Deutsche Telekom Secretly Tracked Phone Calls
Dekortage writes "German telephone giant Deutsche Telekom has admitted to secretly tracking the phone calls between board members and journalists, in an effort to identify media leaks about internal affairs. As noted by the German Journalists' Association, 'This company has special access to the records of its customers.... That means it has a special obligation to be trustworthy.' DT denies having eavesdropped; it merely tracked the calls dialed."
"Hello."
"Hey, what's up?"
"Well, I'm a board member, and they're tracking our calls now, so I can't call you at (insert newspaper name here)'s HQ from the office anymore, and that's why I'm calling you from a pay phone."
"OK, just meet me at the coffee shop at 7pm tonight."
"Sure."
Problem solved. Idiots.
A major corporation providing a necessary public service mis-uses those records for personal reasons! Film at 11!
Okay, is anyone else not surprised to read this? Do any you have actually think that your local telecom ACTUALLY respects your privacy and doesn't do funny things with your data?
Sure, this was only on its own executives. But doing this to faceless subscribers is not a far leap of the imagination.
Bearded Dragon
The company's internal security didn't just track the phone calls between board members and journalists. Obviously, they "had to" check for journalists' number in board members' connection lists. But they also checked for board members' numbers in the connection lists of journalists who wrote particularly much about the company. So hundreds of thousands of connections between journalists and informants, friends etc. were monitored.
I don't think Germany even has laws that are adequate for crimes of this scale. After all, data is knowledge, knowledge is power, power is abusable. More data means more knowledge means more abuse. It is time for lawmakers to react.
blow your mind already
Funny you mention that, when just the other day there was an article on /. that indicated that almost 50% of US companies routinely monitor outgoing email to make sure that there are no information leaks.
I think that if the company owns the phone, and the employee (by paying them) then all communications are fair game for monitoring.
Now if they were snooping on customers, that would be a WHOLE different story...
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