FBI Quietly Forms Secretive Net-Surveillance Unit
An anonymous reader writes with this snippet from CNET: "CNET has learned that the FBI has formed a Domestic Communications Assistance Center, which is tasked with developing new electronic surveillance technologies, including intercepting Internet, wireless, and VoIP communications. 'The big question for me is why there isn't more transparency about what's going on?' asks Jennifer Lynch, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties group in San Francisco. 'We should know more about the program and what the FBI is doing. Which carriers they're working with — which carriers they're having problems with. They're doing the best they can to avoid being transparent.'"
Just a guess, but maybe they want the unit to remain secretive?
'The big question for me is why there isn't more transparency about what's going on?' asks Jennifer Lynch, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties group in San Francisco.
What are you talking about? This is the most transparent administration in history! (Source )
Who is, I suspect, no longer anonymous to the FBI...
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
The basic problem, of course, is that if they were to do this out in the open so that people knew what was being monitored and how, they would do something to maintain their privacy and, according to the latest FBI Local Terrorist pamphlet, anyone who is overly concerned about their personal privacy is likely a terrorist. Add to that anyone who uses cash for their purchases, who questions authority and who claims their rights under the Constitution and you can lock up the majority of the public as local terrorists. They don't need to be charged, just detained long enough to put them into one of the hundreds of thousands of pre-made plastic coffins stacked up in FEMA yards for "just such an emergency."
Since one of the FBI's mandates is stopping police corruption, I assume that they will be monitoring the personal communications of police officers rather than the personal communications of persons with unfavorable political opinions.
That would be reasonable, wouldn't it?
Who cares? They're about 30 years too late to the punch compared to the NSA. Their entire office is going to be staffed by a single ticker-tape machine being sent whatever the NSA deems useful to the FBI.
Apparently ,if the newsclowns know about it they just want to put the word out. "Beware, we are gonna find out what you're doing and bust you"
Pretty stereotypical of them. Kind of like a narc with long hair, a moustache' and white dress shoes expect them to speak real l33t in the forumz and show off their "hep" attitude toward mp3z, warez, and kiddie pr0n.
How obvious could they be?
*Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
This appears to be the Justice department budget request for the project.
http://www.justice.gov/jmd/2012factsheets/docs/fy12-national-security.pdf
Time to spend more time improving Tor
https://www.torproject.org/
Peter AI6PG
Being opaque/translucent would suck. Wouldn't they want to be transparent, so that users don't see them or their effects on the network?
I can see it now -- suspect gets a text that says "WE'RE IN YOUR VoIP PHONE, MONITORING YOUR PHONE CALLS, LOVE, THE FBI." Oh yeah, gonna catch a lot of crooks that way.
coding is life
This center isn't about obtaining intelligence without a warrant, it's about executing a warrant that the FBI has obtained. An old (and I mean old) wiretap involved nothing more than a wire recorder and a pair of alligator clips at Ma Bell's central office. This center appears to be tasked with devising ways to execute surveillance warrants when the suspect is using technology that doesn't currently have "hooks" to tap.
What good is a packet trace if you can't turn the hex into useful data? How do you handle roaming VOIP? Are there currently "hooks" in the system for intercepting cellular data? You get the idea...
Now, none of that means that this technology won't be put to nefarious ends after it's developed, but the stated intent is benign enough.
To hell with ceiling cat.
Uncle Sam is watching YOU masturbate on the internet.
Fixxord.
I can see the fnords!
Are they any VoIP providers that offer SRTP or other encrypted protocols? I have never seen a provider that offers encryption in any form (well, except for crappy Skype).
The thing is, encryption is actually more important over VoIP than a hardline because VoIP has no laws whatsoever protecting privacy (line taps, etc).
If the FBI wants to watch all the data, then:
- They should just pay for all the hosting, backups and bandwidth.
- Include surveillance in the terms of service.
- Then offer the services to everyone for free.
So after they establish this bit of nonsense are they going to be empowered to put netizens on double secret probation?
Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
who else cannot wait some studio to make this into a crime procedural?
Your examples are comically ironic considering you are trying to justify FBI actions, given that the weight of evidence is in: "Time and again, the FBI concocts a Terrorist attack, infiltrates Muslim communities in order to find recruits, persuades them to perpetrate the attack, supplies them with the money, weapons and know-how they need to carry it out — only to heroically jump in at the last moment, arrest the would-be perpetrators whom the FBI converted, and save a grateful nation from the plot manufactured by the FBI."
http://www.salon.com/2011/09/29/fbi_terror/singleton/
The extra z was accepted lingo in the piracy scene.
Fifteen years ago.
Just a little out of date, that's all.
Did this story fall through a time portal from about 20 years ago?
Or the white dress shoes...
*Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
It isn't like the FBI is doing anything new here....just that they have an official department for it. Carnivore was scanning email since the 90s. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnivore_(software)
then they have nothing to hide.
So what are they doing wrong?
The FBI has no need to let leak information of any of their projects, and when information is leaked that story is probably a mere percentage of the truth and intentionally leaked so we don't focus on the big picture of what they are doing. The jurisdiction and rights granted to the FBI give them more power than most law-abiding citizens could not handle responsibly/logically if they tried. I have great respect for an agency such as the FBI and am very grateful for the services they provide for our country, but the fact that I have accepted that I will never know what is going on behind closed doors there led me not to trust them (And all the negative stories don't help). I would not doubt if this "Net-Surveillance" has been going on for years behind closed doors and will continue to do so, their knowledge and power will simply keep growing and they will never release the full story as to what it is they do. I will always be mindful and respectful of authority, but not when that authority has almost no authority. Just a thought. By no means am I certified to talk about what the FBI does, even if I knew what it was they do. Apologies for any offense.
If the Doors of Perception were cleansed, everything would appear as it is. Infinite. -Aldous Huxley
Both of you are being blinded by your preconceptions.
None of the examples of terrorist plots given by Chrisq were FBI instigated plots (not sure about the Brooklyn Bridge one though). On the other hand, the FBI does have a long track record of borderline entrapment (e.g. the Christmas Bomb plot in Portland, OR in 2010(?)).
But, and this is the crucial part, all of those plots were carried out by Americans, just like the OK City bombing, the Unabomber bombings, and the stand-offs at Ruby Ridge and Waco. The FBI, as a law enforcement agency tasked with investigations on US soil, as subsequently overwhelmingly of US citizens, has a duty to the people to uphold the Constitution. There are legitimate threats*, but that doesn't mean we need a secret police.
*I happen to think our perception of these threats is wildly exaggerated. We are far more scared of, and devote far more money to, terror attacks than their frequency and lethality deserve.
Ceci n'est pas un sig.