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U.S. Government Demands ISP Data Retention

dlc3007 writes to mention an article in the New York Times discussing data privacy. The article expands on the U.S. Government's 'request' last Friday at a meeting between Robert S. Mueller III, Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, and the executives of several Internet Service Providers. The ISPs were required to retain data on users, for trials if subpoenaed. Right now they're asking companies to do this. The threat is that, if they don't comply, legislation will follow. From the article: "The Justice Department is not asking the Internet companies to give it data about users, but rather to retain information that could be subpoenaed through existing laws and procedures, Mr. Roehrkasse said. While initial proposals were vague, executives from companies that attended the meeting said they gathered that the department was interested in records that would allow them to identify which individuals visited certain Web sites and possibly conducted searches using certain terms." We originally covered this last Sunday, but more details have been released on the meeting since then.

42 of 355 comments (clear)

  1. Working Clicky by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here is a working link to the story. Please use the RSS feed from newspapers when submitting stories!

    How do you do this? Go to the RSS feed page and select the category your article appeared in. Then do a search for the title and pull the link that declares it to be an RSS user. It's that simple!

    I don't think this is morally wrong as you're going to their site and you're still getting advertisements. Slashdot is really just a hand selected RSS feed so we might as well use RSS credentials. It saves us the time of registering and it saves the site admins some wasted space & e-mail traffic due to shill registrations.

    --
    My work here is dung.
  2. Appeals to Emotion. by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From TFA:
    In its current proposal, the department appears to be trying to determine whether Internet companies will voluntarily agree to keep certain information or if it will need to seek legislation to require them to do so.
    Translation: Will we have to ram another law through Congress to make this happen, or can we achieve the same results through good old-fashioned coercion and intimidation? After all, if we have to pass a law, then we'll be constrained by the law's wording...but if we 'persuade' the Internet companies to retin this data for us 'voluntarily', then we can act without restraint or oversight...after all, it is 'voluntary'...

    So tell me again....why do the Internet companies have to retain so much data?

    From TFA (emphasis mine):
    "The investigation and prosecution of child predators depends critically on the availability of evidence that is often in the hands of Internet service providers," Mr. Gonzales said in remarks at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in Alexandria, Va. "This evidence will be available for us to use only if the providers retain the records for a reasonable amount of time," he said.
    Ah yes...yet another shameless use of the 'Lovejoy Gambit'. If you oppose this data retention, you must hate children. You don't hate children, do you?

    And once more from TFA:
    An executive of one Internet provider that was represented at the first meeting said Mr. Gonzales began the discussion by showing slides of child pornography from the Internet. But later, one participant asked Mr. Mueller why he was interested in the Internet records. The executive said Mr. Mueller's reply was, "We want this for terrorism."
    And we segue straight from the 'Lovejoy Gambit' to the '9/11 bloody shirt'. How relentlesly predictable.
    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The executive said Mr. Mueller's reply was, "We want this for terrorism."

      At least he told the truth, perhaps though he should have lied better and said "We want this to *fight* terrorism."

    2. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by Virak · · Score: 5, Funny

      If you oppose this data retention, you must hate children. You don't hate children, do you?

      Yes, I do, but that's not why I'm against this.

    3. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by XMyth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wow. You are amazingly shortsighted.

    4. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 5, Insightful


      They're asking this data be retained so that **IF A COURT ORDERED SUBPOENA IS ISSUED** the information will be available. Worried by that?

      Given this administration's shocking contempt for the legal system thus far, yes, I am worried by that. They've collected enough data without having to resort to the 'headache' of due process through the courts...do we really need to make more available to them?

      It's quite simple, really. Don't prey on children and don't plan terrorist acts and you'll be fine.

      I'll ignore your reference to the Lovejoy gambit and proceed directly to your statement about terrorism. Have you read Patriot Act I and II? If you have, you'd know that the new definition of a 'domestic terrorism' is "any action that endangers human life that is a violation of any Federal or State law". You'd also know that anyone who fits this ridiculously broad definition of 'terrorism' can now be considred an 'enemy combatant' and stripped of their U.S. citizenship and rights. Under current legislation, a person could be legally held indefinitely without trial for something as innocuous as speeding.

      If you don't trust the courts to work properly, then your issue is much bigger than this request/legislation.

      In that, you're absolutely correct.

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    5. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by ptbarnett · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Don't prey on children and don't plan terrorist acts and you'll be fine.

      From TFA:

      At the meeting with privacy experts yesterday, Justice Department officials focused on wanting to retain the records for use in child pornography and terrorism investigations. But they also talked of their value in investigating other crimes like intellectual property theft and fraud, said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington, who attended the session.

      "It was clear that they would go beyond kiddie porn and terrorism and use it for general law enforcement," Mr. Rotenberg said.

      ---- end cite.

      The problem with a "surveillance state" is that the collected information can be abused by the people that collect it. And worse: over-zealous law enforcement can find sufficient evidence of a crime anywhere they want, given the vagueness of many statutes.

    6. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh yes, because no government agency would ever abuse its powers.

      Any information that's saved, will be used: if you think it will just be to go after "terrorists" and "pedophiles," you're hopelessly naive. (Or rather, if you think that the definitions of 'terrorist' and 'pedophile' aren't sufficiently vague that they can be easily expanded at will to include pretty much anyone unpopular, you're deluding yourself.)

      Reading your comment again I suspect IHBT, though.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    7. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by RsG · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Subpoena? You mean like the ones used by the NSA monitoring? Where is that due process thingy again? We seem to have forgotten it somewhere...

      Besides which, even if people don't prey on children or plan terrorist acts, what's to stop the **AA from using the greater data retention in the next batch of lawsuits? After all, they can get subpoenas too.

      Pedos and terrorists are convienient excuses. The number of actual, real, internet predators and terrorists is very very small. Most violent or sexual crime is in no way related to the net - and most terrorists could easly commit crimes using low tech means (like, oh say, boxcutters, maybe?).

      And most child molesters aren't random scary strangers - they're people the victim knows and trusts. The best way to limit the number of molested children would be to force people to get a license before having children, and force people in positions of trust with children (teachers, preists, etc) to undergo rigorous psychological testing. What's that you say? That would violate their constitutional rights? Well tough titty - it's for the children, so that makes it OK.

      The reason that laws governing the internet get passed, and laws limiting parenthood don't even get proposed, is that the former are politically easy to sell, and the latter would rightly be seen as oppressive and illegal. It's just more examples of politicians crying "oh won't somebody think of the children" as a way to get elected - because politicians are inherently dishonest and lazy.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    8. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 3, Interesting
      They're asking this data be retained so that **IF A COURT ORDERED SUBPOENA IS ISSUED** the information will be available. Worried by that? It's quite simple, really. Don't prey on children and don't plan terrorist acts and you'll be fine.

      Gov't gets a tip that a terrorist attack might be planned in the Raleigh, NC area. All ISP records from that area are subpoenaed. An automated search is run. Everyone who searched on information about, say, chemistry, nuclear reactors, and uranium (as I have in the past) even out of innocent reasons gets a visit from the neighborhood Gestapo. Maybe even a few of them end up in jail until they can exonerate themselves - after all, a judge/grand jury will be hard-pressed not to charge people with *something* if it's a "national security" issue.

      And the real terrorists will be laughing their heads off, since they have already had their training in their camp in Pakistan.

      -b.

    9. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by indifferent+children · · Score: 4, Informative
      Maybe even a few of them end up in jail until they can exonerate themselves

      Silly rabbit, they can't hold you in jail for more than a few days without charging you with something, and you could be 'produced' under a writ of Habeus Corpus. They wouldn't hold you in a jail. They would send you to Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo (if you're lucky enough to avoid a truly secret detention camp).

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    10. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by Johnny5000 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Have you read Patriot Act I and II?

      If he has, he'd be a few steps ahead of the legislators who actually voted for it.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
    11. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by IAmTheDave · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Wow. You are amazingly shortsighted.

      Mod this puppy WAY up.

      Gonzales has already said that the lack of data retention has already hurt child pornography investigations, practically blaming the ISPs for hindering an investigation - and who want's to look like they're aiding the criminal?

      This half porn/half terrorism is rediculous. Next they'll be saying hate speech, or arson investigations, or whatever - must... retain... records...

      Can = will with the government, which is why record retention is so damned scary. Just like with the Wired article about the surveilance (sp?) conference recently - if they CAN spy on you, they WILL, which has been proven time and again in the very, very recent past.

      Child porn my ass. Control the populace - call it what it is.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    12. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by kfg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      . . .anyone who fits this ridiculously broad definition of 'terrorism' can now be considred an 'enemy combatant' and stripped of their U.S. citizenship and rights. Under current legislation, a person could be legally held indefinitely without trial for something as innocuous as speeding. . .

      . . .without judicial oversight or representation. Say hello to "Judge" Dredd.

      KFG

    13. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by vertinox · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you don't trust the courts to work properly, then your issue is much bigger than this request/legislation.

      Well... To be fair. Nazi courts during WWII worked properly, efficiently, and as intended by those in power. Everyone simply just trusted them to work without question.

      Although, in a big pile of irony, the Allies put the Judcial system on trial after the war for crimes aginast humanity.

      And to really be fair, our judicial system is nowhere near that type of system which is why we need to question its authority every day.

      Don't prey on children and don't plan terrorist acts and you'll be fine.

      Really now... Is terrorist and child predators that big of threat? Did we run out of communists? The worse thing that could come out of this is that we don't have any terrorists or child predators to throw in jail which leads to these huge security organizations twiddling their thumbs and deciding to make up targets in order to justify more funding.

      The probelm with government is that if they don't spend their money or do anything, then they loose their funding. If there are no criminals, predators, or terrorists to go after they will have to create them to continue their employement.

      God forbid we ever live in a peaceful and lawabiding world where we don't need this kind of security.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    14. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by AusIV · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I have to agree with the guy who got modded down to zero, but I don't think you're completely ignoring his last line:

      If you don't trust the courts to work properly, then your issue is much bigger than this request/legislation.

      This piece of legislation is not the problem. If it were really going to be used in the ways they claim it will be used, it would be a decent piece of legislation (although an inconvenience to ISPs). It would help put predators behind bars, and potentially disrupt terrorist attacks. The problem is, as JonTurner suggested, much bigger than this legislation. The problem arises when AT&T gives the NSA any information they ask for without going through proper channels. The problem is that we can't trust our government not to use things like this against people who disagree with them politically. We shouldn't sit here and oppose small pieces of legislation like the one in question, we need to be looking at the bigger issue.

    15. Re:Appeals to Emotion. by killjoe · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No the solution is to impeach this pig. That might teach future pigs a lesson.

      --
      evil is as evil does
  3. Mycarthyism.... by beheaderaswp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's nothing but Mycarthyism.

    We just jumped back 50 years.

    --
    Another consultant who stuck it out.

    "We are the Priests, of the Temples of Syrinx..."
  4. What's the point? by Bombula · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'm not sure I really see the value of this information. Sure, some crackheads end up on Fark.com for showing their ID to the teller while robbing a bank, but the real pedaphiles and terrorists of the world don't do regular google searches for "how to build a bomb" and "kiddie porn" from the computers in their homes. To think there will be any significant amount of useful data collected in this fashion is, well, fairly retarded in my opinion.

    I can see this data being useful retroactively for things like criminal profiling and possibly being valuable for targeted marketing analysis, but not for catching child molesters and terrorists.

    --
    A-Bomb
  5. Just remember, this is not a fishing expedition by smooth+wombat · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Just like the warrantless phone monitoring, just like law enforcement officials can now invade your home without a warrant to see if there is evidence of a crime so they can get a warrant, this is not a fishing expedition.

    Nor are we trying to track where everyone goes or what they read. We're ensuring that everyone is fully protected from those bad, bad terrorists. You know, 9/11 and all.

    You see, people want to be free. We're ensuring they can be free by these actions. All we ask is that people understand that we're in it for the long run and ask for their patience while we administer these proctology exams.

    Just remember, 9/11 was a wakup call. We can't let these terrorists take our freedoms away.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
  6. ...bad idea by big+dumb+dog · · Score: 3, Funny

    This makes me think about an old SNL commercial for BAD IDEA jeans.

    ...Normally I wear protection, but then I thought, "When am I gonna make it back to Haiti?"

    ...I thought about it, and even though it's over, I'm going to tell my wife about the afffair.

    ...Well, he's an ex free-base addict, and he's trying to turn around, and he needs a place to stay for a couple of months.

    --
    "Seven years of college down the drain. Might as well join the f-ing Peace Corps." - John 'Bluto' Blutarsky
  7. Retention is ok if lawmakers agree to scrutiny by postbigbang · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We should be able to keep track of lawmakers, where they go, who's buying dinner (or whatever is spent), which people they're with, whether they used condoms, and their cell phone records.... with reverse # lookups.

    Then we can let ISPs retain the records of where we surf.

    Egads:

    Amendment 1:

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

    Amendment 4:

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  8. The all powerful ISPs by usurper_ii · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Of course, log files can be manipulated and faked. ISPs will have the power to exonerate or destroy people (maybe a new revenue stream for the ISPs???).

    If this does become law, soon it will be required that the ISPs use only "approved" monitoring software, perhaps software that will digitally sign the log files. And then, since they still can't be trusted, the log files will have to be kept in a central location of some government office.

    How much will this "approved" monitoring software cost?

    Usurper_ii

  9. Re:Make it hard for them by w33t · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The best thing you can do with your browser is to write your congressperson and paraphrase some of the more cogent arguments for privacy; many are and have been presented here on slashdot.

    This website can be quite a trove of insight.
    --
    Music should be free

  10. Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution by netsetboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. These people are just going to far...! We need to start blasting ISP's with so much email that they finally get the picture, that we don't appreciate being spyed on...!

  11. Feel Safer? by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Funny

    Republicans bring you smaller, less intrusive government and more deregulation.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Feel Safer? by (trb001) · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, true conservatives, which the Republican party used to be made up of, do that...there's plenty of fuel in the argument that Bush and Co. aren't true conservatives, never were.

      --trb

  12. Harmonization by chill · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The concept of "harmonization" has been used to justify lengthening copyright terms around the globe. If a major area has a longer term, it is easier to convince everyone to bump up to that than have the term lowered. Governments almost never give back power or revenue willingly.

    In this case, Europe was used as a trial balloon by the U.S. While the data retention laws were discussed and debated in Europe, the U.S. policy makers publically commented about the dangers of this sort of thing and how it could lead to a totalitarian "big brother" mentality. All the while they were telling people in the U.S. how much of a breach of privacy this is and how it will never happen here, the back-channels to Europe were doing nothing but supporting the push for mandatory retention and gauging the reaction -- and attention levels -- of the peoples.

    Once the E.U. backdoor hammered thru a mandatory data retention law, the U.S. changed its tune. Newly appointed Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez and staff started talking up data retention in the U.S. and pointing to Europe as leading the way. We are now well down this path. For those of you hoping to stall for two more years until there is a change in administration (aka "regeime change"), don't get your hopes up because the Democrats are just as bad. They'll still fuck you over but will be telling you how much they love you and how it is for your own good. (The Republicans just leave out the "but we love you" part. It is still for your own good.)

    While Europeans love to preach to Americans about how much more privacy aware they are, and how they have Constitutional guarantees and strong laws protecting their privacy and data use, they miss a fundamental difference.

    In Europe, the concept of privacy doesn't include the government. Yes, they have strong laws dictating how data is used, kept, stored and brokered so as to prevent misuse by third parties, individuals and corporations. But, they have no real protections about government access and use to all that data. All in the name of paternalistic government, enacted thru "anti-terror", "anti-drug" and "immigration control" laws the gov'ts of Europe have no privacy when it comes to bureaucratic eyes.

    In the U.S. the concept of privacy really means just you. It is *your* data and *your* information and privacy means ONLY YOU get to determine where it goes and how it is used. The government is NOT (in theory) given a free pass or exemption to use, store or broker your data. For the longest time the U.S. Social Security numbers had printed on the issued cards "not to be used as I.D." so great was the fear of a "national I.D.". Of course, this is offset by most American's apathy towards anything to do with government. As long as they can afford their beers, pay the bills and watch their idiot box most of them will be complacent about damn near anything that doesn't interfere with any of that.

    Don't believe me? How about his for a statistic: more people voted in the last American Idol episode of that television show than did in the last Presidential Election.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:Harmonization by Red+Flayer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Don't believe me? How about his for a statistic: more people voted in the last American Idol episode of that television show than did in the last Presidential Election."

      Not true. More votes were cast -- but many people voted multiple times in the American Idol final. Only in a couple districts[1] did a significant number of people vote more than once (or have their vote counted more than once) in the last presidential election. Plus, you're leaving out the people who voted but weren't tabulated in the presidential election -- I heard there were a couple[2] of those in OH and FL.

      [1] A small town in New England (NH?) had more votes tabulated than they had registered voters.

      [2] where 'couple' = thousands.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  13. Another unfunded mandate by stankulp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Transfer the costs of spying to the ISPs.

    Priceless.

    --
    We must be alert to the danger that public policy could become captive to a scientific-technological elite. - Eisenhower
  14. High potential for abuse by QCompson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Putting aside for a second just how effective this data retention would be in catching child predators and terrorists, the probability of the DOJ and police forces abusing this vast database of information is staggeringly high.

    Law enforcement agencies love pursuing internet crime because it is so exceedingly easy for them to do. They can sit behind a desk, eat doughnuts, and bust a bunch of teenagers on Myspace for posting a picture of a pot plant or a 16 y.o. boobie. Giving them mandatory data retention for two years would make their jobs easier still. If I was convinced they would be going after actual terrorists and real child-abusers then I would perhaps be more understanding, but I don't want the privacy rights of all americans sacrificed so the cops can bust a few more dumb teenagers and closet-perverts.

  15. https:// wanted by crow · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is another good reason to use https instead of http. Unfortunately, most web sites will only use https for commerce. If Google used https by default, then the government would have to subpoena them directly to find out what a particular user searched for. Likewise, if Slashdot used https by default, then the government would have a lot more trouble figuring out who an anonymous coward was.

  16. Dr. Strangelove, or Albert Gonzales? by Open114 · · Score: 4, Funny

    "It would be easy Mein Fuhrer, I mean, Mr. President..."

  17. Re:Let me put that into focus for you. by CreatureComfort · · Score: 4, Insightful


    No. "Big Brother" just ensures that everyone is a documented lawbreaker, and that documentation can be used to harrass, blackmail, or remove anyone who offends the ruling power.

    --
    "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
    Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
  18. The cost to the ISP by kbuckalo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am the owner of a small ISP in Santa Cruz, California. We get a couple/few subpoenas a year from the FBI, like most ISPs. My concern with data retention of logs, which is what is being asked for here, is: 1. privacy - 'nuff said 2: the cost to the ISP.

    We're a small ISP, and we keep a week or two of backups and it's already several terabytes. Now, the feds want us to extract all the access, email and web log files from the backups and save them from 2 years. There's a couple thousand ISPs in the US, spread this cost over the US industry, and you are looking at millions, perhaps tens of millions of dollars per year in additional storage and staff costs.

    As a final point, I have 3 kids. Anyone invites me to a meeting and opens it with slides of child porn and my one thought is they are sick sick sick. Most of the people "invited" to the meeting are probably parents, you can sell anti-child porn without showing it to us! What does it say about our AG that he supports torture and has a collection of child porn which he shows to people?

  19. Re:Ya gotta break a few eggs to make an omelette. by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 3, Informative
    Perhaps. But that's not necessarily a bad thing. Remember that McCarthy exposed quite a few soviet spies.

    McCarthy didn't. The NSA or its predecessor did, via the VENONA program, which cracked Soviet embassy codes and tapped embassy communications. McCarthy mostly threw out a bunch of false accusations, hurt a bunch of innocent of people, and actually made correctly accusing someone of being a Soviet sympathizer *less* credible for a while.

    Crying "wolf" when a herd of deer comes onto your property is seldom the correct answer.

    -b.

  20. Libraries have faced this for years by davecb · · Score: 5, Informative
    Different jurisdictions have required by law that libraries simultaneously
    • retain per-patron loan information,
    • retain circulation information, and
    • destroy personally identifying per-patron loan information.

    This looks insane, but actually resolves rather easily.

    To oversimplify, libraries keep statistical information, so they can get their grants for books loaned per year, retain patron loan information until the book is either returned or paid for, and then destroy the link from book to patron.

    This is so common that all the vendors of library circulations systems "enforce" it in software, citing the need to use precious disk space for current records.

    In at least one case, we made it surprisingly difficult to reconstruct old patron-book links from backups.

    Consider this a word to the wise authors of ISP record-keeping systems.

    --dave

    --
    davecb@spamcop.net
  21. what is it with these people? by misanthrope101 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "It's quite simple, really."
    At least you had one sentence that wasn't asinine. It is simple, really. An administration that has already proven that it does not feel bound by warrants and due process wants private citizens to keep a lot of information on other private citizens, and at their own expense, in case the govt wants to look at it later. It is simple--they don't want to fund this, don't want it covered by pesky due process or oversight by the judiciary or legislature, and don't want any accountability when abuses occur. Simple as can be. Now, the other stuff you said was just stupid.
    "Don't prey on children and don't plan terrorist acts and you'll be fine."
    The administration has already put antiwar groups (such as the Quakers, known terrorists all) under surveillance. So your point is simply wrong. Are you just ignorant, or are you lying from political motives? What is it about a Republican presidency that makes people forget that governments will abuse the power they have? Do you get special Kool-aid that makes you forget the obvious? No government in history has really been trustworthy, and all government is hostile to freedom. Has a fairy godmother come down from heaven and blessed this one so it's immune to the human fallibility, arrogance, and secretiveness that has plagued all the other governments in history? What is it about George Bush that makes conservatives want to give him authority unchecked by due process, separation of power, and public scrutiny? Has that whole "power corrupts" idea been rescinded? I didn't see that memo. Did I miss something?
  22. Re:Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitut by Plugh · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Quoth "netsetboy":
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
    These people are just going to far...!

    Oh, you finally noticed, that, eh?
    Yes, the US Constitution is really quite shocking in that it would make the government hamstrung and inefficient -- if they spend their time worrying about this "Goddamn Piece of Paper", they'll never catch the Bad Guys in time!

    Of course, that was the intent -- make it so freakin' clear as day that the government should not be efficient, should be thwarted in its natural desire to run roughshod over the citizenry.

    But what percentage of the US population is even vaguely aware of the rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights? How many even understand the difference between the fact that these rights are stated to make them clear to all, not to "grant" them?

    The dismal answer, of course, is: not enough to make a damn bit of difference. Despite 35 years of the Libertarian Party trying to wake people up to the issue, the erosion of liberties in the US has continued apace. If things keep going as they are, the us will be a Fascist state (if it isn't already).

    People of the United States! Realistically, you have two basic options!

    1. Keep doing what you're doing, and going where you're going -- to a wierd mix of Fascism (Republicans) and Socialism (Democrats) and a tiny, impotent group of Libertarians
    2. Concentrate the free-thinkers in a State that still has some vestiges of a Culture of Liberty

    The choice is yours!

  23. Re:Let me put that into focus for you. by jrockway · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > No. "Big Brother" just ensures that everyone is a documented lawbreaker, and that documentation can be used to harrass, blackmail, or remove anyone who offends the ruling power.

    This, to me, is the scarriest thing that a government can do. Pass laws and then say, "well it's OK, we're not going to use this against people". What? Don't pass laws if you're not going to prosecute every violator. Otherwise it sounds like you're saying, "this law shouldn't affect people that don't cause any controversy... we're only going to use it to take down people we don't like". Great, just great.

    If every law were actually enforced, they would go away when people got fed up with them. Imagine every jaywalker going to jail -- jaywalking wouldn't be illegal for much longer after W (or someone else important, not one of us pleebs) had to spend time in a cell overnight.

    Speaking of which, I think it's time to start filing lawsuits against the government for all these bullshit laws that are passed. I'm sure there are plenty of other laws that make these laws illegal.

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    My other car is first.
  24. Re:Article Text by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Insightful
    > The executives spoke on the condition that they not be identified because they did not want to offend the Justice Department.

    Why. If they're doing nothing wrong, they have nothing to hide.

  25. Brings up an interesting question by BlackCobra43 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    WHY exactly does the Attorney General of the United States spend so much time looking at child porn? And why isn't he getting arrested when he clearly admits to it? I fail to see a single situation in which the AG needs to directly see images of child pornography in order to accomplish his job.

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    I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies