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Germany Seeks Expansion of Computer Spying

gooman writes "The LA Times reports on a proposal to secretly scan suspects' hard drives which is causing unease in a nation with a history of official surveillance. Along with several other European countries, Germany is seeking authority to plant secret Trojan viruses into the computers of suspects that could scan files, photos, diagrams and voice recordings, record every keystroke typed and possibly even turn on webcams and microphones in an attempt to gain knowledge of attacks before they happen."

2 of 177 comments (clear)

  1. Europe beating USA in the big brother arms race by MeditationSensation · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You hear a lot of stories on sites these days about the USA turning into a police state, but I think the UK (all those CCTVs) and I guess now Germany are really kicking our butts in that department lately.

  2. Fearmongering, anyone? by gillbates · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A terrorist attack with nuclear weapons is certain. The question is no longer whether such an attack could be carried out by terrorists, but when," Schaeuble told the Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper in September.[emphasis added]

    If the attack is so certain, why haven't we arrested the terrorist(s)? Which is more likely:

    • The terrorists have already acquired nuclear weapons, know how to detonate them, and are simply biding their time (Osama on vacation?!), or
    • There hasn't been a terrorist nuclear attack because the terrorists haven't been able to acquire a nuclear weapon, don't know how to detonate it, or they're all interned in Guantanamo or elsewhere.

    Fearmongering for personal political gain only detracts from the real issues surrounding terrorism. You know, things like:

    1. The most successful terrorism investigations have involved regular, old-fashioned police work.
    2. The 9/11 terrorists all had valid ID's.
    3. The violations of human rights and common dignity brought about in the name of combating terrorism.
    4. The inability of torture to actually produce usable intelligence, not to mention the moral and ethical dilemnas surrounding it.
    5. The difficulty of stemming the tide of new terrorist recruits when combating terrorism with military tactics.
    6. The moral dilemna of shifting the fight over terrorism to third world countries with no prior history of supporting terrorism.
    7. The Constitutional dilemna of summarily denying rights to an entire class of people by allowing the Justice Department to arbitrarily reclassify their status from "enemy combatant" to "unlawful combatant".
    8. The military dilemna of the United States violation of the Geneva convention in the prosecution of the "War on Terror".
    9. The political dilemna of power seizure by the executive branch made possible by informal declarations of war on concepts and ideas, rather than actual enemies.

    Instead of responding to goons like this, we should instead focus on the fact that other law enforcement officials have been able to conduct successful terrorism investigations without resorting to devices such as these.

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