Telecoms Facing $50 Billion Lawsuit for Wiretaps
hdtv writes "According to a MarketWatch article, BellSouth Corp and Verizon Telecommunications are facing lawsuits seeking billions of dollars in damages for the decision to turn over calling records to the government. The damages amount to $1,000 per person, whose records were turned over to Feds. According to the article, 'consumers could sue the phone service providers under communications privacy legislation that dates back to the 1930s. Relevant laws include the Communications Act, first passed in 1934, and a variety of provisions of the Electronic Communications and Privacy Act, including the Stored Communications Act, passed in 1986.'"
at the very least, is it grounds to cancel your contract without paying the fee? These companies only listen to money.
I expect the lawsuits to collapse, or at least gimp along on two broken legs at that point.
"National Security" has become the new "We Do This For Our Children".
*Stomps away in disgust*
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
The unrest against the goverment's tyranny is reaching a critical point.
Expect another 'terrorist act' real soon to distract us from the issue of our eroding civil rights.
____
~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
Why fret over privacy loss if you aren't doing anything illegal/covert?
Powered by caffeine and sugar; BSD
What we need is an itelligent judge that isn't afraid to intepret the law and who will stand up for the American citizens of this country. I don't deny that we're in a time where we need some kind of safety net, but we don't need to give our liberties. If this all keeps going on the way it has been, the terrorists the gov't is seeking so hard to stop will win by splitting America apart.
That which does not kill me only postpones the inevitable.
Or the Government that bullied them into handing over the information? Though I imagine the telecom companies are an easier target, so where the money is, so goes the lawyers.
Go ahead and call me unreliable; reliable is just a synonym for predictable.
Sue the government AND the telecoms!
fledgear the archer
Phew glad I work for Qwest since it looks like we were the only ones to refuse that request http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-05-12 -hayden-support_x.htm?POE=NEWISVA
will I get a 0 score again, if again I ask if a server blew up
US goverment intervenes in Joe Citizen Vs. BellSouth, AT&T and Verizon.
When do I get my check?
Be better in bed. Wikiafterdark!
I love the smell of barbeque in the morning.
The telecoms in question (Verizon, SBC/AT&T and BellSouth) handed records over whereas Qwest did not. Assuming there was bullying, it wasn't enough to convince Qwest's previous CEO in the past and current CEO. More likely the other three RBOCs handed over the records with no questions asked.
First after a call to AT&T, where I had a nice 15 minute talk with the customer service representative (she was aware there was something going on and had some canned response for reporters, but didn't understand what the "big deal" (her words) was, until I explained it to her. By the end of the conversation, she agreed that this was pretty scary... or at least pretended to, but she sounded sincere.) who told me that only one other customer had called her to complain (about 2pm).
Second, I'm cancelling my phone service w/AT&T and I will let them know exactly why. I'm switching to an Internet phone. Now, I know that this may not be much safer, especially considering any call INTO a bad phone company would be logged and reported to the NSA. (This is why Qwest customers aren't safe if they call anyone who uses AT&T, for example)... but if enough people cancel in disgust, who knows, maybe they'll get the message.
Third, I'm donating to the EFF. They need our help more than ever. And vice-versa.
Fourth, I'm ready, willing, and able to join any class action lawsuits against these companies. Even if they get thrown out.
Fifth, not an email. Not a letter. But a phone call to my state Senators and Representative.
Also #1: Has anyone put together a unified wiki/forum trying to "reverse-engineer" the NSA's data mining program from published reports + what IT folks & mathematicians think is possible? I bet with enough collaboration and discussion, the net can figure out pretty close to what they're doing with this massive database/total information awareness program (sounds a bit like they're creating associations between clusters of people, much like Amazon does when they profile you to recommend new products... The more info they have, the more they can cross-reference, looking for patterns and comparing with patterns of known profiles (criminals, political enemies, etc.).. I'd be really interested in learning more about what people think this program is and how it might work, from a technological point of view.
Also #2: Merry Fitzmas
$1000.00
I RTFA and neither your summary nor MarketWatch arcticle discloses who filed the fucking suit. Dumb fucks.
Yeah, I too am a dumb fuck for expecting better from Slashdot. Ugh.
Straight from the article:
AT&T Corp., BellSouth Corp and Verizon Telecommunications are facing lawsuits seeking billions of dollars in damages for the decision to turn over calling records to the government, the New York Times reported Saturday.
The New York Times is the source for this BS, not Marketwatch. Funny how the New York Times published the same surveillance story four months ago, yet the USA Today rehashed it and now it's front page new again?
Anyway, according to the New York Times America is losing the war in Iraq. According to the New York Times, tax cuts are hurting America. According to the New York Times, the US economy is in the toilet despite record job growth, record economic growth and great performance by almost every other metric.
The New York Times seems to be at arms with reality, but this is slashdot so hey let's just leave their tarnished name off the front page.
You're a law abiding citizen. You've never ever done anything wrong. You support your country. You're a role model.
An old school buddy comes into town and calls you. You meet, talk a little, what happened, how life changed, what you did, you got married, got a job, whatever and other things. Everything's cool, except for one thing: He got into some shady business. He was selling some equipment to someone who turned said equipment into a bomb, and a day later some parts of town go down in flames.
Next day, a SWAT team crashes into your living room, pins you, your wife, your kids, and drag you away for questioning. After all, you were talking to someone who supplied bomb material. Were you with him? What did you two talk about? You've even been seen with him!
A few days later you're released. Maybe still under surveillance, but they didn't find any evidence pointing to you. But your neighbors saw what happened. A SWAT team kicking down your door, dragging you off... why? They stop talking to you. After all, would YOU want to be seen with a suspect? Maybe with the chance of seeing someone SWAT down your door? Better not, better be safe than sorry...
Same for your kids, your wife...
Can you imagine now why privacy COULD be a good thing? Not only despite, but BECAUSE you don't do anything wrong?
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
...tell me A) where and how to sign up, and B) honestly, and not as a partisan / America suxxx troll, what the chances are of the judge and juries voting with their inner moralities, and not being blinded by political "moralities" along the way?
Thanks in advance -
~Nugneant
Did they hand the info over because a law forced them to, or did they because the gov came over and said "you better do"?
Big difference.
If there's a law that forces them, the telcos can't be held responsible. If they did without any force, sue them into the ground.
It could be VERY interesting if we have conflicting laws here. In that case, fire the dumbasses who created contradicting laws.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Idiot
Relevant laws include the Communications Act, first passed in 1934, and a variety of provisions of the Electronic Communications and Privacy Act, including the Stored Communications Act, passed in 1986.
You mean the president hasn't set aside these laws yet? It's not like we didn't authorize him to do so or anything. A person has to be pretty naive not to believe that all this was happening before the 2004 elections. And in light of this, Bush would STILL get re-elected if he could run. Too bad nobody will nominate and elect a decent alternative. I would consider that voting for the major party is an act of treason. We are the accomplices in all these violations. Let's see if the other shoe drops and we find the country to be placed under martial law very soon now. Especially if the crooks think the election might turn out poorly.
What?
If we ignore lawyer fees, this leaves 50,000 people with claims against these phone companies. Given the more realistic 30 million lawyer fees, that's still 20,000 individuals who are aware that their privacy has illegally been breached.
As a customer of Bellsouth, should I just assume that they violated my privacy? What does someone do to check on this? Of couse, given the small payout amount, it would be nice to hit these companies with as many claims as possible.
"And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
1 John 4:14
Because of the six degrees of seperation rule. Odds are someone you know is a communist. If you don't know anyone who is a communist odds are you know someone who knows someone who is a communist... etc etc etc. If you are unwilling to divulge the name of any communists, and since obviously by the rule of six degrees of seperation you at least know someone who knows someone who knows someone ect... who is a communist, you must be a communist. QED.
Just replace communist with terrorist and ask your self again why the right to privacy is important. Granted six degrees of seperation is just to illistrate a point, and it may be possible that there is somoene other there who doesn't know anyone who has ever commited a crime, disagreed with the current political climate, or commited a copyright violation. All of which including the sale of counterfeit t-shirts (oklahoma city bombing according to us customs was funded by the sale of counterfeit t-shirts) are signs of being a terrorist apparently.
There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Northwoods
Or are facts and precedent too "paranoid" for you?
In a recent news article, the "Los Angeles Times" reports, " USA Today, which disclosed the program this week, reported that Qwest had refused to turn over its phone records because it believed it would be illegal. Qwest urged the NSA to get a court order, but the agency refused, the newspaper reported.
In a statement Friday, the attorney for former Qwest Chief Executive Joseph Nacchio said the government approached the company in the fall of 2001 seeking access to the phone records of Qwest customers, with neither a warrant nor approval from a special court established to handle surveillance matters.
'Mr. Nacchio concluded that these requests violated the privacy requirements of the Telecommunications Act,' attorney Herbert J. Stern said. "
I encourage everyone to support Qwest by making it their preferred telecommunications provider.
Interestingly, AT&T is one of the companies that eagerly gave the customers' telephone records to the government. AT&T is also affiliated with Yahoo DSL via AT&T's merger with Pacific Bell. No one should be surprised at the connection between AT&T and Yahoo. Yahoo is the company that assisted Beijing in arresting and imprisoning several reporters in China.
I encourage everyone to use Qwest as the preferred telecommunications provider and to use either MSN or Google as the preferred search engine. Use your economic might to defeat tyranny.
In a recent news article, the "Los Angeles Times" reports, " USA Today, which disclosed the program this week, reported that Qwest had refused to turn over its phone records because it believed it would be illegal. Qwest urged the NSA to get a court order, but the agency refused, the newspaper reported.
In a statement Friday, the attorney for former Qwest Chief Executive Joseph Nacchio said the government approached the company in the fall of 2001 seeking access to the phone records of Qwest customers, with neither a warrant nor approval from a special court established to handle surveillance matters.
'Mr. Nacchio concluded that these requests violated the privacy requirements of the Telecommunications Act,' attorney Herbert J. Stern said. "
I encourage everyone to support Qwest by making it their preferred telecommunications provider.
Interestingly, AT&T is one of the companies that eagerly gave the customers' telephone records to the government. AT&T is also affiliated with Yahoo DSL via AT&T's merger with Pacific Bell. No one should be surprised at the connection between AT&T and Yahoo. Yahoo is the company that assisted Beijing in arresting and imprisoning several reporters in China.
I encourage everyone to use Qwest as the preferred telecommunications provider and to use either MSN or Google as the preferred search engine. Use your economic might to defeat tyranny.
Verizon just informed me that without court order they cannot release *_any_* phone number detail to subscribers until it is printed in your monthly billing information.
I can't believe I need a court order to find out the phone number that called last night my cell phone? Its standard account detail included with your bill!
Maybe not. The article quotes Smith vs. Maryland:
[W]e doubt that people in general entertain any actual expectation of privacy in the numbers they dial. All telephone users realize that they must "convey" phone numbers to the telephone company, since it is through telephone company switching equipment that their calls are completed. All subscribers realize, moreover, that the phone company has facilities for making permanent records of the numbers they dial, for they see a list of their long-distance (toll) calls on their monthly bills. . . .
[E]ven if [a caller] did harbor some subjective expectation that the phone numbers he dialed would remain private, this expectation is not "one that society is prepared to recognize as 'reasonable.'" . . . This Court consistently has held that a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties. . . . [W]hen [a caller] used his phone, [he] voluntarily conveyed numerical information to the telephone company and "exposed" that information to its equipment in the ordinary course of business. In so doing, [the caller] assumed the risk that the company would reveal to police the numbers he dialed.
Now, what the NSA allegedly did is rather more comprehensive, but being able to say "Ah, this phone number we found on this captured terrorist laptop was in contact with phones A, B, and C. Are any of those numbers interesting?" has its merits. There's all sorts of scenarios where it's useful to know who a person of interest has been in contact with.
Here in the UK, if calls are going to be monitored or recorded, companies must inform you *before* the call starts that it might happen. Even if that particular call isn't recorded, they still have to tell you that it might be.
Five years ago, I worked in the Civil Service and despite being a goverment department, we had to inform our callers that their calls might be recorded.
If I understand things correctly, we could've been sued, had we not had those warnings.
If the UK has rules and regulations about these things, I'm hardly surprised that the US has similar; so who is going to be the first to actually make a case of this?
This lawsuit will be dismissed, just like all the others becuase no one can prove that their personal data was used illegally.
To me, suing the telecoms is not really helpful. They probably thought that they were being helpful. I bet they all complied with the NSA thinking that they were helping to protect the country from terrorists. I don't think we should punish them for that.
If what the NSA is doing is truely wrong (I withhold judgement), then the NSA and the president should be the one's to be punished. The president is supporting the NSA's actions:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4768701.stm
Vote the basterds out!
I have to wonder if Bush can claim martial law like Lincoln did way back during the Civil War. If you remember, Lincoln essentially declared an end to free speech for a while and arrested anyone who was suspected of any sort of dissent. They were held without habeaus corpus. Certainly, Bush has and can claim that we are fighting a war on terrorism and that we need whatever information the NSA/CIA/FBI/DoD need to "protect" us. The US is becoming a really scary place to live in.
aka the big rug where we put everything dirty under... It's going to be invoked, and it's going to be upheld.
An intelligent judge will realise that finding against the government - this government - will be a career-limiting decision.
At the very least. A corageous and intelligent judge, with some semblance of integrity, would most likely find in favor of the plaintiffs.
So who's willing to hold their breath with me? Anyone? Anyone...?
The government will just wish the new lawsuits away too.
Well you can kiss 60% of my ass. The only thing you needed to say for me to question your intellegence was "I watch Fox News".
Probably at least $10 or $20 million in "campaign contributions". Yeah, let us help you out with these phone records, gubmint. And be sure to remember us next time we need something nudge nudge wink wink say no more say no more.
They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
The erosion of civil liberty is a threat to national security.
Simple Machines in Higher Dimensions
If you did reply seriously, great. I now know that you are 22 years old, not 18.
A search with this info using Peoplefinders.com yields a YORK, SHEYENNE, 22 years of age, with a relative (possibly mother) named YORK, MICHELE, age 53. For only $9.95, anyone here can find out more information about this person or their relatives, including more past addresses (and more specific addresses to confirm the poster's information).
See how privacy works? Once a leak occurs, it quickly becomes a flood.
You've gone from "kinda stupid" to "condescending idiot".
Your parents would be so proud.
--- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
I am a 18 year old Gothic Mistress, I specialize in turning icky lil boys into wellbehaved and feminine little girls, I am a poet,musician,singer and a actress.I am also a preop transsexual, I have had advanced classes in stage makeup and chances are I could turn you into the girl of your dreams. I also offer phone voice training, so that you can attain that coveted female voice that you thought impossible until now!
Just come by and meet me!
Zweideutig
60 Minutes had a story about Amgen a few months ago. Amgen were carrying out tests for a treatment for a serious disease. They had to halt the tests when side effects starting showing up - drug companies can not afford to take risks these days once they suspect there are problems.
So the patients sued Amgen - for halting the trials! They said the treatments were working.
60 Minutes thought the story was about how greedy and uncaring drug companies are. I thought the real story was about how it's fast becoming impossible to do business in the United States, even with the best of intentions.
FoxNews calls plaintiffs "treasonous" and defends the DoJ's detention of same at undisclosed locations.
More monitoring than the NSA does is done by many entities in our everyday lives, like your ISP, your bank, your cell phone provider, etc. You give more personal data than this to rent a video or save $0.45 at Albertsons. The NSA can't legally (and no one is seriously alleging they have) done any more than see what phone NUMBER is calling what other phone NUMBER. Anything more intrusive requires a court order and the FBI's involvement. Since this has been going on since 2001 without apparant cataclysmic consequences to civil liberties (name me one innocent person who was harmed by this), and we have, by NSA's assertion, stopped multiple attacks by mining this data, I really fail to see the harm. Just another excuse to blame Bush for doing his job. Most of those complaining about it would complain that the government didn't do enough if we were attacked without doing this.
Sure you could cancel, and switch to the only company fearful enough of the potential liability to say "no" to the government. That seems to be Quest. Out of the frying pan, into the cesspool.
- Domestic spying is costly for telecoms
- Domestic spying could reveal trading secrets
- Domestic spying accelerates standard encryption
An other reason for hope is the existence of organizations like EFF or ACLU.Snooping and tapping activities at the boundary of legality have made me worried, but costly legal lawsuits could be a good medicine. Like chemotherapy against cancer. Better would be strict laws which prevent such abuse. Lets see how the law dragons fight the snooping hydra.
There is an other issue which could prevent that we slip into a totalitarian state: telephone calling records of industry decision makers are valuable information. The database can give hints about mergers, stock market developments (company X has suddenly a lot of phone-calls with company Y. Do they merge? Do they launch a new product, lets buy or sell stocks accordingly). In a government, for which business is so closely linked to politics, domestic spying could be seen a free ticket for obtaining insider information. That could become a problem, once it is realized that it exists.
A third remedy about the domestic spying issue could be technology: not only standard encryption of telephone calls, but also standard masquerading about who calls whom. Such technology will first be used by people who need protection, not criminals, but CEOs or engineers working on new technology, which the competition should not know about. Of course, the people who are the primary targets of those stupid spying activities have long gone to other communication channels.
"The Eye: that horrible growing sense of a hostile will that strove with great power to pierce all shadows of cloud, and earth, and flesh, and to see you: to pin you under its deadly gaze, naked, immovable."
LOR, Chapter 2, The Passage of the Marshes
Here's a real scenario for you. You are a muslim, you use to got to a restaurant where a bit ago the waiter "rotation" happened to bring in a muslim one. Happens that some "terrorism" suspect is noticed "talking" with the waiter. Guess what happens with you? Nothing? Meeep. You are now a prime suspect.
Of course, you are not a muslim. So you have nothing to worry. Right? Please explain me, precisely and unambigously, what does the government understand by terrorist and terrorism.
*sniff sniff* I smell witches burning...
Watch for another line item in your Verizon or SBC bill, mandated by legislature so that it costs them nothing. All taxed, of course, and passed at the last moment as a rider upon something totally unrelated such as a rider upon the interstate commerce and Highway act. Can you tell that I'm kinda jaded?
C|N>K
go to http://www.gillespieresearch.com/cgi-bin/bgn/
Shadow Govt statistics
Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
Why Ohio? Seriously. I don't know enough about our neighbor to the south-west (past the stereotypes), but it's not like Ohio is a state full of uneducated ultra-conservatives. The really conservative middle American states (The Dakotas, Kansas, etc.) think Ohioans are a bunch of East Coast Liberals. With the exception of Cincinnati, the major urban areas in Ohio *are* pretty liberal. It's just that they get balanced out and overtaken by the rich suburbs and the (ever shrinking number of) farmers. And as for lowbrow, you can't throw a damn rock without hitting a college or university in Ohio. I'm sick of people who don't know anything about the state imagining that we're a bunch of drooling hick farmers. It's a small (34th in size), densely popluated (7th highest) state, therefore largely urban.
Meh. No point in getting angry at a troll. But still. Meh.
Trust me, you don't want what you think you want (Quest). They are not heros. This company was noted for committing the largest accounting scandal in world history until they were bested only days later by Enron and MCI WorldCom. Quest would be in the news every day, like Enron, except they were overshadowed. ($2B seems like chump change.) Their service is dismal. They are more arrogant than any other phone company.
They were not striking a blow for freedom -- they were scared of a class action lawsuit, because they have more experience in such matters than most other phone companies.
If you mean 18 USC 2510, that defines "wire communications" as:
"wire communication" means any aural transfer made in whole or in part through the use of facilities for the transmission of communications by the aid of wire, cable, or other like connection between the point of origin and the point of reception (including the use of such connection in a switching station) furnished or operated by any person engaged in providing or operating such facilities for the transmission of interstate or foreign communications or communications affecting interstate or foreign commerce;
Note well the phrase "aural transfer" of "communications".
That doesn't apply to billing data.
FISA itself also excludes billing data:
the term "pen register" means a device or process which records or decodes dialing, routing, addressing, or signaling information transmitted by an instrument or facility from which a wire or electronic communication is transmitted, provided, however, that such information shall not include the contents of any communication, but such term does not include any device or process used by a provider or customer of a wire or electronic communication service for billing, or recording as an incident to billing, for communications services provided by such provider or any device or process used by a provider or customer of a wire communication service for cost accounting or other like purposes in the ordinary course of its business"
Assuming the NSA is mining billing data, what they're doing is legal under FISA and 18 USC 2510.
Now, that's not the entire United States Code, but the case for terming data mining of billing records as illegal is looking really weak right about now.
Most secretive organizations use a cell structure. If one cell is compromised, the others continue on undetected. However, someone somewhere has to provide information and funding. It's conceivable that the NSA is using the tree patterns from the call records to identify who that someone might be.
However - I really don't give a shit. People who sacrifice liberty for safety deserve neither. [ Hmmm ... who said that? ] What's the point of living in the supposedly freest nation in the world if we (or our government) has to stoop to this?
Compose your thoughts clearly and intelligently in a written letter. A hand written letter has the most impact.
c .htm
Once you've sent that letter, wait 1 week and then call them to follow up on your letter. Make sure you have a copy of your letter in front of you when you call so you can go over the specific points.
Also, considering that an election is coming up, take the time and send letters / make calls to the challengers, too. They want your vote as badly as the incumbents do. And they're usually far more willing to push an item if they think that it will get people to vote them in.
The last step is to grab 5 of your friends who would not have otherwise voted and go vote (make sure to register first, though).
Then you and your bloc can celebrate the return of Democracy with pizza and beer.
http://www.c-span.org/guide/congress/glossary/blo
was it because qwest alone was smart enough to realize it would be a litigation disaster / public relations nightmare if it came out that they had given the gov the records without a court order???
i have to wonder how verizon, AT&T and BellSouth could have been stupid enough to volentarily agree to give their customers info to the gov without a court order?
I'm amazed that the legal depts for these companies could not see the nightmare senario and demand the the gov obtain court orders to get the info.... or who knows maybe the legal depts did try to stop them and the boards of these companies overrode them?
fucking madness either way.... i wonder what else the gov is upto that we are as yet unaware of....mind kinda boggles...
THINK PATRIOTIC THOUGHTS THEY COULD BE READING YOUR MIND????
actually I am happy to see you, however that is in fact a banana in my pocket.
'Cause I want to know this too!
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
once put, "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." --- Benjamin Franklin
Mccarthyism
'nuff said.
First rule of holes; When in one, stop digging.
Aside from this, a court decision in 1979 about the fourth amendment has little to do with a lawsuit in 2006 about telecom companies breaking the Stored Communications Act, passed in 1986-- as the article discusses. Here. Look. I can cut and paste too.
It then sets out various exceptions, listing separate exceptions for "records" and "contents of communications". If the information is obtained accidentally, if people are in immediate danger of death or physical injury and this information is needed to prevent that, that's an excpetion. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children gets an exception, as do persons investigating specific cases of telemarketing fraud. Other "governmental entities", this act outlines in several places, don't. None of the exceptions are protections here.
The section after this one concerns the circumstances under which providers are required to supply information to the government and thus freed from any charges that they shouldn't have supplied the information; and it begins:
and co
Irritable, left-wing and possibly humorous bumper stickers and t-shirts
Go read it and then realize while all these lawsuits will fail.
FISA specifically exempts billing records, and ECPA doesn't cover anything other than things like direct wiretaps for listening to conversations.
So, if the NSA is data mining billing records, it's probably legal.
Why? Because you have no expectation of privacy with respect to billing records since they go all over the telecommunications industry anyway and are visible on a lot of different systems to a whole lot of other people in the course of the call getting carried by various companies through the layers and systems of the telecommunications infrastructure.
In other words, your billing information for each call you make and receive gets turned over to a whole lot of third parties in the normal course of business anyway.
After reading over my phone company's privacy policy, http://att.sbc.com/gen/privacy-policy?pid=2506#4 it seems that they have violated said policy. According to AT&T, "We must disclose information, when requested, to comply with court orders or subpoenas," but there clearly weren't any court orders involved with them turning the information over to the NSA, according to this article: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/business/38 59829.html.
AT&T says that the data is "Customer Proprietary Network Information (CPNI), http://att.sbc.com/gen/privacy-policy?pid=2566, and that "Protecting the privacy of your service and usage records is your right and our duty under federal law," although "our local SBC telephone company may also be required to disclose CPNI for legal and regulatory reasons such as a court order," but again there was clearly no court orders involved according to the article about Qwest's refusal to cooperate.
If they didn't break any laws (which I doubt, but is a possibility) they certainly have broken their promise to their customers. That might be grounds for legal action, false advertising perhaps?
Im moving to Greenland. Who's with me???
Take a look at the exceptions paragraph in the legislation that was passed by the Telecommunications Act of 1996. http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=185703&cid =15327344
the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
Call me a starry-eyed dreamer, but I love the American system. I love that there are laws, and that despite the fact that people try to circumvent them from time to time - even with the best of intentions, the law eventually catches up with them.
...?
The system is great because it lets citizens participate in the creation and modification of laws over time - so we have a hand in shaping the ever-evolving legal framework underpinning our democracy.
I'm not a legal expert, but even with my layman's understanding of the issue, it seems that some bounds have been exceeded and a correction is in order. I'm not crazy about excessive litigation, but if the executives at Verizon and the others illegally provided my phone records to the NSA out of some kind of misguided patriotism - then they are not only bad business leaders but bad citizens. They've let down their employees, their shareholders and their fellow citizens. They should be held accountable.
This isn't immediately about whether tracking citizens' communications is right or wrong. It's about breaking laws. If at some point in the future we want to grant the government the right to track our phone calls without court orders, or whatever, then we should amend the laws accordingly.
Anyway, I'm calling my rep & senator and voicing my opinion. I wonder what conclusions the NSA will make over phone data over the next while. Maybe that people don't like being monitored by government without permission
or their legal departments researched the issue and discovered that it was legal.
the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
(301) 688-6524 it is the public affairs office number at the NSA. If we all just set our voice mail to forward to the NSA they will get what they want ... and we will get what we want ... an all out phone jam at the NSA switch board ... nevermind ... I forgot they are the mother of all switches.
So how much can I sue Qwest for due to its endangering my life by not turning over my phone records?
This is no surprise, or at least, it shouldn't be. First the patRIOT act eroded the Bill of Rights, and now it is revealed that we've all been wiretapped.
Fodder for some lawyers and a catalyst for change. The damage is done. All the denial in the world won't make that go away.
I see this as a healthy wakeup call. An awakening, perhaps, that seems trivial at first, but could snowball into impeachment hearings. "one word" indeed!
One cynic's prediction.
We could think that the administration is doing what it says it is doing... using the data to look for terrorists,..
But more likely, this information can be used as the next generation of political technology. Using social network analysis polictical campaigns can identify central individuals in key districts --> but targetting the right people a campaign, I'm guessing republicans, can change one mind and influence 50, maybe 100. A candidate could see 20 people one week and do more for his election than any number of town halls and other get the word out campaigns.
Democracy in action with your private data kids.
Please note:
That post you link contains an amendment to 47 U.S.C. 222.
My post which you are responding to primarily concerns a completely different law, 18 U.S.C. 2701-2712.
Please note the difference between a "bill" and the "code". A bill, Such as the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which you apparently link, amends the United States Code, which is what "the law" is. A copy of "the code", such as can be found at http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode, has already taken all amendments, additions, etc to the law into account.
So while I'm not entirely sure what in that big block of text you link you're trying to draw attention to-- you don't give any hints what you're trying to say, so I actually can't even tell if you're trying to agree or disagree with my post-- I just want to make it clear that the post you link there has no bearing on whether the communications carriers have broken the Stored Communications Act, because it concerns a different law.
Irritable, left-wing and possibly humorous bumper stickers and t-shirts
Killing thousands to save millions? The logic of that has been debated long ago, and the indoctrination of this dogma has long been put in practice. Whether it applies to this bunch or not, is another question altogether.
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." - Ben Franklin
(yes, that is another version of [or the same as?] the Civ IV quote for researching...democracy? liberalism?)
(In our example above, you would take out Ron and Patti -- they connect the green and red groups)
And in addition to redtea's comments... if your goal were to separate the red and green groups, you'd also need to "take out", I mean murder, Gwen (or is it Glenn) and Phil (mostly because of Cindy). The only person orphaned by killing Ron and Patti would be lonely, pathetic Bernie (remaining members of Blue wouldn't even be disrupted because of Barb and Cindy).
Anyhow, this assumes that there isn't any second-degree command-and-control, er influence (Kim: "oh I trust Joe, and Joe speaks of Jeff's unwavering loyalty"), in which case an even larger swath of the network must be exterminated.
As mentioned, bad intelligence is all about making (bad) assumptions -- unknown unknowns and such.
I recall the case you refer to, and I tried to dig it up, but there are quite a few similar cases, mostly related to the war on drugs, and I couldn't find that needle in the haystack.
accidental killings by police in the war on drugs
You are reading a broadly stated claim that fails to specificlly note what the US government supposedly in violation of in the stated regulations. Just because some lackey GWU "assistant professor" states somthing, it would be nice to have someone at least try to nail down some facts. Losers.
"God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
I overheard evidence that the local cops are running a protection racket and I don't want the local cops to know that I know. My company is hoping for a contract for some government work and we don't want our competitors with friends in the White House hearing what we're prepared to bid. I don't want anyone to know what the secret ingredient in my cookies is because once a trade secret is revealed it's no longer a secret. I want to phone my uncle in Iran without being visited by the feds because even though my last call was innocent I was fired from my job soon after the feds turned up at my office. Oh, and porn is legal, but I don't want my neighbors knowing that I have a fetish for girls wearing bunny suits and I'm dating the boss's daughter and I'd rather my colleagues didn't find out about it.
Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
Not only do we lose our privacy, but now we are going to have to pay for it. In the end it all comes from our pockets anyway.
I can't get to the original article but here's something on the Cali drug cartel using phone records.
http://www.primidi.com/2002/07/07.html
According to former and current DEA, military, and State Department officials, the cartel had assembled a database that contained both the office and residential telephone numbers of U.S. diplomats and agents based in Colombia, along with the entire call log for the phone company in Cali, which was leaked by employees of the utility. The mainframe was loaded with custom-written data-mining software. It cross-referenced the Cali phone exchange's traffic with the phone numbers of American personnel and Colombian intelligence and law enforcement officials.
A top Colombian narcotics security adviser says the system fingered at least a dozen informants -- and that they were swiftly assassinated by the cartel. A high-level DEA official would go only this far: "It is very reasonable to assume that people were killed as a result of this capability."
Terrorism could be construed as "unlawful", no? So a carrier could claim they allowed access by the government to that data on those grounds. Heck, they could claim they're doing it to protect their property from terrorist attack - or even to protect the value of intangible assets like business contracts with a government that's threatening to blackball them if they don't allow them access.
The law you've quoted has too many broadly-based exceptions to be useful.
`(d) EXCEPTIONS- Nothing in this section prohibits a
telecommunications carrier from using, disclosing, or permitting
access to customer proprietary network information obtained from
its customers, either directly or indirectly through its agents--
`(1) to initiate, render, bill, and collect for
telecommunications services;
`(2) to protect the rights or property of the carrier, or to
protect users of those services and other carriers from
fraudulent, abusive, or unlawful use of, or subscription to,
such services; or
`(3) to provide any inbound telemarketing, referral, or
administrative services to the customer for the duration of the
call, if such call was initiated by the customer and the
customer approves of the use of such information to provide
such service.
for you anarcho-capitalists and lolbertarians and assorted other weirdos out there to start bitching about how evil class action lawsuits are.
there is no need to sign your posts. this isn't usenet. your username is right there above your post. stop it.
Depending on where that's written.
Ex nihilo nihil fit.
Thank you sir... now you know my wife calls her brother every weekend, and don't call my mother often enough. So will I be getting a check in the mail or a $1,000 credit on my 2006 tax returns?
Ass hats, get off my line... >:(
Specific information on individuals suspected of a crime associated with a warrant, no problem. But just handing over data on millions of Americans...they deserve to get sued for not making a token effort to stick up for their customers.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
Why don't I? I saved all your butts from the soviet horde. I'm too old to reup.
ummm... maybe i believe if you RTFA the argument of the lawsuit is that it was actually not legal.
~~~~
The legal experts said consumers could sue the phone service providers under communications privacy legislation that dates back to the 1930s. Relevant laws include the Communications Act, first passed in 1934, and a variety of provisions of the Electronic Communications and Privacy Act, including the Stored Communications Act, passed in 1986.
~~~~~~
actually I am happy to see you, however that is in fact a banana in my pocket.
The incidents involved are not wiretaps. The demagogues always have their day, but at least on /. let's keep the facts straight.
Qwest's refusal to turn over phone records means they "did something right" (tm) for a change. That being the case, It's obvious the seventh seal has been opened and the end of the world is nigh.
"It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
I doubt that seriously. Now, it's possible and likely that their lawyers DID tell them it was legal - but I doubt that would have been their motivating factor.
My reasoning is this:
Companies will generally make decisions based not on legality, but on cost - if doing something illegal is potentially worth tons of money if they get away with it, and the potential punishment is minimal (oooo... a whopping $50,000 fine) they're going to do it, even though it's illegal.
I find it more likely that Qwest was less certain they could win such a lawsuit than AT&T and BellSouth were. The whole "we were just doing what we were told and it's really the NSA's fault" type of thing.
We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
This case should be a criminal case, not civil. This spying is also essentially a betrayal of the constitution, or at a minimum a criminal hacking offense. The people responsible for this outrage should be in a Federal prison.
If the government can lock people up for being whistle-blowers, they can lock people up for the theft of the private data of millions UNLESS THEY ARE FUCKING HYPOCRITES of course.
Do you think that the fear we're living under now is anything compared to the fear of the founders as the much larger, better equipped and trained Royal armies attacked?
Yet they believed freedom was more important than life itself. That belief is the foundation of our way of life, and this foundation is under attack. Once we lose these freedoms, they will be almost impossible to recoup without force.
What unmitigated cowards are the people who are willing to cede freedoms to terrorism. And furthermore, there is no proof that ceding these freedoms enables us to better fight terror.
To the founding fathers, we would look like a bunch of cowards and ingrates. They would be horrified to see the legacy they struggled and died to create collapsing under the comparatively tame threat of terrorism.
(%i1) factor(777353);
(%o1) 777353
There's no legal reason they can't give you the information.
T-Mobile (I guess being a cellphone provider doesn't make this an even comparison) had no problem giving me a phone number. I just had to wait at least 8-12 hours (something like that) after the call came in for it to show up on their records.
Would you please tell us what exactly is this "war"? I keep hearing about a "war in Iraq", but it's very difficult to identify the enemy.
Sure, you can say the magic word "Al Qaeda", and then lots of people will jump to the obvious conclusions; however, let's face the facts - there are three groups in Iraq that don't like each other, and after the regime was brought down a power grab has ensued, followed by a brawl. The US army is stuck in the middle of it, trying to crack down on militias. Is it a war? not really, but it is close to a civil war. Even the invasion of Iraq wasn't really a war, since there wasn't much resistance.
Perhaps you are unware, but other countries have had endure (and some still do) terrorism, and they have dealt with it without resorting to a marketing campaign ("War on Terror"), nor to the simple-minded rhetoric of good & envil.
The attack on 9/11/2001 was indeed a spectacular one, and for the most part I would say they really got lucky in executing it. There were many factors that played in their favor - from the lax security checks at the airports, to the inept intelligence agencies. However, I don't quite see how all this extra wiretapping and phone records data minig will help.
All this expanded elecronic surveillance seems like a joke when you have torrent of Mexicans coming through the south border. It became evident how preposterous the situation is when they found out that tunnel crossing the border, fitted with lighting and a light rail to faciliate the transfer of merchandise (drugs found on the scene).
Also, perhaps you should check out the Power of Nightmares:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/3755686.stm
One of the interesting things it focuses on is that there really isn't this ultra sophisticated terror network mentioned all the time; one of the memorable parts was when Donald Rumsfeld was being interviewed regarding these super-duper bunkers in the Afghanistan mountains, where they had multiple levels, along with air conditioning, and even an internet hookup. Rumsfeld clearly said that there isn't only one of these bunkers out there, but dozens. Now, as far as I know, they have yet to find one.
One of the allegations in the series is that the US created Al-Qaeda, just by attributing so much capability, and sophistication to this organization that doesn't really exist. This is indeed an interesting idea - after Al Qaeda is being glorified so much in the news across the world, and by Bush and Blair themselves, you can expect to find some copycat terrorists motivated by all this repetitive talk of how cunning Bin Laden is. Combine that with the Iraq invasion, and those fanatic clerics have the ideal conditions to brainwash (especially) young people into taking stupid actions.
And by the way, your closing statement fits really nicely with the idea behind the Power of Nightmares. However, you forgot to mention the possibility of biological, and chemical attack.
And by the way, I don't know which are these networks that you speak of, but it seems rather logical that you'd be in danger if you go somewhere where people don't like you. Nontheless, if you are white/black/lation/etc (take your pick), I'm sure you can make your way into some place in the US where somebody isn't particularly fond of you, and might kill as well.
And you didn't rebut the "protection of property" exception.
Given that many exceptions, any lawyer can work around that law.
I stand by my assertion that it's useless. Especially since you didn't rebut my claims as much as engage in ad hominem bloviations.
So, first the plaintiffs would need to prove that their information was shared. However, any records related to this are likely to be highly classified. But, you can't just go subpoenaing classified records just because you read some story in a newspaper and decide to sue. Without records of the sharing, there is no case.
This is really just a few plaintiff's law firms hoping that their suits have some nuisance value to the Telcos who will pay some money to make them go away. If the law firms get some publicity as a result, all the better.
I'm not doubting your word - or at least, wouldn't be surprised if their service was shitty.
However, reading Wikipedia (truly the best source for objective information </sarcasm> ), the only thing that sticks out is the "slamming" - ie, moving customers to their long distance without asking them beforehand.
Accounting scandals, though, are preferable to giving up customer data - in my book, at least. Maybe I just associate the term "accounting scandal" with "stealing money from banks", a practice which fails to elicit much empathy from me, one way or the other.
Anyway - for the Coup De Karma: Details / links, if you could be so kind?
--
("MOD PARENT UP" - the slashdot equivilant of "hear, hear!"?)
How do you guys explain away the fact that Osama & Co take credit for 9-11? How do you explain away the fact that Al-Qaeda takes credit for most of the violence in Iraq even now? Are the videos of people having their heads sawed off with knives actually evidence that Al-Jazeera is part of a White House cabal? What about the rape and butchery of all those Russian children in Beslan?
... crack cocaine, or methamphetamines, or whatever drugs you may be using are not your friends.
How will you explain it away when your Al-Qaeda heroes pop a nuke in a big European or North American city? As long as you have your heads in the sand or up your asses, you may as well start making up some fantasy explanation now, because it is only a matter of time.
And one more thing
If you want your life to be different, live it differently.
The scary thing is, I can actually believe the information he posted is correct.
The funniest thing is now that her real email address (albeit a gmail acct) has been posted to a website, she'll now get inundated with tons of spams for viagra, cialis, ambien, home mortgages and stock scams... probably the most absolutely last things of interest of an 18 yr old (or is it actually 22 as another poster pointed out) geek chick.
To catch terrorists this way. By now, everyone, including the terrorists, have figured out that the phone lines are insecure. Those who have something to hide are already using different forms of communication.
The only possible effective use of this system today is to stifle the political dissent of law abiding citizens.
It has never been about catching terrorists or protecting children. Yes, occasionally such eavesdropping has helped solve criminal cases; but the primary purpose has always been the suppression of political dissent.
The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
Just had to chime in, and say how much I totally agree with that sentiment.
Everything in sec 2702 besides (a)(3) is irrelevant to this discussion, as it deals with the 'contents' of communications, not customer records. When you poke at anything in sec 2702 besides (a)(3) you're really just obfuscating this discussion by confusing it (deliberately?) with wiretapping and surveillance.
sec 2703 (c)(2) is the heart of this matter. The plaintiff's argument in this case appears to be that the NSA did not have the 'administrative subpoena' authority enjoyed by other government agencies, and therefore violated sec 2703 (c)(2). OK, we'll see (Yawn).
One of the things which most of the conspiracy sites fail to realize is that steel does not need to be melted in order to weaken. ASTM E119 is a testing method, which is used to measure fire resistance. Typically between 1 and 4 hours under typical fire conditions, depending on the design spec. Any large scale office fire could have taken down the WTC or any other building. This is why the fire codes exist. If it were not possible for any office fire to reach the annealing temperature of structural steel (the temperature at which it starts to weaken -- well below the melting point), then ASTM E119 would not exist in the first place. Buildings such as the USX Steel Tower in Pittsburgh would not have their support beams filled with antifreeze for fire safety, they'd just be hollow.
The conspiracy theory requires some relatively ridiculous assumptions. If the pancaking effect was not possible without explosives, then the government would have had to place shaped charges on every support column on every single floor of the WTC. In both buildings. Without any of the 50,000 employees noticing. Why would the government even bother with such a risky operation when it's well known that a fire can collapse a building?
I hate this administration and almost all of its actions, but many of these conspiracy theories defy common sense. I wish people who share my viewpoints would stop making me look like an idiot by association by saying such ridiculous things.
That's it!
The real threat isn't coming from the tens of thousands Islamist extremist terrorists trained in Afghanistan by Al Qaeda, in Saddam's Iraq, and their associates (minus the captured ones). No!
The 9/11 attacks, the attack on the USS Cole, the Bali bombings, the Madrid bombings, the London bombings, the shoe bomb attempt, the US embassy bombings in Africa, the attacks and bombings in Saudi Arabia, the bombing in Jordan, the attacks in the Philippines, the Beslan attack, the dirty bomb plan, the plan to attack the soccer stadium in the UK, the plan to attack Heathrow, the 19 person ring just broken in Michigan, the hundreds of Hezbollah operatives in the US, including the recent Hezbollah Mexican border smuggling ring broken, and the rest all show its not the terrorists that are the problem!!
The real threat is that *cough* fantasy *cough* cabal in the White House which the "insiders" on Slashnut know are secretly planning to ignore the next election with mass destraction. (How this will actually work, nobody explains. The Constitution limits the term in office and provides for succession.) Meanwhile, outside Mom's basement (or with more meds), the rest of us see them trying to detect and stop the next terrorist attack, prefereably before they can use a salvaged anthrax or chemical weapon from Saddam's discards, or maybe even start a nuclear Jihad with a little help, or simply send a suicide bomber to a crowded mall.
Lets reach over into one of the Evolution v. Creation debates and grab Occam's Razor. Which way do you think it cuts here?
I think I understand the impulse behind William F. Buckley's statement that he would rather be governed by the first 2000 names in the Boston phone book than by the Harvard faculty. It seems to require a certain degree of sophistication to engage in certain forms of idiocy.
much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
Your senario is not far fetched. Reading the paper today and happend upon this intersting story.
c le/2006/05/12/AR2006051202025_pf.html
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/arti
It all seemed darkly funny at first.
Eric Haskett was merely taking a nap in a car when he roused suspicion in a rural Frederick County neighborhood. A neighbor traced Haskett's license plate to an address once used by a registered sex offender.
Then his girlfriend's parents told him to scram; law enforcement officials, including three FBI agents, began investigating; and Haskett began fearing that the suspicions could cost him his job at a gag shop that sells such kid-friendly items as whoopie cushions.
"It blew me away that a federal agent was sticking a badge in my face. Three agents, dog -- like I'm the ringleader!" said Haskett, 28, of Mount Airy.
After allaying the concerns of several law enforcement officials over the past few weeks, Haskett also asked them what he could do to clear his name.
"They said the best bet is to leave the area," Haskett said.
What bothers me the most if you RTFA you find that no one is apologetic about the harassment he has received. Law enforcement, the girl friend's family and the neighbors all have the attitude of "well he should have been acting so damn weird, serves him right".
With all our "social networking" information they have via these phone taps. And with all the money the government needs. I say they should create a Web 2.0 site then sell it to Fox for billions.
`(2) to protect the rights or property of the carrier, or to
protect users of those services and other carriers from
fraudulent, abusive, or unlawful use of, or subscription to,
such services; or
If the phone companies had a rational belief that terrorists were planning to do harm to their property. Then yes they could release customer information. However it's not clear in the law if they are allowed to release ALL customer information or just some. Also it seems that the companies themselves must actually belief this or have some evidence.
What happened is the US government just asked for it and they gave it over. They did not perceive a threat and ask for the government's help.
The argument you put forth could be used to implement very draconian surveilliance for the sake of a general threat. I would hope the courts would not take it seriously.
by an anonymous Vietnam Combat Veteran speaking out from overseas Why am I being spied upon and discriminated upon just because I live outside the United States? This by the very country that I fought in a war for and the country to I sacrificed twenty years of my life to. Recently a large controversy developed in which it came to light that the National Security Agency has been obtaining the calling records or American citizens throughout our country in the hope of identifying Terrorist communications methods and links. Now think about this, they state that they want to monitor all numbers without having listened to a call and that should help them. If they know who the bad guys and their phone numbers, get a warrant and listen and then act according the information gathered. Fishing, under the Constitution is not allowed! Their alleged defense is that they are doing so in protecting us from Terrorist, who recently seem to have become the cause for everything including spoiled milk and the avian flu. In an effort to stave off a mass denouncement of these actions by the public, President Bush, on 11 May 2006 took the unprecedented step, of making an immediate rebuttal statement on the situation through the means of a news conference. See the following Internet link for more on the story: (http://usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-05-10-ns a_x.htm?POE=click-refer) During this particular speech President Bush, as quoted by USA Today, insisted that the NSA was focused on international calls. "In other words," President Bush explained, "one end of the communication must be outside the United States." Last year President Bush publicly stated he had authorized the NSA to eavesdrop -- without warrants -- on international calls and international emails of people suspected of having links to terrorists when one party to the communication is in the USA, however, this did not come to my attention until this recent uproar and seems to be more prevalent than to only cover those of suspected links to terrorism. This is based from the most recent allegations and the past capabilities of places such as RAF Chicksands, in the United Kingdom and other vast data collection points, worldwide, which work very closely with the NSA. Now that brings me into the picture. I am a retired Vietnam Combat veteran, living in Asia. Am I exempt from the United States Constitution? It subsequent Laws passed by Congress and signed into law by the President of the United States? Am I a lesser citizen? I see this as a direct violation of my rights under the United States Constitution, Article IV, perpetrated by the NSA, but ultimately authorized through Executive Order from the President of the United States. Now I know that the President has the power of Executive Orders, but, after reading a lot of material, I found again and again that his Executive Orders could never violate my Rights under the Constitution. Or am I wrong? Further reading of the article from USA Today, indicates that the Telephone companies, sold the information to the NSA, as specifically prohibited by law. The law further states that such violations are punishable by fines $300,000 per violation. See excerpts of Section 222 of the Communications Act and amendments below in italics: (4) PROHIBITION OF SALE OF GENERAL OR DETAILED INFORMATION- Except for the purposes for which use, disclosure, or access is permitted under subsection (d), it shall be unlawful for any person to sell, rent, lease, or otherwise make available for remuneration or other consideration the customer proprietary network information (including the detailed customer telephone records) of any customer.'. Section 202(a)(1)(E) requires the prior express authorization from a customer before a telecommunications carrier may disclose or permit access to a wireless telephone number. This language is intended to limit the ability of carriers to create a telephone directory of wireless telephone numbers without obtaining the express consent of its customers. Section 203(i)(1) increases
Didn't want to /. the poor bastards.
All your base are belong to Google.
...and I stand by my statement. I say we should sue the companies for all they have got. We have an imbecile for a President, a military man as the CIA chief, a blind for a VP... We get spied upon, our life hangs by a social security and credit rating, a word is not good enough... I am too traumatized by this experience...Maybe I should sue the government for acute mental stress...
Smith vs Maryland, 1979:c ourt=us&vol=442&invol=735
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?
NSA program is legal....
The lawyers bringing the suit should be disbarred; their actions are very clearly not in the interests of their clients, but rather in the interests of the lawyers' wallets. Actually, forget disbarrment. They should be lined up and shot. With screwdrivers. Lots and lots of screwdrivers. And then they should have to speak at law schools, as a warning for the next ten generations. For one dollar a talk.
I'm wondering if the worth of phone call should perhaps be ratcheted up a notch. Of the three communication channels mentioned, it's the only one that requires the time of a human being on the receiving end in a way that you the sender can measure with any confidence. Put another way, email and postal mail are easily dismissed with zero accountability to the sender. Phone calls can also be dismissed, but only after a human on the receiving side has spent the time talking to the person on the sending side. That costs real money on the receiving side. I think this amounts to a supportable argument that phone calls are the only way to truly make an impression, especially if one assumes a government more concerned with placating the populace than serving it.
- First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
Anybody can Sue ANYBODY for ANYTHING (In the U.S.). I could sue you for eating a grilled cheese sandwitch, but chances are it will be thrown out of court.
Same goes for this as well. It may or may not be illegal depending on who you talk to, and it may or may not win in court. The legality is determined by the court NOT by the fact that you are suing.
Get over it, seriously. The corporations have a wonderful free ride, owning the government with no social responsibility. The only ones stymied by the current situation are the newcomers trying to overcome the barriers to entry (barriers being the enormous patent portfolios of the entrenched players)... in other words, you and I can't go and start a corporation and compete, but the existing corporations are fat, happy, and delighted as punch that anyone might feel sorry for them.
- First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
I feel all antsy every time something like this happens (I don't like it), but the real sad thing is I'm not sure how we'll ever fight terrorism. What we are basically saying is that we don't trust the government to do ANY survielance of people in the U.S. (and this is a good thing).
The problem with knee jerk reactions (like what we are all justifiably having now) is that if there ever IS another terrorist act you can be sure all of our hard work will get thrown right out the window.
We've got to find a way to this stuff legally, quickly and with oversight. If we can't, then we might as well accept that there is basically nothing we can do about terrorists if they really want to get us.
It seems we have two arguments...one says HELL NO to everything, the other says "give up your rights or you'll be killed by terrorists".
There has GOT to be a way inbetween all this mess.
I know we live in a capitalist state, and damn me for saying this, but seriously, should the government be allowed to protect a company from a civil suit, even if the government originally contracted the work that caused the complaint? I'm sure building the case won't be easy without the government's help, but it can be done if need be, especially seeing as the lawyers could be looking at the payday of their careers if they were able to successfully litigate the case.
What happens when AT&T and Verizon use the precident set here to sell our information to the highest bidder? Why should the government be allowed to let this precident stand in the first place? I ask because I honestly haven't a clue.
"Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
take $50 billion away from them and they will just increase their billing to recoup it and more. Money doesn't appear out of thin air, it will come from some where. Where do you suppose it will be?
....)
On another note, so what about the tapping.....maybe if they really do it they might just find out that its only a small fraction of the population creating world terrorist and other serious problems and that its the ones they are not tapping that are the ones causing problems. The process of elimination of who they are and are not tapping will lead to the same conclusion anyone applying common sence concludes. idiot polticians and military war mongers.
finding that out is a bad thing? for who?
how about some real real tv and real radio shows? certainly the NSA has such technological analysing capabilities that they can extract, in a very timely manner, terroristic communications out of the mass of communications happening every minute.
and once they get rid of the scum, then maybe they can sell the technology to the like of google, microsoft, yahoo, etc... so we actually get better search results.
now if the NSA really has such data analysis capabilities, then are they themselves not also responsible for hindering human advancement and technology of the everyday worker who could benefit in their daily activities in saving time in their online searchs?
Come on people, wise up..... the NSA is not using alien technology. They are getting more suppression of so called bad activity from the promotion of their access to the data than they have the ability to analize the data.
The whole point of the idea of London creating a TV program of their street cameras is that they don't have the ability to analize it otherwise. now multiply that by a factor of (london is small in comparison to teh country of the US
however a focused effort on monitoring the more likely to cause world problems and put in front of teh eyes of the public.... now that might just work....
I reserve the right to call someone who says this country is a "police state" a complete, utter, idiot who doesn't understand what a police state is.
Do you actually understand what a "police state" consists of? Are you currently in fear for your life because of your enlightened posting? Do you think you're going to be hauled off to jail or executed in the middle of the night with your body dumped on your front door step and your family billed for the bullet they used to kill you?
The point of the original poster wasn't that he was "glad to live in a police state" it was that he understood that we in fact are not a police state and thus he risks more of getting signed up for stupid email lists and snail mail spam by posting his address here on SlashDot than he does from any black helicopters or orbital mind control lasers.
The fact that you missed all of that and could only see that he was 18 and thus "kinda stupid" is what makes your whole diatribe so laughable.
--- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
Funny. I don't feel left wing or hysterical. In fact I feel like I was just plain right to complain.
Anyway, giant communications companies have been in bed with the government since forever. During WWII, The postal system, Western Union, the various couriers and all the news outlets, (while they don't proudly say so loudly now), will all admit to having had government spooks directing their efforts, reading whatever they wanted and publishing whatever they felt would benefit the government.
So this current debacle is nothing new. And while it would be satisfying, I suspect that it doesn't matter whether the telcos are successfully sued or not. It's hard not to do as you are told by the Government when you are A) Profit-motivated, and B) Cowardly. --A secret service gun to the head is a great incentive to rat out on your fellow country-men, especially when you are probably built from shoddy moral materials to begin with.
-FL
Those lawsuits aren't going anywhere. The president will declare the matter top secret in the interest of national security and those grandstanding lawyers will have plenty of airtime to bash the president and all of his henchmen and the nightly news will no-doubt run stories in much the same vein.
All of this adds up to one more talking point for the democrats to bolster their bretheren
who are trying to get elected. All that time and money wasted on politics. The other explanation is
that the suits will go forward and sometime after the current administration is long gone the telcos
will finally, after months of negotiation, agree to a 300$ rebate while insisting strenuously that
while they would be proven non-liable in court, they would just like to put the matter behind them.
Moral of story:Don't get too excited about this,this is just lawyers fighting lawyers, nothing like truth or justice has any chance of prevailing.
So all we know is just a tiny tip of a huge iceberg!
(And I know NSA is reading this!)
That most of the "I'm doing nothing wrong so why should I be concerned" people seem to forget that this information can be used for a lot of things. Now they claim it's to fight terrorism. Tomorrow George decides he needs another term in office and changes the law to make that possible. A lot of people protest and decide to actively oppose George in this endevour.
Now Georges smiles and uses the information to track key activists and get's a nice picture of who is dangerous and who is not for his proposed plans. He now uses this information to take out these key activists and the rebellion is squashed. George succesfully changes the law and declares himself president for life.
OK maybe not just yet. Another example....
George encounters strong oposition to one of hise lame scams. Some senators seem to be influencial in leading this opposition. George decides to use the telecom information to see who is supporting these senators. He will ofcourse take no direct action against the senators because that would be to obvious. Instead he decides to attack the voter base behind the senators. Some people supporting the senators suddenly get strange calls claiming: "I know who you called last summer...." To their surprise these senators suddenly see a change in their support base, it is none existent. They decide to halt their opposition and George get's what he wants.
Information like this can be used for many things. That is why no government should be able to get this information without their being ample checks and balances in place. Did you ask yourself what will be done with this information after the us "wins" the war against terrorism? Will it be deleted? Or will you find it sometime in the fiture when the goverment decides you are a danger because you have free will?
Maybe George will outlaw abortion and use these records to track pro abortion activists. Maybe he will outlaw bingo and track your grannies contacts in her vast network of bingo buddies?
What is acceptable today can be unacceptable tomorrow so you need to protect yourself from an over zealous government.
That would be Founding Father Benjamin Franklin, the gent on the USD100 bill, AKA Poor Richard.
m in_franklin.html
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both."
Of course my favorite is that "beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy."
Many more here http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/b/benja
Actually that's a ruse to get all the terrorists to switch to QWest, which is really a wholly owned subsidiary of the NSA. In truth none of the others are cooperating, so they used "unnamed sources who are in a position to know" to spread a little disinformation.
In other news, Reynolds Aluminum stock up in after hours trading.
I call bullshit on the "people standing at the impact site". Do you have a link to pictures to back that up? I remember watching TV and seeing a whole lot of smoke coming out of both buildings, indicating a fire or massive deployment of smoke machines by the illuminati.
1 70105womanwaving.htm
Here is a link:
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/wtc1_fire.html
And this: http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/january2005/
and one more: http://hereisnewyork.org/jpegs/photos/5088.jpg
Now let me also say that I don't construe this as hard evidence. Prisonplanet has video (I haven't watched the video). Forrest Gump shook hands with Kennedy. I'm being skeptical, but this looks legit. So here are your photos and video. Debunk it at your pleasure.
The conspiracy theory requires some relatively ridiculous assumptions. If the pancaking effect was not possible without explosives, then the government would have had to place shaped charges on every support column on every single floor of the WTC. In both buildings. Without any of the 50,000 employees noticing. Why would the government even bother with such a risky operation when it's well known that a fire can collapse a building?
The assumptions may seem ridiculous in isolation, but they do dovetail in interesting ways with other independently verified (published in MSM, or visible in broadcast footage of the event) facts that we know of:
See the movie "Loose Change" for more, and follow up if you wish by going the the newspaper archives of your local library.
The point is, your assumptions are flawed. Many of the WTC employees did notice unusual activity, and reported it at the time. Further, if it's so well known that fire can collapse this type of steel frame building, just post one example of it happening elsewhere. If it hasn't happened, that it doesn't matter how "well known" it is.
--MarkusQ
If there's another "terrorist act", and the gubmit uses it to try for more inappropriate powers, shouldn't we view it instead that they're simply incompentent with their current powers? I mean, shit, they're getting all these new ways to "fight crime" and it's never enough. What's the balance point between our liberties and how hard law enforcement should work to get the bad guys? When the bad guys do big things, how much can we whine about giving up more freedoms compared to saying "hey coppers, drop the donut and use what you got."
Just ranting a bit. I know if I screw up a webpage the client tells me to fix it, even if I have to stay up all night. I don't argue that everyone should only use a particular browser that will render the webpage.
That if the records being turned over were from gun shops rather than phone companies, almost everyone's position on this would reverse?
Steel frame building collapses: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2004-01/27/con tent_301145.htm
http://www.china.org.cn/english/2003/Nov/79742.htm
Can you find examples of "this type of steel frame building" with raging fires which didn't collapse? All of the examples of buildings which had fires but did not collapse that I've seen so far were instead concrete and steel frames.
Debunking of link #1 http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2004-01/27/con tent_301145.htm
m
This building had 4 floors added to it illegally. It ends with this quote:
Building collapses are common in Egypt and are often caused by shoddy construction or the unauthorized building of extra stories. The last such incident was May 4, when a seven-story apartment building collapsed in Cairo, killing at least seven people.
Debunking link #2 http://www.china.org.cn/english/2003/Nov/79742.ht
This is still under investigation. The cause of the collapse is not yet determined.
In both of these articles, the word steel is absent. How do you know they are of similar construction?
How is that for calling bullshit?
I was just going over it my mind and regardless of the amount of information you gather it never changes the S/N of data of interest so to speak. This is whether or not you are talking about phone records or video taping everything that every citizen does, as they do in the UK -- which I'd like to point out didn't stop the london train bombings. Obviously the reason for that is they have thousands or millions of hours of tape of people walking around. Who cares. Criminals have long had to evade detection, so the promise of 'facial recognision software' will not prevent criminals from gaining weight, wearing a wig, wearing a big hat, holding a newspaper in front of their face, etc. Phone monitoring has occured since the introduction of the phone. Terrorsts will simply avoid using the phone, period, if there's no other way around it. AND NOW THEY KNOW ABOUT THE PROGRAM. Which makes it useless.
If there's no way around being video taped and monitored and having ids checked all the time, the terrorist will obtain fake ids.
My question to everyone is do you think that collecting a lot of biometric data on a person and linking it to all those records make it easier to catch a terrorist, or easier to evade detection? Think about it.
However what it does do is make it real fucking easy to steal a persons identity and commit fraud, provided that you hve access to those files. Hmmm. In the future criminals will make wonderful careers in law enforcement.
there was a time when i never believed ecommerce would work, because no one would trust computers enough to enter a credit card number. Now I see was wrong and people do come to trust computers.
Look at all the mistakes in credit reports and you'll get the picture. Ever have to clear a false charge from a large corporation like fedex or a phone company? Mistakes happen all the time, yet people have grown to trust what appears on their screens and their hard drives.
Look at the RIAA lawsuits against ppl who don't even have computers! Trusting data gathered from fishing expeditions is a dangerous game.
Here's a good example for you:
The Madrid Skyscraper Fire
From TFA (emphasis mine): Now please explain to us how the Madrid skyscraper, which was of a similar truss design to the twin towers, managed to withstand a fire that burned for over 10 hours and reached peak temperatures of 800 degrees Celsius, even continuing to support a heavy construction crane perched on its roof, while WTC 1, which, according to all accounts, had a much cooler fire (roughly 250 degrees Celsius) burning within it, managed to collapse through sudden, total, and synchronous failure of all support structures, causing the building to fall straight down, at a speed only marginally slower than free-fall, into its own footprint, all in only 85 minutes.
When you're done with that, perhaps you can explain how, in a stunning suspension of the laws of probability, WTC 2 collapsed in exactly the same manner, despite having sustaned impact damage and fire damage substantially different from WTC1.
And if you've managed to make it this far, mabye you can then enlighten us on how WTC 7, which was of a completely different design than WTC 1 and 2, collapsed into its own footprint in, again, exactly the same manner, despite the tiny detail that it was never struck by an airplane.
Apologies for the length that this post grew to, but as you can see, there are many questions that need to be addressed. I look forward to your reply.
____
~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
The problem is that we don't live in a capital, what we live under is the corporate aristocracy Thomas Jefferson warned of and James Madison wrote about. Adam Smith, writer of "Wealth of Nations" also disliked corporations believing they'd have too much power.
FalconShould there be a Law?
From your link:
"As the fire burned into the night, all that was visible of the upper parts of the building was the flaming, gutted remains of steel-reinforced concrete floors."
Steel reinforced concrete construction is not similar to the WTC's construction. There are also many examples of buildings similar to the building in Madrid collapsing due to a fire.
You are basically stating that it impossible for a steel framed building to collapse from a fire. Perhaps you should inform the regulatory bodies who write fire codes and design specifications and inform them that their work is pointless.
Yes, there are anomolies. Conspiracy or not, however, it seems more logical to me that a building which is known to be collapsible by fire did collapse by fire, rather than a massive plot requiring shaped charges with fireproof wireless explosive blasting caps in shaped charges placed directly against every support column in 3 buildings.
What an amazing application of circular logic.
Steel reinforced concrete construction is not similar to the WTC's construction.
Are you seriously maintaining that steel-reinforced concrete structures are more fire-resistant than steel-framed structures?
There are also many examples of buildings similar to the building in Madrid collapsing due to a fire.
Apparently not. What was your point again?
(BTW, I call bullshit on this FUD. Please give examples of steel-framed buildings that have collapsed due to fire, or admit they don't exist.)
You are basically stating that it impossible for a steel framed building to collapse from a fire. Perhaps you should inform the regulatory bodies who write fire codes and design specifications and inform them that their work is pointless.
Umm, the reason that it is impossible for a steel-framed building to collapse from fire is precisely because of the work done by the regulatory bodies who write fire codes and design specifications. Your contention that steel-framed buildings can collapse due to fire is the contention that would render their work pointless.
By the way, speaking of regulatory agencies, you might want to read this communication from Kevin R. Ryan shortly after the 'collapse by fire' theories began flying.
Conspiracy or not, however, it seems more logical to me that a building which is known to be collapsible by fire did collapse by fire
You can't be serious. The only reason that the buildings were 'known to be collapsable by fire' is because the 'official account of events' maintains that they indeed collapsed from fire, despite the inconvinent fact that this explanation flies violently in the face of all accepted knowledge of architecture, chemistrry, metallurgy, physics, and just plain common sense.
rather than a massive plot requiring shaped charges with fireproof wireless explosive blasting caps in shaped charges placed directly against every support column in 3 buildings.
Several floors in WTC 1, 2, and 7 were closed in the preceeding week due to "security concerns". Bomb-sniffing dogs were also removed during this period.
Modern demolition explosive is fireproof, and wireless triggers are commonplace.
Yes, it may seem "far-fetched" to someone who hasn't looked critically at the facts, but the longer you look, the more you are forced to conclude that the 'official account of events' does not add up.
____
~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
Now please explain to us how the Madrid skyscraper, which was of a similar truss design to the twin towers, managed to withstand a fire that burned for over 10 hours and reached peak temperatures of 800 degrees Celsius, even continuing to support a heavy construction crane perched on its roof, while WTC 1, which, according to all accounts, had a much cooler fire (roughly 250 degrees Celsius) burning within it, managed to collapse through sudden, total, and synchronous failure of all support structures, causing the building to fall straight down, at a speed only marginally slower than free-fall, into its own footprint, all in only 85 minutes.
That's easy. The Madrid building didn't have the fireproofing insulation blown off of ten floors worth of steel supports. Having an airplane hit the building will do that.
When you're done with that, perhaps you can explain how, in a stunning suspension of the laws of probability, WTC 2 collapsed in exactly the same manner, despite having sustaned impact damage and fire damage substantially different from WTC1.
It's not clear that the impacts were substantially different; both aircraft were banked at the time of impact, damaging many floors. The kinetic energy borne by debris of the 550-mph jetliner destroyed the fireproofing on the steel columns.
One plane hit near the center of the tower, the other farther off center. The offset was of little ultimate consequence given the load-bearing nature of the open floor plan. It was beneficial, but not ultimately necessary to destroy the core of the building with the initial impact.
And if you've managed to make it this far, mabye you can then enlighten us on how WTC 7, which was of a completely different design than WTC 1 and 2, collapsed into its own footprint in, again, exactly the same manner, despite the tiny detail that it was never struck by an airplane.
It seems obvious that it was a less robust design that was hit with about 50 stories of debris from the neighboring tower's collapse; have you been to ground zero? Building 7 and Building 6 were both heavily damaged by debris from the north tower.
I vehemently disagree with your theories on several grounds, the most obvious being that no conclusive evidence has emerged to show any government involvement in this matter - and I mean that the government of George W. Bush simply doesn't have the competence and follow-through to plan an orchestrate such a horrific and complicated event.
There was also another kind of government detachment from 9/11: ignored warnings, late translations, and a lazy administration with self-interest closest to heart.
For the large and growing segment of the U.S. population that disapproves of the Bush administration's incompetence and self-enrichment during a critical time in our history, your theories are the ravings of a crackpot. We may be united in our disdain and disgust for Bush, but your conspiracy rants are very far removed from the reality-based subjects we should be concerned with as a country and society.
Are you seriously maintaining that steel-reinforced concrete structures are more fire-resistant than steel-framed structures?
Why would you believe otherwise?
I'm wondering how many customers these guys have. $1000 is less than the small claims amount, seems like a perfect justice would be to have every customer sue the companies in small claims court. The fees the companies would spend in defending against the numerous claims would cost as much as the fines!
(Just dreaming...)...
Accounting scandals, though, are preferable to giving up customer data - in my book, at least. Maybe I just associate the term "accounting scandal" with "stealing money from banks", a practice which fails to elicit much empathy from me, one way or the other.
It may not be much to you if a corporation is up to some accounting shenanigans but it matters to many others. Indirectly I lost thusands of dollars from both Enron and MCI WorldCom. Because I was disabled when a moving van hit me while riding my bike 10 years ago I haven't worked since and what little income I have is my disability income and what dividents and interests a trust that was setup for me can earn. Slowly but surely it has been loosing it's principle because it doesn't earn enough. Other disabled people as well as many retired people also suffer financially because of these crooks. Even employees for these companies lost a lot, many employees of Enron lost their retirement funds. Admittedly they share some blame for that because they should of had those funds diversified and not all or mostly invested in Enron.
FalconShould there be a Law?
And why does PBS get Government funding to shell out completely one sided Documentaries and news?Can you imagine the outrage by the left if the Government funded the likes of Rush Limbaugh or Michael Savage?
While PBS has historically tipped to the left they do have some to the right. I don't recall it's name but years ago I used to watch this show on PBS much like CNN's Crossfire. The show had two people, one from the left and one from the right, and they'd debate an issue of the day.
PBS could be better but at least it's not like it is in Great Britain. Amoung other sources I've heard they have a tax on TVs that goes to support BBC. Now if the FCC were abolished and micropower rqadio and TV stations were allowed to broadcast then things would be much better.
FalconShould there be a Law?
Just keep the likes of Hillary out of office so I don't lose the freedom I have to choose which doctor I can take my family to. If she gets into office I will probably also loose the freedom I have to spend my own money for what I want since she seems to know better how to spend it than I do. For that matter most of the left would like to me to loose the freedom I have to spend my money and grow the economy. After all they vote against Tax cuts every time they can. They also vote against cutting Government programs that should have never been setup in the first place. If you want to stop "eroding civil rights" First you need to remove all government programs that are not part of the proper role of Government. I am afraid that the only way we will ever do that is by electing Independents into office, and I don't think that is going to happen any time soon.
Ooh, missed this. Hillary as president is indeed scary. As regards tax cuts, yes you can blame democrats for opposing them but you can't blame them for not cutting government programs and the cost of them, republicans share just as much blame for this. Two republican congressmen, House Transportation Committee Chairman Don Young and Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Ted Stevens, both from Alaska and republican, pushed to spend $223 million for a bridge to nowhere in Alaska. Even Rush Limbaugh lamblasted it. Now this part I really liked, "First you need to remove all government programs that are not part of the proper role of Government." That's one reason I voted for Michael Badnarik for president. We need to abolish every agency, bureau, department, and office in the federal government that is not constitutionally mandated. This, a government that stays within constitutional contraints, is why when I can I vote for Libertarian Party candidates.
FalconShould there be a Law?
That's easy. The Madrid building didn't have the fireproofing insulation blown off of ten floors worth of steel supports.
The ASTM E119 certified steel comprising the structure of the WTC twin towers was able to take temperatures of 1100 degrees Celsius for several hours while maintaining structural integrity, without the benefit of 'fireproofing insulation'...at least, that's the U.L's opinion...and I'm inclined to trust them.
The jet fuel burning in the WTC could not have even come close to softening or annealing the structural steel of the WTC, let alone in as little time as 85 minutes. Please look here for an excellent mathmatical proof of this.
One plane hit near the center of the tower, the other farther off center. The offset was of little ultimate consequence given the load-bearing nature of the open floor plan.
Sorry, but I'm not buying that. It's farfetched enough to believe an airliner crash (which the towers were specifically designed to withstand) plus weak kerosene fires burning in an oxygen-poor environment could somehow make every load-bearing member fail simultaneously, but expecting another airliner crash in a different part of the other tower could somehow yield the same perfectly symmetrical collapse is beyond incredulity.
It seems obvious that it was a less robust design
Really? 'Seems obvious'?
If you've done any research into WTC 7 you would know that due to it a) being built straddling an existing electrical substation, and b) being Mayor Guiliani's doomsday bunker (a $15 million project), a command post from which to operate in case of a total infrastructure breakdown, it was one of the most (if not the most) overdesigned structures on the planet.
that was hit with about 50 stories of debris from the neighboring tower's collapse; have you been to ground zero? Building 7 and Building 6 were both heavily damaged by debris from the north tower.
Apparently you haven't...try checking out this map:
You'll see that WTC 7 is significantly farther away from the nortrh tower than WTC 6. In fact, WTC 6 stands directly between the north tower and WTC 7.
So how exactly could '50 stories of debris' jump out from the north tower, over WTC 6, and strike WTC 7?
The answer is: it couldn't, and it didn't. There are no reports of more than incidental debris from the north tower striking WTC 7. In contrast, WTC 6 had two huge holes punched straight through it from top to bottom, but remained standing until it was demolished during the site cleanup.
I don't know where you got your '50 stories of debris' information, but we'd really like to see a link. This assertion runs contrary to all other observations of the event.
I vehemently disagree with your theories on several grounds, the most obvious being that no conclusive evidence has emerged to show any government involvement in this matter
What we have here is conclusive evidence that the incidents surrounding 9/11 did not occur in the fashion described by the official version of events. Since that version was researched, verified, and published by our government, they are, by definition, involved in the matter. QED.
your theories are the ravings of a crackpot
That's hardly helpful. I could call your theories the ravings of a self-deluded Polyanna, but that wouldn't be helpful, either.
What is helpful is stimulating intelligent, informed, honest, and rational debate of the subject. I was once like you....I believed the 'official version of events' unquestioningly. When I was introduced to this information by a friend, I was overwhelmingly skeptical, so I decided to go about debunking the CT claims in favor of the official version.
However, the
____
~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
US foreign policy has nothing to do with foreigners disliking and hating the US? There's another meaning for 11 September, try 11 September 1973 in Chile. Or how about a couple of years later when then Pres Ford and Kissinger supported, gave the green light to Indonesia's invasion of newly independent East Timor. Said invasion then led to the death of up to 200,000 East Timorese, 1/3 the population. All just because the East Timorese had the balls to elect a socialist government.
FalconShould there be a Law?
"Peace" comes about when no-one threatens your life and the way you wish to live it.
It's only with justice, or when all of the enemy is dead, that your life isn't threatened. As long as there's someone who feels they've been denied justice, amoung other things, there will be a threat. When someone feels sleighted they aren't at peace and those who they perceive as the purp aren't either, though they may feel they are.
FalconShould there be a Law?
Too bad in 1979 the Supreme Court decided that a list of the phone numbers that you call isn't protected by the 4th Amendment and isn't to be considered private information. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 (which overhauled quite a bit of the 1934 act) also allows the telecoms to distribute or allow access to customer calling records in order to protect their rights, property, and customers.
the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
The patriot act demands that these companies go out of their way to collect, store and then ship this data to the government. They are required by law (or go to Gitmo). The other law says they can be sued for doing so. They are damned if they do and damned if they don't. Either the laws from the 1930's go (bad idea) or the stupid patriot act (which is recent, stupid, and violates many parts of the US constitution) must go.
I don't see what the big deal is. They are just inverting the system a bit. Imagine if they found a terrorist. The first thing they might do is supoena the guys phone records for the last year and see everbody that he talked to regularly, then add those guys to the scrutiny list. This is run of the mill everyday police work.
With this system, it seems all they are doing is simply collecting and archiving all the data in advance, such that they when do find a terrorist they can have their super-computer analyse all the phone data and try to identify accomplices.
Do you guys have any idea how much data we are talking about here? It's not like somebody is thumbing through your personal phone records and noticing that you are calling 1-800-hot-chik all the time. With the massive amount of data they are collecting, the only thing looking at that data are computer algorithms doing complex data analysis trying to find subtle links between the terrorist cells.
The computer will be able to identify terrorist relationships that a human would never be able to figure out looking at the data by hand. It's a perfectly legitimate use of our technology to fight terrorists and something that can't be accomplished without having access to all the raw data.
The constitution gives us guaranteeds against unreasonable searches, but the definition of what is unreasonable is left for contemporary interpretation. Seems to me data-mining is very reasonable given the problem at hand.
National security is also a completely different problem than criminal law and you can't approach the two problems the same way. I think the NSA ought to have even more latitude than they have now to do stuff in the interest of national security, but the fruits of their efforts should be unusable in a court of law.
Do you really think they could keep something like that a secret? It would take hundreds of men weeks to rig those towers to come down. Do you really think every one of them is going to keep their mouth shut? Plus the dozens of people up the chain of command?
Somehow idiots like you seem to think the American government is made up of people who are 'part of the conspiracy' and somehow all keep it a secret. The truth is the American government is entirely made up of, surprise, everyday Americans.
What about the thousands of workers who cleaned up the plane at the Pentagon...are they all in on it too? Any conspiracy theory that requires thousands of people keep the secret is pure BS and anybody who believes otherwise is a total moron.
There are at several fundamental flaws with this argument (note, by the way, that I am not endorsing either theory here, just looking at the logic of your critique).
-- MarkusQ
The code was amended in the 1990s to broaden the powers of the government in surveillance. 18 USC Sec. 2517 is particularly disturbing because it paints a very broad picture of government uses for communications data.
Phone companies can fight any liability on two fronts. For one, provisions were provided in the law for their actions. Secondly, the argument could be made that the intent of the law was for the content of communications, not statistical data on the endpoints. The latter is obviously some pretty gray area, but if you read the text of the law you can see how a decent attorney could make that argument.
It's not a "wiretap". A wiretap is listening in. This is a record that 555-1212 called 555-1234.
I'm glad the mainstream media no longer has a monopoly on over-sensationalizing headlines.
They claim "terrorism" tracking, but they're really just trying to figure out how Chris Daughtry got voted off of American idol.
Why, oh why, didn't I take the Blue Pill?
I emailed my local teleco Verizon stating I was not pleased that my phone records were turned over to the NSA. Here is their response:
Dear R. Heinich,
Thank you for contacting the Verizon eCenter. My name is Jamie, and I will be
handling your request today.
This message is in response to your email dated May 14, 2006. You inquired
about the National Security Agency (NSA) news article. I will be happy to
assist you.
We appreciate that the USA Today article and other reports about the possibility that the NSA is able to analyze local call data records is causing concern.
Please be assured that Verizon places the highest value on protecting the
privacy of our customers.
Anything to do with the NSA is of course highly classified, so we can not
comment on whether or not the news article causing concern is even accurate. But we can say that, to the extent that we cooperate with government authorities, we are confident that we are complying with all applicable statutes. We appreciate the continuing opportunity to provide you with service.
Sincerely,
Jamie
Verizon eCenter