)(1) Notwithstanding any other law, the President, through the Attorney General, may authorize electronic surveillance without a court order under this subchapter to acquire foreign intelligence information for periods of up to one year if the Attorney General certifies in writing under oath that -
    • (A) ...
    • (B) there is no substantial likelihood that the surveillance will acquire the contents of any communication to which a United States person is a party; and
    • (C) ...
    1. Re:Here you go. by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      oops, had a Bush quote there but removed it and forgot to change the title.

  196. Who's assuming? by PCM2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It sounds to me like the article summary isn't assuming anything. It's stating the position of the lawsuit. The EFF is suing over illegal wire taps -- that's a fact. What hasn't been decided yet is whether the lawsuit has any merit. We'll need a court hearing to know for sure.

    Believe it or not, though, trusting the New York Times, even after a couple of unfortunate incidents, is still pretty good practice. What's scarier is people like you, who can't seem to separate the concepts of somebody explaining facts to you and somebody telling you what to think. Don't worry, dude ... nobody at the New York Times is trying to keep you from making up your own opinions. That's not what the news is for.

    Repeat after me: Being informed is good.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  197. what else? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If not them, who, and how? I just watched the state of the union crap, then the alleged democratic party "response". That was PATHETIC, I couldn't believe it. Well, I can actually, I expected it, but I had 1% hope they might actually DO SOMETHING. Instead of using the great opportunity to do something with GUTS, say announce some serious impeachment moves, they had some gomer on who droned his way to lecture hall sleepytime and said...nothing. Not believing this incredible display of ineptitude, I go over to the democratic official webpage. They are having a blog circle jerk call in to each other while they have "watch parties". WOW, THAT'LL WORK!!!1!1 MAN,, I IZ IMPRESSED!!

    I checked the Libertarian party home page, NOTHING, NO RESPONSE. Constitution party, NOTHING, NO RESPONSE. Only the Greens had anything, they have 5 videos up as a response (says there available feb 1).

    If the major so called opposition party FAILS to address wars based on lies, illegal and clearly unconstitional actions domestically, expansion of the heinous police state, destruction of the economy, with the only thing they do is get on the phone and talk at each other, then who the hell is left? Only places like the EFF and others like that who are trying the only peaceful remedy we have left, in the courts. Sure as hell VOTING ain't doing it, because they hack the damn vote now and get away with it! So even play acting at VOTING is a big fat waste of time.

  198. Read up on EFF's accomplishments, please by JBMesserly · · Score: 1

    Someone, please, stop the EFF before it's too late. I know they might think of these things as a "why not, let's give it a shot and see what happens" deal, but these trials and the EFF's continued losses are going to be a serious impact on ALL of our futures. I know, I get a chuckle too after seeing the latest story about how they've been laughed out of court, again, and see how riled up people get over it, but this needs to stop now. Our rights, and our (US citizens) futures may depend on it.

    I think you should review the Electronic Frontier Foundation's history of accomplishments before making such an over-generalized (and incorrect) statement. They're trying the herculean task of protecting OUR civil liberties at THEIR expense; I think they deserve better than baseless criticism.

    I read the Register article where this meme ("EFF is hurting our civil liberties by losing cases") started, and it needs to die. Frankly, I think the lawyers at EFF know a hell of a lot more about winning cases than some hack from The Register, and there's plenty of evidence to prove it.

    In any case, if really have some brilliant and constructive idea about how the EFF could win more cases, I'm sure they'd love to hear about it. They have contact information on their website. Knock yourself out.

    (Side note: it's amazing how much a reputation can be tarnished by one sensationalized "article".)

  199. Go to prison, please. by Naruki · · Score: 0

    If you don't mind not being a free person, at least you'll stop interfering with the rest of us who actually cherish freedom.

    You know, we who admire the Constitution, not the Government du Jour.

    To think all those thousands of soldiers who have given their lives for freedom and people like you come and try to piss it all away.

    Disgusting.

  200. Not a good measure of quality by multiOSfreak · · Score: 1
    Move to North Korea and if you ever get back, write me a report comparing the Bush administration with Kim Jong Il's regime.

    So this is the yardstick by which we are to measure democracy and quality of life?: North Korea? I suggest you get some better standards. Just being "better than North Korea" is not good enough for me.
  201. Two for starters. by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
    Please provide even a hint of evidence that any of these claims is true. Because I'm betting that you can't...here's a hint: Just because you read it on the internet doesn't make it true.

    And shoving your fingers deep into your ears and singing lalala doesn't make anything not true, so thanks for that nugget of information.

    My previous statement had two salient points: 1. The NSA tapped or datamined information for possibly thousands of people and inundated the FBI with this information, according to the NYTimes. 2. Noted journalist Christopher Hitchens, a pro-Iraq war writer, has joined the case against the NSA along with the ACLU and EFF.

    Further reports indicate that not only Hitchens, but also Christine Amanpour a CNN reporter as well as many others also had their phone tapped. This program was far-reaching, did not follow the FISA requirements, and was lied about by current Attorney General Gonzales while under oath and by President Bush during a press conference.

    This program did not merely focus on "immigrants" but on many more people and included domestic calls within the United States.

    Finally, these are internet links so I guess they can't be true since the seem to put some rent into your well-defined reality.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  202. It will be interesting to see by Roduku · · Score: 1
    if this case actually gets a court hearing or if it will be subject to "state secrets privilege" -- an executive power that lets the government effectively kill civil lawsuits deemed a threat to national security, even if the state is not a party to the suit.

    "After the privilege is properly invoked, the privileged material is completely removed from the litigation, and the court must determine how the unavailability of the privileged information affects the case."
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_Secrets_Privi lege

    IANAL, but I see the possibility of the details of just what information in ATT databases was accessed being deemed privileged material and thereby being disallowed as evidence.

  203. Re:Not illegal. by mesocyclone · · Score: 1

    What is this "domestic" wiretaps nonsense? Since the media has been spinning these wiretaps on *international* calls as "domestic," I guess you, like many others, fell for it.

    In fact, these are intercepts of communications crossing our international borders. Hardly the same as tapping your phone call to your girl friend or whatever. These international taps have *always* been legal and have been used for a very, very long time.

    As for wanting to be secret, are you not aware that members of congress, from both parties, were briefed regularly on this program? THAT is accountability. But if you have ever worked with secrets, you know that you want to minimize the number of people who are know them. And going to the FISA courts, which requires the involvement of many people for the complicated warrant process, not to mention the staff of those courts, greatly increasess the probability of a leak.

    Such leaks are quite damaging, as they reveal to the enemy the existence of the program, and to some extent, the power of the program. Given that this program has already prevented one Al Qaeda attack, the argument that the enemy already knew and took countermeasures doesn't work. But now they *really know*, thanks to irresponsible and illegal leakers of extremely sensitive information, and the highly irresponsible media.

    Wonderful.

    --

    The only good weather is bad weather.

  204. why a lack of precedent might be nice by Quadraginta · · Score: 1

    A brilliant post. May I add one comment, in re this:

    In fact, if the EFF loses this case, it will establish a precedent that what AT&T did is not illegal.

    Only if SCOTUS wants to set a precedent. They can easily settle any specific case without setting a precedent, if they feel like it.

    I only mention this because of one interesting fact: have you noticed that, despite all the huffing and puffing by Congress and the President in the last five decades or so, over precisely who has what authority over what when it comes to war, neither side has actually filed suit in a way guaranteed to get the issue settled once and for all? The Supreme Court has never really settled this issue in part because neither the Executive nor Legislative branch has seriously asked them to.

    And why not? Let us wax a trifle cynical, and suggest that perhaps the present ambiguity serves the interests of both branches. With the water muddied, so to speak, each can hope to angle for more turf, e.g. get away with stuff because of popular opinion that doesn't quite pass Constitutional muster. After all, both the White House and Capitol are inhabited by political animals, who are probably more confident of their ability to win the backing of popular opinion than of their ability to dispute arcane legal principles with nine gimlet-eyed humorless old sticks.

    Once the Supreme Court rules firmly on the issue, there will be far fewer ambigous dark corners where one side or the other can exercise some squatter's rights. Maybe, like spouses battling loudly in divorce Court, neither President nor Congress really wants the Court to make a final and complete ruling.

  205. Better quote by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
    Better Quote

    The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, selfappointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.

    James Madison, Federalist No. 47

    --
    Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
  206. Evidence Bush is out of control and his mind by buss_error · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Got this off CNN

    WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Peace activist Cindy Sheehan was arrested Tuesday in the House gallery after refusing to cover up a T-shirt bearing an anti-war slogan before President Bush's State of the Union address.

    Q. Since when is expressing a political opinion a crime in the United States?
    A.Since King George took over the White House.

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    1. Re:Evidence Bush is out of control and his mind by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      Got this off CNN

      WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Peace activist Cindy Sheehan was arrested Tuesday in the House gallery after refusing to cover up a T-shirt bearing an anti-war slogan before President Bush's State of the Union address.

      Q. Since when is expressing a political opinion a crime in the United States?
      A.Since King George took over the White House.


      Ummm...no.

      Cindy got herself in the hoosegow for attempting to disrupt the speech by throwing a banner and screaming, and refusing to stop when ordered to by the Congressional (note: not the police, not the Secret Service) security/police force internal to and responsible to Congress, not to the President.

      Cindy opened her jacket and displayed the propaganda T-shirt well before the banner-tossing and screaming, with no action taken until she escalated to outright disruption. The T-shirt was in extremely bad taste at such an event, but did not cause her to be arrested.

      But I suppose facts tend to take all the steam from a good hysterical partisan attack.

      There are plenty enough reasons to legitimately critisize.

      FUD with no factual basis only weakens you and your causes' or parties' credibility.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
  207. I'm out too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have contributed to the EFF (and the FSF, though that is another matter) for a number of years running.

    Fascinating. An EFF member who doesn't beleive in the concept of privacy or the rule of law.

    I believe in both. However US Citizens calling known or suspected terrorists hardly have a valid right to privacy.

    What else do I believe in? I believe in keeping personal records safe and unviewable without my authorization. I believe in the ability to make copies of any media for public commentary. I believe in the right to reverse engineer anything and to publish what I like on the web.

    If the EFF is going to become an electronic ACLU, as they seem to indicate with this case - then it is a sad day for all of us when money spent on real concerns is no longer going to said cases but instead going to fight a case already laid hopeless by the constitution itself. They might as well have taken my donation and set fire to it, and I will not tolerate my funds being put forth in a case that is so obviously unwinnable as this one. How much money will be spent tilting against this liberal windmill?

    I will send a letter with these same thoughts to the EFF urging them to abandon this course of action, and I urge fellow Slashdotters to do the same before the group marginalizes itself and leaves the people of the US truly defenseless against real attacks on our freedoms.

    1. Re:I'm out too by vidarh · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I believe in both. However US Citizens calling known or suspected terrorists hardly have a valid right to privacy.

      And that's the huge gaping hole in your argument. How do you know they are calling known or suspected terorists, when your government refuses to let anybody know who they are tapping on what basis but just ask you to trust them?

      Do I really have to point out to you that the US has at least once had a president who had no qualms about wiretapping his political enemies for political gain (Nixon, in case you completely lack history knowledge)? What makes you think you can trust the current and all future governments not to do the same.

      Keep in mind that regardless whether you think Bush is an asswipe or a true American hero, he will not be president forever, and any expansion of presidential powers will be there to exploit for future presidents too unless something is done to stop it.

      The scary part here is not that Bush wants to wiretap, but that he so obviously KNOW that these wiretaps are wide reaching, considering that he's decided it's worthwhile to avoid asking for permission from a court that hardly ever says no to any request, and where the requests can be filed after the fact.

      It takes an extreme naivety to think even for a second that nothing is fishy there.

      If these are truly people calling suspected terrorists, then warrants for these wiretaps would be granted with no problems.

      So why again, is it necessary to bypass the oversight measures put in place by congress?

    2. Re:I'm out too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "So why again, is it necessary to bypass the oversight measures put in place by congress?"

      Yet another AC here (wanna know something about tyranny of opinion? take a look at who goes AC).

      Anyway, you asked the question didn't you? And as so many others you seem to vehemently believe that there are no conceivable valid answers to that question. But is that the case? Or could it be that a large proportion of those voicing their opinion have no practical experience or knowledge and as such go into the oh so typical traps of couchpotato quarterbacking. I swear most act like they would make any bureaucrat from hell proud in their total lack of realism and practicality.

      I'm not discussing whether or not what was actually done (which we have rather few details about) was/is legal or not. You can find excellent discussion about that in replies by others (the thread where susanno is modded up) and it should be obvious that with the limited amount of information we have it is not clear-cut either way. No, what I'm posting about is whether or not it is conceivable that the use of FISA becomes impractical for valid reasons.

      Sometimes seconds count and not just one second but hours, days, weeks and even months of seconds. By this I do not mean that those involved necessarily couldn't have managed to put in motion a FISA-approval during the first 72 hours, only that those involved have much more important things to do. Yes that mostly includes inordinate amounts of attentive waiting.

      Counterargument: that can be solved by throwing manpower onto it.

      Counter counterargument: possibly for individual cases although both in individual cases and generally speaking there is a big argument against this because we're talking about covert surveillance -- increasing the number of people involved will always be a security risk in itself simply because of the increased numbers and the increased amount of information and details retransmitted. In other words: there are valid reasons why the puzzlers love throwing machines rather than people at problems...

      So far I'm not saying that the above arguments might be present in all cases, but if there is any justification at all then at least enough of the cases have a high degreee of probability of including those arguments. Many enough to make FISA impractical.

      Let's say you find three laptops, seven mobile phones, 20 SIMs, and a satelite phone after a priority raid in Afghanistan. The foundation aren't known for their IT provess and the laptops run w95/98 and the phones are all standard consumer models. Nada encryption. In total something close to 300 phone numbers are found locally on the devices and the CID/SIM tracking coughs up something like 3000 unique numbers from past calls. All the data is sent to the puzzlers who adds it in the bin and starts crossreferencing which results in the adding of let's say 100 numbers to the watchlist. The watchlist is always on.

      You do not know which of those 100 numbers, if any, are ever going to be used, if the present user will have any connection at all with the previous use of that number and so on (although the crosschecking has removed the obviously uninteresting ones). You cannot ask FISA for a warrant yet both because you can't and must not for security reasons give FISA all the numbers on the watchlist (far more than 100) and because most of the numbers on the watchlist will never be used before they fall of the list and lastly because no wiretapping has taken place at this point in time. Neither is it always possible to determine (at the time before the number is used) if the number is inside or outside the US

      As time goes on some of the numbers on the watchlist are used and tapped. In many cases it will become obvious after a small amount of analysis that it doesn't belong on the list and is taken off.

      But let's say we cherrypick a situation where the number is known to be inside the US and owned by a US citizen and has been in this citizens possesion for years. T

    3. Re:I'm out too by vidarh · · Score: 1
      You cannot ask FISA for a warrant yet both because you can't and must not for security reasons give FISA all the numbers on the watchlist

      And exactly at this point your reasoning fell apart. The very rationale for the existence of FISA is exactly that Congress wanted to ensure 1) oversight, and 2) that oversight would not compromise security. It is a secret court for a reason. It allows warrants to be obtained after the fact for a reason.

      Regardless, if the government truly has such a compelling reason for bypassing FISA, then they should have put that argument to Congress.

      As much as I dislike Bush, if he'd told Congress up front "sorry, but national security requires us to bypass FISA temporarily while you are addressing the concerns we're presenting, but we'll prepare documentation of the wiretaps as and when security allows" he would have earned a lot of respect. It would have opened the door for finding methods of oversight to address whatever concerns the government had, OR for Congress to decide that those concerns were invalid.

      In a pragmatic world you have to expect that sometimes rules may have to be broken, and sometimes that is ok. But big alarm bells should go off if you're not willing to be upfront about it with those charged with overseeing your powers.

      Anything else is a slippery slope towards a dictatorial police state.

  208. at&t suite by JohnVanVliet · · Score: 0

    it was my understanding that the patriat act forced the tellicoms to make there networks "easy for law enforcement/ fbi/nsa/cia/ ??? to tap into" ie code word for what bush is having the nsa do he(bush) is an ideit but he "may" be with in the law .

    --
    "I don't pitch OpenSUSE Linux to my friends, i let Microsoft do it for me
  209. Pass the buck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't see you answer what happened? Pass the buck, and you have only added to the ignorance.

  210. Why He can't get a warrant by Novice_Baiter · · Score: 1

    My guess is what the government is going after is the call records of all the numbers that the suspected terrorists were in possession of and then the call records of the "friend of the friend of the terrorist". That second list (much larger) would be a tough call for a judge to sign off on a warrant. As Mr.Bush senior was so fond of saying, then you connect the dots.

  211. Congress declares war...... by Rank_Tyro · · Score: 1

    ....not the President of the united states. Just trying to clarify a point.

    --
    Today's show is brought to you by the number 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0: 25
  212. Re:If AT&T is innocent, they have nothing to h by Myopic · · Score: 1

    the parent post was modded funny, which is how i read it, so i think you might have missed the tongue planted in the poster's cheek.

  213. To be fair... by hung_himself · · Score: 1
    we helped create the situation in 39 with the punative versailles treaty
    Wilson did try to advance his 14 points which were rejected by the old European guard (eg Clemenceau) who insisted on reparations/revenge from the Huns. Of course it's easy to be farsighted when you entered the war near the end and none of it took place anywhere near your home soil. Still, it's unfair to blame Americans for Versailles much as I sympathize with your Geopolitik viewpoints...
  214. Mod Parent Down by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    The grandparent may have been a little sensationalist, but the parent is a quintessential troll.

    Use mod points wisely. They cannot be unused.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  215. Illegal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, actually it happened by data mining the stream of foreign calls coming into the United States, from known terrorists. That's surveillance of foreign powers or the agents of foreign powers. The targets are foreign powers, and those foreign powers are communicating to within the US, ie agents of foreign powers.

    No, actually, without FISA oversight of these actions we can't be sure they are legal. I'm all for proper intelligence gathering, and keeping it secret as long as it stands to be valuable to keep it under wraps. Once it is no longer sensitive, it should be released. Even while it's sensitive, FISA should have oversight to prevent illegal activity on the part of the executive. That's the whole damn point of that Bill of Rights, and of the FISA law to boot.

    Selah.

  216. I don't think that's right. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    I mean, I could be wrong, IANAL, but I thought you had to show that you had been harmed and as for producing evidence - much like needing "probable cause" you can't use discovery to go fishing for evidence - you have to have some evidence a crime occurred before you sue.

    1. Re:I don't think that's right. by faedle · · Score: 1

      Didn't seem to stop SCO.

  217. LoL. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    1. The presumption of innocence does indeed extend to any defendant in a legal case, whether that defendant is a homeless man, Enron, or Bush.

    2. The constitution divides the government into 3 equal branches. It does not give Congress automatic control over the president. It also explicitly says that congress has no control over how the president chooses to defend the country. The courts, including the FISA court, have repeatedly ruled that that is true.

    3. You cannot "presume" that the President is in violation of anything, without evidence to support that "presumption".

    4. There is a difference between asking "have you any evidence" and saying "Bush was right".

    Basic logic is lost on some people.

    1. Re:LoL. by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      "It also explicitly says that congress has no control over how the president chooses to defend the country."

      Where does the Constitution say that?

    2. Re:LoL. by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1



      "1. The presumption of innocence does indeed extend to any defendant in a legal case, whether that defendant is a homeless man, Enron, or Bush."

      Ah ... True enough, but ... the presumption of innocence goes out the window when the accused goes on national TV and declares proudly that he commited the act. There is no question of guilt or innocence - the President admits the act. There is no question of legality or illegality. The only question is this: do the number of people who understand the constitution, the system of checks and balances, and ... most importantly ... the fact that a US President doesn't have the right to invoke special war-time privileges by standing on a pulpit and saying that the US is at war with terrorism, outweigh the number of people who will blindly and ignorantly believe whatever they are told, so long as it sounds patriotic?. Sadly, Osama Bin Laden is winning, and Bush is his (albeit unwitting) right hand man.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  218. Way to go, connecting the dots. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Except for the bit that the 4th ammendment only applies to Americans, not to foreigners.

    "international communications" are not protected by the 4th ammendment, nor by FISA, unless one of end of the call was a legal U.S. resident, on American soil.

    1. Re:Way to go, connecting the dots. by imthesponge · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately for Bush, he admitted to authorizing wiretapping of overseas calls.

      In the weeks following September the 11th, I authorized a terrorist surveillance program to detect and intercept al Qaeda communications involving someone here in the United States. This is a targeted program to intercept communications in which intelligence professionals have reason to believe that at least one person is a member or agent of al Qaeda or a related terrorist organization. The program applies only to international communications. In other words, one end of the communication must be outside the United States
  219. Geez dude, can you read your own citations? by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Please show me where that quote says anything about warrants?!?

    It says that the AG can authorize wiretaps! And guess what! That's exactly what people claim was going on!

    So, if Bush was asking the AG to approve of the wiretaps, he wasn't breaking the law!

  220. Which of us is covering their ears? by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    1. You offer no evidence that the article in the NYT is linked to warrantless wiretaps.

    2. Read your own links. Hitchens never claims he was personally wiretapped.

    3. Please provide any evidence, any evidence at all, that Amanpour was wiretapped.

    The only evidence you've presented is evidence that you lack reading comprehension.

  221. Not quite. by raehl · · Score: 1

    The pinnacle of an oppressive regime is the ability to sit behind closed doors, inside of protective walls, while shooting at the underclass demonstrators outside.

  222. Maybe I just need some higher learning.. but... by Churla · · Score: 1
    Doesn't the post office have the right to inspect and open any package it suspects of breaking the law of it's use? And it's the only body responsible for deciding what to open adn what not to open.

    AT&T also have the right to inspect any package (in this case conversation) passing through it's network that it suspects of breaking the law?

    What is to stop them from simply using the NSA to determine what to monitor? Or allowing the NSA to be their monitoring branch?

    I think the golden rule here is if you want a conversation to be private, dont use an unencrypted public means of transmission. Just like e-mail.

    On the front of the EFF and it's lawsuit frenzy. I also agree that it dilutes the legal power of the EFF to go after cases which are going to be "hail marys" to win. The reason he is if they lose this case it ALSO sets a precedent which AT&T and the NSA can use in the future.

    --
    I'm a fiscal conservative, it's a pity we don't have a political party anymore
    1. Re:Maybe I just need some higher learning.. but... by faedle · · Score: 2, Informative

      AT&T also have the right to inspect any package (in this case conversation) passing through it's network that it suspects of breaking the law?

      No. The Telecommunications Privacy Act (TCPA) specifically prevents common carriers and local exchange carriers from this activity.

      And, technically, the rank-and-file employees of the USPS don't have that ability either. Only Postal Inspectors, who are fully deputized federal law enforcement officers, have that ability.

  223. No warrant required by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    No, under several situations here the feds dont need the warrant up front. They can get it AFTER they trash your place.

    Wont debate if its morally right or wrong for them to do so, but they do have that power now to do it legally.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  224. Re:"if you're doing nothing wrong, then you have n by Pollardito · · Score: 1

    if everyone is a criminal, then you're living in a police state. maintaining a status quo where everyone can be arrested for something they've done if the authorities feel that you're interesting is a great way to keep people under your thumb. the only sense of that i've had in the U.S. is the speed limit situation (where it's basically understood that lots and lots of people are going to be driving above the "limit"), and i'm not sure that is extreme enough to warrant a police state label.

  225. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by swillden · · Score: 1

    What do you call a person within the boarders of a country, not a citizen of the country, during the time of war

    What war is that? Did I miss the Congressional declaration?

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  226. No, the real problem is that people remember Nixon by gnomicide · · Score: 1
    Everytime the government puts up a security camera we have to listen to constant whining.

    "Oh no, it's big brother. Oh no, what would Nixon or J. Edgar Hoover use this for."

    I have some sad news. Hoover and Nixon are dead. And 9/11 happened because people were still obsessed with them.

  227. Oh, I get it! by NickFortune · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Instead the NSA has to move the wiretapping from easy (ie, AT&T handing them the keys) to a bit more covert (ie, splicing in somewhere remote) which will cost tons more to the taxpayer than the original plan.

    So, logically, if you put a lock on your front door, you're only making life difficult for the burglars. I mean the professionals will get in whatever you do, so all your lock does is force them to go out and buy expensive new equipment. Of course, they then have to pay for that equipment, which they do by burgling more houses, to the detriment of us all.

    Clearly the only patriotic thing to do is to take all your possessions and pile them in the middle of the street, so as not to overly inconvenience the working criminal.

    I know! Why don't you run a pilot scheme? You can report back in a few weeks and tell us how much crime dropped in your area.

    --
    Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  228. Osama cell phone leak by newspaper is urban myth by mencik · · Score: 1

    See this article or this article for more details.

  229. SECRET DECODER RING! by autocracy · · Score: 1

    perl -e 'while(<>){print map(pack("B*",$_),split(/ /))}'

    --
    SIG: HUP
  230. They certainly don't seem to be winning. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    either.

    1. Re:They certainly don't seem to be winning. by faedle · · Score: 1

      No, but there's a difference between being able to file a lawsuit and winning one.

      Ask any of the people sued by the RIAA what their chances of winning were.

      Increasingly, the mere threat of a lawsuit is enough to get one side to pay up, even if they have a reasonable chance of winning should it come to trial. Lawyers ain't cheap, and the mere act of walking into a civil courtroom will cost you $15,000. Even if you get the trial thrown out at the first hearing.

  231. ... mmmkay ... by everphilski · · Score: 1

    Yeah, let them know that because someone accused them of wrongdoing that has yet to be substantiated in the court of law, you are cancelling services. You will really come off as being the intelligent customer they want. They will probably be thinking "good riddance, another idiot we don't have to support" ... (not to mention the profit margins on consumer services are slim: even if the entire /. populace canceled services they wouldn't be feeling it)

  232. Re: Sensationalism? by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Hey buddy, if you object to sensationalism when some cries out that their libertties and fourth ammendment rights are being violated, then you should be prepared to ban advertising, radio, and TV. Talk about media hype.

    This story about Osama's cell phone being tapped and somehow the NYT compromised national security is rediculuous (and the last time I checked the first ammendment still said "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances". So until Bush and folks like you succeed in repealing the first ammendment it cann't be illegal to publish such a story and hence commit a crime in doing so.

        Only until recently have there even been any cell towers in Afganistan and these are found only in a few cities. Even if he had a cell phone it wouldn't have worked. Stop puking out the party line and try thinking on your own. Yes, it will be incoherent at first, but its time you took some baby steps in that direction.

  233. Re:What can we, as individuals, really do? rigB0xn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    vote

    sure vote. also if you have to serve on a jury and make law.
    remove the electricicity from voting, otherwise you are the one that is insane not me.

    whatever you say make my answer be the opposite
    you can't vote electronically

    vote box
    jury box

    a fsck nightmare

  234. Re:Not illegal. by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

    One of my friends suggests that if it were him, he'd be busy tapping the phones of Administration lackeys, to stop the leaks about extradition, secret prisons, and public exposure of CIA operatives' identities, and only after the plumbers have tightened things up to stop legitimate criticism do they go after their actual enemies.

    --
    Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
  235. Re:"if you're doing nothing wrong, then you have n by m50d · · Score: 1

    The problem is that people conflate "good" and "legal". If you've done nothing wrong, that doesn't imply anything about whether you've done anything illegal.

    --
    I am trolling
  236. Did they even bother to READ the Constitution? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    Article I, Section 9:

    "The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases or Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.

    I'd say that terrorists invading the USA to endanger the public safety may require that the Writ of Habeas Corpus be suspended in these cases.

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    1. Re:Did they even bother to READ the Constitution? by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      What does habeus corpus have to do with wiretapping?

    2. Re:Did they even bother to READ the Constitution? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      habeus corpus means that warrants have to be issued for wiretapping and searching. I guess you are just ignorant of how our laws work, aren't you?

      In cases of national crisis such as invasions or rebellions of the USA, and threats to public safety, the President can ignore habeus corpus and elements of it like warrants needed for wiretapping to prevent threats to the public. Warrants and habeus corpus, are really privilages and not freedoms or rights, according to Section 1, article 9 of the Constitution. Therefore taking away priviliages is not the same as taking away rights and freedoms, to think otherwise goes against the Constitution on issues such as the ones the nation is currently facing.

      This was used before in the Whiskey Rebellon, and the Civil War. This is not something new that George W. Bush just invented, our founding fathers put it into the Constitution for issues such as these. As long as terrorists keep making threats of attacking the USA, the national emergancy still stands and George W. Bush is justified in warrantless searches and wiretaps. To say otherwise violates the Constitution.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  237. Mountain out of a mole hill by Morinaga · · Score: 1
    While attempting to be as politically agnostic as possible with this whole thing, I really don't see what the problem is. For those that are open minded enough to set aside their political hatred please ask yourself the following questions.

    What if it works? What if this wire tapping is actually effective and it's being properly briefed to other branches of the federal government so it's not soley overseen by the executive branch?

    The FISA law was established in 1978. At the time it was designed for the US to monitor Soviet spys in the US. It was an era of rotary phones. Today It's way more complicated and dynamic with satellite, wireless and Internet communication. Today people have way more control over how information is distributed and how quickly the self identifying nature of those communications are changed. Getting to my point and question, what if Al Queda knows about FISA (it's no secret), how does the NSA track operratives that change their email address every 30 seconds? What if these legal attacks are successfull and the NSA has to chase down these dynamic identifiers but can't effectively do their job because they have to follow FISA? What if Al Queda knows this and even with communications outside the country they simply CC some random US email to implement some FISA protocol?

    If you agree that intelligence agencies should act with alacrity in these situations is not the oversight of congress enough? Or, should the administration keep IP logs etc... that might number in the thousands let's say, retroactively to FISA so they might obtain the 1000 warrants for that tracking?

    A related power to the use of force is the ability to gain intelligence about the enemy so one might use that force as effectively as possible. Presidents since at least Franklin Roosevelt have used the authority driven by the use of force to intercept communications by members of the enemy. Do you believe the authority given to the President does not allow him to order such taps in communication regardless of a non wartime law? If your answer is "no", then it might interest you to know that the FISA review board themselves believe it does, http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/doj/fisa/fiscr111802 .html.
    We take for granted that the President does have that authority and, assuming that is so, FISA could not encroach on the President's constitutional power.

  238. It's accountability, stupid by hey! · · Score: 1

    The kind of thing they say they are doing is exactly what I would be doing in their place. Nobody requires an explanation for that, and acting as if it is so is misleading.

    The problem isn't what they say they're doing. It's that whatever thy are doing, they are concealing it from mechanisms specifically designed to keep such activities focused on legitimate ends.

    Logically, this isn't proof of course that they're doing something other than what they claim. But given that the FISA mechanisms are so permissive, there's no obvious reason it should not be used.

    That's what I think they should explain.

    (1) If a FISA warrant is a burden to legitimate intel gathering, tell us why so we can change it.
    (2) If not FISA, then how are you and future adminsitrations going to be prevented from doing all the abuses FISA was designed to prevent?

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  239. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by Politburo · · Score: 1

    First, there is no declared war. Second, FISA defines these people as "Agents of a Foreign Power", and warrants are not required to wiretap agents of a foreign power, as long as they are not also US Persons (citizens or legally admitted aliens). Put down the herring.

  240. Expectations of privacy... by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    This is my understanding; and it may be wrong:

    When something crosses a national border, all bets about privacy are off - or at least greatly reduced. This is why Customs can search your bags, your FedEx deliveries and your mail when it crosses the U.S. border.

    The way the FISA law is structured, if one of the persons in the call is a legal U.S. resident on U.S. soil then the 4th amendment applies and a warrant is required; but if the person is in the country illegally, or if the call starts and ends internationally, there is no 4th amendment protection and the president is free to act as he sees fit to defend the country (under article II).

    IIRC, Europeans have, in recent years, tightened their laws to raise the level of privacy in international (or maybe just intra-EU) mail, I don't know about phone calls.

  241. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    He only informed a very select few members of Congress, and we don't know how much he told them nor whether or not what he told them is true. After all, he's acted to prevent oversight that would allow fact checking. We do know however that he's presented tainted evidence to Congress before, and look where that got us. We also know that he's lied about wiretaps before.

    But he loves Jesus and thats all that matters. See, as long as you accept jesus into your heart,sinning is ok. In fact, the bigger the sin, the better! Isn't Jesus great?!

  242. Bzzzzzzzt nice try Bush apolagist by mrraven · · Score: 1

    The FBI and the military are spying on non violent politcal activists now. Given that we have Alito on the supreme court who supports the power of the "unitary executive," and given that Bush lied to us about always getting a warrant before engaging in phone tapping (in New Mexcio 2004 google it), it's utterly foolish to allow Bush to have the power to spy on anyone in violation of FISA. Lists of links showing Bush's FBI and military spy on domestic activists now from a post to William Arkin's excellent early warning blog at the Washington Post: http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/earlywarning/2006/ 01/nsa_expands_its.html

    American Media Dodging U.N. Surveillance Story By Norman Solomon Media Beat March 6, 2003 http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2226&printer_fr iendly=1

    ###

    The unholy trinity of electronic snooping: Bolton, Negroponte and Hayden By Wayne Madsen Online Journal May 5, 2005

    ###

    NSA spy program hinges on state-of-the-art technology By Shane Harris National Journal January 20, 2006 http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=33 212&printerfriendlyVers=1&

    ### NSA Gave Other U.S. Agencies Information From Surveillance Fruit of Eavesdropping Was Processed and Cross-Checked With Databases By Walter Pincus Washington Post Sunday, January 1, 2006; A08 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2005/12/31/AR2005123100 808_pf.html

    ### New Documents Show FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force Targeting Peaceful Protest Activity in Colorado ACLU Press Release December 8, 2005 http://www.aclu.org/safefree/spying/22884prs200512 08.html

    ### New Documents Show FBI Targeting Environmental and Animal Rights Groups Activities as "Domestic Terrorism" ACLU Press Release December 20, 2005 http://www.aclu.org/safefree/spying/23124prs200512 20.html

    ### Secret Pentagon Unit May Have Gathered and Kept Unauthorized Files on Thousands of Innocent Individuals and Organizations Newsweek Jan 23, 2006 http://www.yubanet.com/artman/publish/printer_3073 0.shtml

    ### Protesters Subjected To 'Pretext Interviews' FBI Memo Shows No Specific Threats By Dan Eggen Washington Post Wednesday, May 18, 2005; A04 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2005/05/17/AR2005051701 240_pf.html http://www.aclu-co.org/docket/200406/JTTF_file_sar ah_bardwell_08-02-04.pdf

    ### Battlespace America: The new Pentagon can peruse intelligence on U.S.citizens and send Marines down Main Street Peter Byrne Mother Jones May/June 2005 Issue http://www.motherjones.com/cgi-bin/print_article.p l?url=http://www.motherjon es.com/news/outfront/2005/05/battlespace_america.h tml

    --
    Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  243. TY EFF by PCCybertek · · Score: 1

    Thank (insert supreme being or any name here) for John Barlow and The EFF! Atleast not all Americans have stuck there collective head in the sand.

  244. You obviously didn't read it.. by imthesponge · · Score: 1

    It says that the AG can wiretap without a court order (i.e. a warrant) only if "there is no substantial likelihood that the surveillance will acquire the contents of any communication to which a United States person is a party." He has to get a court order if the conversation involves someone in the US.

    Okay, Bush wasn't breaking the law himself; he just asked his AG to break the law for him.

  245. Re:Illegal and extremely scary if you know about F by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    But he loves Jesus and thats all that matters. See, as long as you accept jesus into your heart,sinning is ok. In fact, the bigger the sin, the better! Isn't Jesus great?!

    Please stop trying to support my argument. I'm a Christian, and while do I think the right-wing severely abuses the teaching of Jesus, I find your bigotry more offensive.

    Honestly, this is why debating politics with people who disagree with you is more fun than with people who do agree with you. People who disagree with you don't have the ability to embrass you and make your side look bad with their own bad reasons for agreeing with you.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  246. Ludicrous Comparison by Nazmun · · Score: 1

    Comparing Bin Laden and al quaeda with Hitler and germany is simply ludicrous. IT would only be appropriate if Hitler was a militant who never had control of Germany.

    We appeased and allowed hitler and germany to take over countries militarily and officially. Bin Laden has no such power, al quaeda is not a nation.

    While he is not a common criminal he's also not a leader of any country. Treating the al quaeda situation as a real war will get us no where. We can't conquer a mindset with bombs. Killing all the top members of Al Quaeda including Bin laden will not extinguish the problem.

    A similar thing can be said of Iran. Iran has yet to call for or conquer it's neighboring countries like Germany did. We appeased germany by allowing them to conquer foreign nations. Trying to stop a countries inevitable technological advancement is equally ludicrous. A nuclear bomb is almost ancient tech by modern standards. It's hella powerful but it's far from new technology. Long range delivery systems and the sophisticaion of the nukes themselves is a different case.

    --
    Hmmm... Pie...
  247. There you go. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    And since no one has any evidence that any kind of crime has been committed, why are we spending so much time discussing unsubstantiated rumors as if they are established fact?

  248. Saddam has more credibility re: WMD in Iraq by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

    Don't know much about Galloway, and it doesn't matter. The pro-Iraq war is completely unhinged. If you can find a straw man to make it seem more hinged, well, goody for you.

    I really wish I could implicitly trust the word of the president of the U.S.A. more than that of a megalomaniacal, murderous tyrant. But I can't, because Bush lied about the intelligence support for WMDs. He wanted a war, he did what he needed to get it. Bush now says he would have invaded without even that excuse.

    A war of whim and fantasy, but real people are getting killed. We have probably killed more Iraqis than Saddam did. Those car bombs the bad guys set off don't compare with the bombs we drop or the artillary shells. They are landing in crowded neighborhoods. The Pentagon has no credibility with civilian casualty statistics. It is probably inevitable that they will lie their asses off to shore up support for the war.

    1. Re:Saddam has more credibility re: WMD in Iraq by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      So Bush lied, but Kerry, Clinton (both), et al didn't lie when they said the same things?

    2. Re:Saddam has more credibility re: WMD in Iraq by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

      "We know for a fact..."

      "We know what disarmament looks like, and this isn't it."

      I forget the part where Kerry invaded Iraq.

  249. How about undercutting our way of life? by Anyd · · Score: 1

    What about those which died in previous wars to protect our civil liberties and way of life?

    My real problem with Bush, is that he seems much too eager to sacrifice our liberties to try and secure a relatively small amount of safety (Hasn't the American death toll in Iraq surpassed that of 9/11 already?) I honestly believe that the path he's taking us down will lead to far more many deaths than any terrorist attack could. Take Palestine... they actually elected a government of what we call "terrorists", and they did it for a reason. The U.S. can't invade every Muslim country on this planet.

    Now lets take me for an example. Bush said that there is "constructive debate, and debate which aides the enemy." And he went on to classify anti-war debate as non-constructive. Therefor I'm aiding the enemy. I've lived abroad since 9/11 and the Iraq war, and I've never been shy about my stance on the war. Therefore my communications are foreign communications which are aiding terrorism. Next stop for me, a military trial. I don't honestly think that they're going to send me to Guantanamo, but it scares me that they could.

    So next time you blindly support a leader as you march our soldiers to their deaths (in search of WMDS,) remember that's not patriotism. Patriotism is trying to make our country better.

    And one more for the road;
    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Ben Franklin

  250. It's not the wiretapping, it's the lack of a warra by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Okay, so the EFF sues AT&T for letting them do the wiretapping. Lets just say they win. Do you really think they will stop tapping the phones? Instead the NSA has to move the wiretapping from easy (ie, AT&T handing them the keys) to a bit more covert (ie, splicing in somewhere remote) which will cost tons more to the taxpayer than the original plan.


    It's legal to tap the phones with a secret spy court warrant - they have a national security court filled with retired judges who agree to 99.99 percent of all requests for such wiretaps.

    And, you can start wiretapping 72 hours before you need the court warrant, and it's still legal.

    The problem is that - unconstitutionally - they have been wiretapping without a court warrant.

    You'll still never see the warrant, nor will you ever be told such a wiretap existed, nor will you be able to use a Freedom Of Information request to find out if such a warrant ever was issued.

    But it would be legal.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  251. Re:It's not the wiretapping, it's the lack of a wa by gamenfo · · Score: 1

    My original post was somewhat tongue in cheek, but what you say is true...
     
    The thing is, since the NSA or other agencies can legally get a tap without asking for 72 hours, how can AT&T be liable for anything? They just have to go along with whatever they are told because they dont know if the NSA is planning on actually getting a warrant or not.

  252. Re:It's not the wiretapping, it's the lack of a wa by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    The thing is, since the NSA or other agencies can legally get a tap without asking for 72 hours, how can AT&T be liable for anything?

    Valid point, but AT&T is joint and separably liable in that they didn't require to see the warrant - which isn't shown to the person being wiretapped or released to the media but is physically viewable by the firm in which the wiretap is placed (e.g. AT&T).

    If they had requested to see the warrant by email, phone, or in person and noted on a log that they were refused it, then they would get off scot free.

    But they - apparently - didn't even ask, just like the good comrades they are when the KGB shows up.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  253. Does this BS rhetoric usually give you a "win"? by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

    And since no one has any evidence that any kind of crime has been committed, why are we spending so much time discussing unsubstantiated rumors as if they are established fact?

    Because if the corroborated rumors are true, then there has been a major violation of the Constitutional rights of many, many US Citizens--the thought of which, surpisingly, bothers many, many US citizens. In the forefront of concerns is that the elected branch chartered, by oath, with enforcing laws, specifically Constitutional law, is the alleged violator. In fact the alleged violator has admitted that the program exists and made claims regarding the nature of the program that do not align with previous public claims. Many consider that worth discussing. Odd, huh?

    This cat isn't squeezing its narrow behind back in the bag. You'll have to do better than arguing that we can't discuss the legality of a program classified as top secret because of its classification. That's simply not realistic, and it's quite a dangerous idea for our system of representative government.

  254. Article 2. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    The constitution gives the president control of the defense of the country, it doesn't give it to congress, or say that congress can limit his control.

    Now, that does not mean there are no limits on executive power. In later court cases, the Supreme Court has ruled that the authority granted in Article 2 does not supercede the rights granted in Article 4; thus the restriction that he can wiretap foreigners all he wants, but that he needs a warrant to wiretap Americans on U.S. soil.

  255. And yet, he still has an out. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    I notice that he did not say "I chose not to get a warrant."

    Seeing how many FISA cases there have been since 9-11, he could argue that he was referring to a case where a warrant was acquired. In addition, if the person in question was not in the U.S. legally, then the FISA warrant requirement does not apply.

    That admission - while suggestive - is not hard evidence.

  256. I'm not looking for a "win" I'm looking for... by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    the truth - and the only thing I've found is people making hyperventilated claims with no substance behind them.

    If these "anonymous NSA sources" decide to step up to the plate then we can actually judge the merits of their charges. If someone comes up with something more substantial than empty claims that the NSA was eavesdropping on Christopher Hitchens, I'll give them a listen.

    Until then, I give this hysteria no more credence than any other conspiracy theory.

    1. Re:I'm not looking for a "win" I'm looking for... by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

      I'm not looking for a "win" I'm looking for...the truth

      No, you've advocated for not discussing the matter at all due to an alledged "lack of evidence". Just how does one actively seek truth through inaction?

      If these "anonymous NSA sources" decide to step up to the plate then we can actually judge the merits of their charges...yada, yada

      The NSA source who helped the NYT break this story is not anonymous. Google is your friend.

      I don't want to have to judge the merits of these charges. Congress and the courts must oversee executive branch activities. It's one of the reasons we send them to DC. That they've abdicated this responsability deeply shames both parties--or at least it should.

      Until then, I give this hysteria no more credence than any other conspiracy theory.

      Way to "look for the truth". "You're doing a helluva job, clowny."

  257. Only 312TB? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    So, ~312 times more data than I have on one of my computers today, which is ~312 times more data than I had on one of my computers 10 years ago. Saying someone has "too much" data when your only measure is the byte size is a bit of an oversimplification. And it's not exactly easy to meet demand if you can't analyze your traffic to figure out where the demand is coming from.

    I like my privacy, but the idea that a phone company wouldn't aggregate data about calls made on its system is just naive. What about a shipping company? Should they just guess how many trucks they're likely to need? "Looks like we've got a crapload of boxes piling up.. we should probably order more trucks."

  258. The thing is... by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    He didn't admit to warrantless wiretaps of U.S. residents. He admitted to authorizing a wiretap of a "suspected al Queda member". FISA's warrant requirements and the 4th amendment only apply when the person being tapped is legally in the country.

    His statement is suggestive, I agree, but it doesn't rise to the level of hard evidence.

    1. Re:The thing is... by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

      FISA's warrant requirements and the 4th amendment only apply when the person being tapped is legally in the country

      Actually, in past cases, the SCOTUS has held that aliens are also afforded Constitutional protections in domestic jurisdictions. No, I won't google this for you either.

  259. Google may be my friend, but I notice by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    you're too lazy to do it yourself.

    As for letting Congress judge the merits of these charges - excellent idea. I'd like to point out that they have not yet done so, though you seem to have made up your own mind.

  260. I'm not your research assistant by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

    Lazy? Maybe. Relevant? No.

    I know the guy's name already, I don't need to google it. You're supposedly the truth-seeker. Go forth and seek it, then...or quit lying about your goal.

    I'd like to point out that they have not yet done so

    You could, but it would be redundant, as I pointed that out in my last comment. Look up "abdicate" if you're confused.

  261. blowjobs and terrorists by dean.collins · · Score: 1

    I'm still in "Shock and Awe" that the US President was caught spying on the US population illegally without court orders and that the US media has pretty much swept it under the rug in under a few weeks. This certainly isn't the general public (or congress) of the Nixon era...if tricky dick was in politics today he wouldn't even get a censure...let alone booted out in shame. Clinton gets a blowjob in the oval office.....gets in trouble big time, Bush breaks the law on a massive and unpresecedented scale - no one says a words because that would be seen as aiding and abetting the 'bad guy' terrorists. Makes me want to move to Canada. Cheers, Dean

  262. Why they didn't change the law... by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1
    My best guess ( without knowing how the secret program operated ) is that they're randomly intercepting any and all foreign-routed calls ( and maybe others ), in such a way that even the most pro-government judge would hesitate to authorize so many unfocused, unfounded wiretaps, and for whatever reason, they decided that asking Congress for permission to do what they wanted either wasn't needed or wouldn't work. They're claiming it's not needed, but they might only be right with Alito on the supreme court...

    http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2005/12/20 051219-1.html via
    http://billmon.org/archives/002349.html, emphasis my own:

    Q: If FISA didn't work, why didn't you seek a new statute that allowed something like this legally?

    GONZALES: That question was asked earlier. We've had discussions with members of Congress, certain members of Congress, about whether or not we could get an amendment to FISA, and we were advised that that was not likely to be -- that was not something we could likely get, certainly not without jeopardizing the existence of the program, and therefore, killing the program. And that -- and so a decision was made that because we felt that the authorities were there, that we should continue moving forward with this program.
    --
    Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    1. Re:Why they didn't change the law... by javaxman · · Score: 1
      My best guess ( without knowing how the secret program operated ) is that they're randomly intercepting any and all foreign-routed calls ( and maybe others )

      According to a TV news story that I caught a tiny, tiny part of this past weekend, your guess is correct. The news was that they're using a voice-processing program to scan potentially thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands of calls, of course flagging any call with key words ( like what? Arabic language? accents? "nukes" ? who knows... ) with flagged calls are later listened to by people.

      Basically, the worst-case scenario, something very, very few, if any, politicians ( and an even smaller percentage of voters ) would ever dare back.

      This is no surprise, of course... really, I asking specifically the knee-jerk far-right military commando type I'd replied to that question, along with the more important "how easy do you want a wiretap to be" question... hoping in vain to make him think about it, or at least to hear him admit he thinks the Fourth Amendment should be repealed or othewise rendered ineffective.

      In the unlikely event that someone later reads this, just for the record I'll quote that little gem that is designed to protect our true freedom here:

      Amendment IV
      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.

      That seems like it should be pretty clear, and the condition of probable cause easy enough to meet; I'm not sure why people have such a hard time with that. Maybe they just hate freedom, or don't like our country or something, I don't know...

  263. OT: Re:Why they didn't change the law... by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

    Right! Why is there debate about "shall not be violated". Papers and effects seems to obviously cover correspondence. Sheesh.

    No Citizen is above the law. If the President must violate the law to uphold his oath of office, then he must submit to the punishment for his crimes. I mean, if he must fall on his sword to "protect the Union", so be it.

    --
    Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.