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FBI Stops Satellite Phones

redbird writes "According to this article, the FBI is temporarily (although they have a different meaning for that word) blocking satellite phones that would allow world wide wireless service because such communications are difficult to tap."

164 of 250 comments (clear)

  1. Communism != dictatorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Communism is a completely different thing. Communism is ONLY an economic system. It is not a philosophy of massive oppression and/or censorship on the people.

  2. a few things by m|sTaMoFo · · Score: 3

    1: wiretapping is worthless against criminals. Criminals learned long ago to always speak in code over phone lines. Wiretapping only exists today for the monitoring of political groups that might pose a threat to the rampant corruption in American government, especially in agencies like the FBI that are used against the American people for political reasons.

    2: hmmm.... looks like nations are becoming obsolete. About fucking time. A few more decades and they can just drop the facades and the world will be able to go corporate!

  3. it's not fear either by kaisyain · · Score: 1

    I hope my original post didn't come across as too harsh. I wasn't trying to offend. Just trying to offer a different viewpoint.

    I find it interesting that everyone automatically assumes that people who are "paranoid" live in a constant state of fear.

    Do sysadmins live in a constant state of fear, or are they merely prudent? It seems to me that it is entirely possible to be prudent and cautious without living every waking moment in a state of fear.

    Currently, the average American is more than likely to be the victim of at least one violent crime in their life. Taking that information into account when you act is not letting your life be ruled by fear, any more than installing a firewall at work means letting your life be ruled by fear. It is merely prudent.

    I was trying to point out that you were not in any actual way truly punished. A woman got scared. Big deal, it happens, especially in today's society. The police checked up on you. Big deal, that's their job. You felt like an idiot and criminal. But those are just your feelings.

    I believe that you could have just as easily taken the position of understanding the woman's position and the cops' position and not felt like an idiot or criminal. Rather than feeling offended you can have felt understanding and sympathy. But that is just my opinion, not gospel :-)

    I agree that it is a little sad that we can no longer trust complete strangers. I also doubt that the sense of threat was her first impression. Probably at first she thought it strange that the car behind her was flashing its lights. Then when it persisted and escalated she began to get worried. Then when it pulled up beside her she got a little scared. And then there was some note that he held up to the window but she couldn't make out what it said and she got kinda scared at that point. Finally, when the car drove away she breathed a sigh of relief and decided to call the police. She decided that if she read a story in the newspaper about some poor girl getting raped and murdered by someone driving the same car as you, she wouldn't be able to live with herself not having called the police. She figured she was probably overreacting and being foolish, but she decided she would let the professionals figure out what the truth was rather than making that decision on her on.

    I don't know if that's what happened, but the point is neither do you. You are jumping the gun and making assumptions just like you are saying she did. Just like you claim she didn't try to understand your point of view, it seems to me that you aren't trying to understand her point of view. You are automatically assume the worst of her at the same time that you decry her assuming the worst of you.

    [For the record, there are many cases of female motorists who are kidnapped and raped while there is traffic around, so I don't think that substantially diminishes the validity of her fear.]

    1. Re:it's not fear either by jabber · · Score: 2

      I should have said in the original post, that from the moment I drove away from the girl, through my interview with the police, I totally understood their rationale. Yes, she had every right to be scared - though IMHO she was overly so (subjective, I know).

      Yes, they were doing their job - prudently. I wish all the reports they have to follow-up on are as benign (while one was taking my statement, nicely as pie, the other was getting my cat to chase his flashlight up the wall - they both had fun). I sincerely hope that her 'encounter' with me is the worst thing that ever happens to her.

      What struck and thoroughly frustrated me, was that good intentions are simply not assumed by anyone. Everyone expects to get screwed by everyone. I somehow saw this as a judgement of my character. I know what my intentions were - but as you point out - no one else does.

      It's like being asked to take a drug test before getting a job offer. To me, it's an offense against my integrity, since I do not do that. The company is just trying to protect itself. Ah well, what can you do?

      Still, it would be nice to change something, that fundamental something.. I don't know if it's a factor of being human, or if it's a uniquely American phenomenon. I'm originally from Poland, and this would have never been an issue there, so I have to wonder.

      But anyway, I wish there was something that we could all do, to make sure that the world is less hostile (perceivably as well as actually) for our kids. I'd prefer that my child didn't have to face a similar situation from either perspective.

      --

      -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
    2. Re:it's not fear either by Clockwork+Apple · · Score: 1

      I wonder how many women have had the crap beat out of them because they let the car run dry of oil? If not beaten, certainly belittled and ridiculed.

      As for helping people, I might and I might not, depends on how I feel at the time. I used to love doing stuff like when I was younger, immortal, all knowing, and the world was a seemingly less dangerous place, but now?

      For me, I would be more worried that a person might misinterpret my motives and react from fear and suspicion.

      I suppose it probably didn't occure to the man but couldn't she have been a bit more paranoid and also armed with a gun?

      This poor guy did a good deed and it didnt go totally unpunished. Suppose this guy is brought up on some stupid politically correct sexual harasment charge (you know the kind that happen every day) do you think for a minute that his lawyer will not have to defend/explain his action?

      Suppose this guy were firing up after he got home to unwind after work. Or cleaning his gun collection, or any number of things that ppl do that might cause the police to react or be nervous.

      This story is sad on many levels but it could have been much worse. Lots of nastier situations could have evolved here. I really wish I didn't think along those lines but there it is.

      Not making a point really. Its a difficult world and as soon as I hear of a working time machine I'm taking my wife and my PC to 1955 where things were simpler. I already learned how to stop worring and love the bomb, so the 50s should be a walk in the park. Not to mention that sat-phones wont be a problem then either.

      Did that put me on topic?

      No?

      Oh well, I tried.

      --
      "Doctor, it's not the voices I hear in MY head, but the voices I hear in YOUR head that really frighten me."
  4. Re:american ingorance??? by Moofie · · Score: 1

    Screw Earth. The sooner all of us Smart People get off this dirtball and go to Mars/L5/Luna/Wherever, we'll be in MUCH better shape. If the normals want to spiral down the toilet bowl of restrictive governments and Racial Tensions (tm), let 'em. Those of us with courage, vision, initiative, imagination, and know-how can just move elsewhere. Maybe I'm selfish, but I'm not smart enough to solve all the problems of this planet. I AM smart enough, however, to route around them.

    It's like that scary dude in Alien:Resurrection said: "Earth...what a shithole..."

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  5. Knuckling under - bad habit by homunq · · Score: 1

    However much you do or do not trust the FBI, this is still bad news. If satellite phone companies are willing to give wiretap capabilities to a "legitimate" government in one case, why not other cases? And there are clearly governments out there that have even less regard for life than the FBI has for privacy.

    In fact, Iridium originally excited me because it is essentially a democratic technology. It can give information the power to cross borders unsupervised by authorities. Even at 2400 baud, it could send a whole lot of newspaper articles into the hinterlands of China or out of the jungles of Chiapas. If the corporation controlling it is going to start collaborating with governments, I guess that potential will be squashed.

  6. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by SimonK · · Score: 1

    Thats from Mao, only I think it was actually "freedom comes from the barrel of a gun", which is something I suspect an Objectivist might have some trouble with if the gun belonged to the state, but would agree with wholeheartedly if it was his own.

  7. Re:Oh please by Syslevel · · Score: 1

    Consider the McCarthy witch hunts. If the technology had been in place to precisely know who 'the real Communists' were, innocent non-Communists would not have been persecuted. The information would have been better, hence far fewer innocent lives would have been ruined.

  8. Re:FBI stops school room note-passing... by bolie · · Score: 1

    Heh... in the UK you have laws which require
    you to pass over all your encryption keys if
    asked by the government with a jail term if
    you fail to... that doesn't sound much better.

    Bolie IV

  9. Headline: IRS clerk used data to plot murder by Zigurd · · Score: 1
    The following is from today's Philidelphia Daily News:

    A former IRS clerk in Philadelphia allegedly used a confidential government computer data bank to find and try to kill a restaurant manager who had accused him of robbing her.

    Dameia "Omar" Smith, 27, of Magnolia Street near Walnut Lane, Germantown, was indicted yesterday by a federal grand jury on robbery, attempted murder, unauthorized computer access and related charges.

    If convicted, Smith could be facing about 40 years in prison without chance of parole, said Assistant U.S. Attorney John J. Pease.

    Earlier this month, Smith was sentenced to 111/2 to 23 months in prison by a Bucks County judge for an unrelated attempted bank robbery in January in Northampton Township.

    In the new federal case, Smith allegedly pulled a pistol and robbed about $1,887 from a manager of a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant on Sept. 6, 1998. At the time, Smith worked nights as a clerk in the IRS' collection division of the Philadelphia Service Center in Northeast Philadelphia.

    The robbery happened in daylight outside a bank on City Avenue, where the restaurant manager had gone to deposit the restaurant's earnings from the prior night.

    Later, Smith was arrested for the stickup and learned the restaurant manager would testify against him.

    On Oct. 7, 1998, Smith allegedly tapped into an IRS computer data base, the Integrated Data Retrieval System, which contains "sensitive information about taxpayers."

    He used the IRS computer, without authorization, to get the witness' home address, the grand jury said.

    Then he used the information "to threaten and intimidate her to prevent her from cooperating with law enforcement officials," the prosecutor said.

    After she testified against him at a hearing in December, Smith tried to persuade an associate to kill her by handing him a gun outside her house on Jan. 25, 1999, the grand jury said.

    The associate, now cooperating with federal authorities, refused to do Smith's bidding.

    In February, Smith was arrested in Baltimore on unrelated charges and was sentenced to a short prison term for possession of a stolen handgun. He's been in jail since then.

    The IRS canned Smith in April, the prosecutor said.

    Note: The article does not say why he still had access to IRS computer after being busted on two violent felonies! Still feel safe if you have nothing to hide?

  10. Re:Iridium Sucks by Hobbex · · Score: 1

    You checked with your own government here? Asked if they aren't actively blocking the Iridium frequencies? After all, the Chinese government is _almost_ as good at depriving you of your rights as the American...

  11. The fear is encouraged by leereyno · · Score: 1

    I never realized exactly what was going on until I read your post. I think that these fears are encouraged because only the fearful will give up their rights for the promise of security. Divide and conquer as the saying goes. Divide the country, make citizens fearful of each other, and you'll be able to run right over them. It's really a very old trick and I'm somewhat embarrassed that I didn't see it before now.

    --
    Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
  12. Re:Oh please by Steve+B · · Score: 1

    Nonsense. Proof of innocence doesn't prevent corrupt politicians from targeting their enemies -- just ask Billy Dale. "Better information" just makes it possible for corrupt politicians to improve their aim.
    /.

    --
    /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  13. Re:If all laws were 100% enforced. What %pop jaile by Syslevel · · Score: 1

    It was a long, drawn out, complicated mess, and not well handled by the government authorities.

    What David Koresh and his followers didn't do that would almost certainly have saved their lives was come out with their hands up when asked to do so by clearly identifiable authorities. That would have required an amount of common sense greatly absent, however.

    Hindsight is always 20/20 of course.

  14. Gov & individual paranoia: more by Kaa · · Score: 2

    It could turn out that we are of the same mind, if we work out the causal chains.

    But as people are distrustful of the gov, their distrust is unfocusable. It becomes a heat-seeker, and targets the strange, the unknown and the different. A black family in a white neighborhood, or the smiling stranger in a faceless crowd.

    I think that the distrust of the government is the *consequence*, not the cause. There is a biological bias to be distrustful of the strange and the different. If you perceive the environment around you as safe (huge media role!), then you become more tolerant of the different ones, and vice versa.

    It seems the causal chain would go like this:

    There is a certain level of actual crime ->

    Media tends to focus on crimes, so the *perceived* threat level becomes very high ->

    People become afraid and distrustful, especially of strangers (note that depending on the circumstances that might be the correct and rational thing to do) ->

    People tell politicians that they want 'safety' ->

    Politicians, quite happy, increase the powers of the government "to protect the people" and, usually not explicitly, to prohibit 'strangeness' and 'freakiness'.

    Yes, this is one way the governments get to be more powerful. My point was however, that govenments innately hunger for power without any prodding from the populace. So we should distrust governments and limit their power just because they are governments, and not because the population is afraid and actually encourages the governments to take away freedoms.



    Kaa

    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
  15. Re:s/criminal/citizen/ by CiXeL · · Score: 1

    just like vietnam. in vietnam everythings illegal so the govt can nab any trouble makers it wants whenever it wants. Again it makes me kinda spooked if they decide to try to regain control again by going marshall law through some strategically planned Y2K disasters. Typically Im not a paranoid person but all these things the govt is doing openly is starting to get at me.

  16. Where did you get the idea they couldn't breag PGP by leereyno · · Score: 1

    They can, although it isn't as easy for them as something like DES which I suspect they've found a flaw in. They've got a lot of very bright people working for them to undermine your constitutional rights in the name of national security. I wouldn't put my money on any encryption method being beyond their ability to crack. It would be funny though to give them encrypted white noise and see what kinds of funky patterns they do find in it.

    --
    Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
  17. Re:s/criminal/citizen/ by CiXeL · · Score: 1

    on one more note, the fact that people living in cities and suburbs arent very neighborly is power in the gov'ts eyes. We cant easily gang up on the govt if we're so involved in work that we cant defend ourselves. I think its a good time to implement grassroots-style stuffs like a 2600 meeting in every city or whatnot. My dad owns guns (legally), which puts my house as a red flag in the gov't's eyes. To the gov't the cities are easy to take, the real work is going to be in the small towns scattered across america if they ever did pull that marshall law crap.

  18. Some information on Iridium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Let's get some things straight here about Iridium and similar sattelite phones.


    - The don't encrypt their transmissions. This was intentional because of the international nature of the phones. Many governments around the globe insisted on this as a condition of having Iridium downlink centers in their country. This enables any intelligence agency on this planet to hear everything you say on these phones with or without a warrant.


    - The phones can act a location device already. If the phones can see three sattelites they can pinpoint your location anywhere on the planet including current altitude. Apparently this feature already exists in Iridium from rumors I've heard.


    Don't feel sorry for any of these agencies, they have it all arranged to ensure they can keep snooping on anyone using these phones that they want. There are devices that can be used with the phones to encrypt all your transmissions, but from what I understand they are restricted because they don't want people doing this. Basically if you use a sattelite phone you are carrying a fully-eavesdroppable tracking device for the governments of the world. It wouldn't surprise me in the least if the NSA had a vested interest in keeping Iridium going for this very reason. They would probably be giving the phones away to people if they could afford to do it.

  19. (non)Intelligence agencies by Rotten · · Score: 1

    We have to assume that every legal form of communication that the FBI has not complaints on, is now being taped easily?

  20. So go on and spend our money! by noeld · · Score: 2
    I found the following in S.1217 Departments of Commerce, Justice, and State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2000.
    TELECOMMUNICATIONS CARRIER COMPLIANCE FUND For payments authorized by section 109 of the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (47 U.S.C. 1008), $15,000,000, to remain available until expended.

    15 million directly spent to protect our governments ability to tap phones.
    It seems like a lot of effort being spent on a task that in the long run is going to fail.

    In the long run I don't think that the government can keep everything under wraps, it is as doomed to failure as the efforts in past centuries to keep the reading of the bible the exclusive domain of clergy.

    The only argument I have ever read by a non gov official for this sort of thing is in one of the Tom Clancy novels, were he has the terrorists using encryption to prevent their detection. However these same terrorists have the resources of an oil producing nation to back them up, So would pgp being exported really have been needed for them to be protected or would they have just been able to buy what they needed? After all in the book they are able to produce biological weapons to attack the US with, so how hard would it have been for them to operate without coming to the notice of the CIA without public domain strong encyption?

    So give me a break. Read my mail if you want to, but have fun I even have trouble keeping up with it.

    Check out the Lance Armstrong Foundation

  21. Re:? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm French and I would like to point out two things:
    - With the Echelon system, the US gov. has the means to control/tap every bit of data that get aired. I don't think that sat phones would be a great challenge.
    - I bet that a similar tradition of tapping already exists for the traditionnal wireless phones. In fact, in France, it has allowed to solve the murder of a high ranking official.

    Now, would the french police go to such extend to solve my own murder?

    As for the privacy, I don't think we ever had one...

    Snake (I've forgotten the password again - sigh, I should ask the NSA to retrieve it for me :)

  22. Re:Too much paranoia in the world. by Wah · · Score: 1

    hear, hear brother!

    Just because the news media portrays us all as twisted psychos on the edge of reality, doesn't mean we all are. Sure, maybe when I play Quake, but after that I'm just some dude. Our sensationalist news organizations portray a very different and scary world than the one outside, and they do it for ratings, no other reason. While this may help their bottom line, it warps the perspective of viewers (esp. over a long time)

    The FBI needs to chill the f*ck out and quit relying on wiretaps to get info. I can't even imagine some of the stuff that has been done in my name for my National Security.

    --
    +&x
  23. Political groups by pottsie350 · · Score: 1

    Well here is a shameless plug for the libertarian
    Party. See what thier view is on the governments police tactics.

    http://www.lp.org

  24. Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by Anonymous+Chemist · · Score: 1

    Once more, I hear paranoia at /. The Gvmnt right to a digital feed of phone info is emminent domain. Believe it or not, they don't have time to track ordinary law abiding citizens, just the criminals. Would you have a terrorist/drug trafficker in the US able to coordinate activities without any way for law enforcement to track his communications?

    Think about it, you're opening Pandora's box; and folks like don't care who gets hurt. True you take the risk that the law may be abused at some time, but then if you don't have such a law.. you can be certain that the loophole will be exploited by terrorists or criminals.

    Too many posts at /. have paranoid reply's, unfortunately our Founding Fathers had no idea of nukes, germ warfare, car bombs, etc. I have no doubt if they had, they would have supported the ability to infringe on those folks rights (who would commit such crimes) for the greater good of the nation.

    I've said it before, I'll say it again. If you have nothing to hide, you really have nothing to fear. But I personally support the right for the Law to fight back. You fight the Law...the Law will win.

    1. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by alumshubby · · Score: 1

      The most recent example that comes to my mind are the McCarthy era commie witchhunts, although there are other much less publicized and more recent examples.

      I think this is heavily overshadowed by The War On (Some) Drugs, too. Thanks to the people's right to be protected from personal and property crimes inherent to drug dealing and consumption, we get to live in a frickin' police state.

      --
      "How many light bulbs does it take to change a person?" --BMcC-->
    2. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by alumshubby · · Score: 1

      I hate conspiracy theories, but do you have any idea how much the CIA actually does?

      Don't sweat the CIA, baby. Ever since the Church Commission hearings, their wings are clipped, domestically anyway. Instead, why not worry about the NSA? They're the outfit with the capabilities.

      --
      "How many light bulbs does it take to change a person?" --BMcC-->
    3. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by jandrese · · Score: 2

      You have a lot more faith in the integrity of our government than most people on Slashdot. Many of the people here see a government bent on controlling every aspect of our lives "for our protection", while our protection (and rights) seems to take a back seat to the policical agenda of the FBI, Congress, or anyone else who can afford to bribe^H^H^H^H^Hgive soft money to these people.

      The most recent example that comes to my mind are the McCarthy era commie witchhunts, although there are other much less publicized and more recent examples.

      Just put yourself between a politician and his money if you want to see this for yourself.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    4. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by Trepidity · · Score: 2

      1) Wiretapping is not going to do anything. Any criminal sufficiently sophisticated to have a satellite phone is also sufficiently sophisticated enough to be able to use a normal phone and encrypt his/her communications. The government can then wiretap a bunch of line noise that's of no use.

      2) Why should I forfeit some of my liberties to catch these drug dealers? If they break other laws, such as killing people, then go after them for that, but I really don't care if they sell a bunch of drugs to people who want to buy them (and will find a way to get them whether the FBI likes it or not) anyway. I certainly don't want my money and freedoms forfeited in a futile effort to stop it.

    5. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      Once more, I hear paranoia at /.

      Nope; you hear outraged citizens protesting yet another U.S. Government violation of the Constitution.

      The Gvmnt right to a digital feed of phone info is emminent domain.

      The doctine of eminent domain has nothing to do with communications. The Government not only has no "right" to conduct fishing-expedition broad surveillance, but in fact is specifically prohibited from doing so by the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

      Believe it or not, they don't have time to track ordinary law abiding citizens, just the criminals.

      You reveal a breathtaking ignorance of recent history -- have you really never heard of Richard Nixon or J. Edgar Hoover?

      Would you have a terrorist/drug trafficker in the US able to coordinate activities without any way for law enforcement to track his communications?

      Shall I set up another one for you to knock down, and would you like it stuffed with polyfoam, rags, or the traditional straw?

      Law enforcement has the authority to track the whereabouts and communications of specific individuals within a specific time period once a warrant for that purpose is issued. They will retain the ability to do so even if satellite feeds, strong encryption, etc. come into routine use -- all they have to do is plant old-fashioned bugs in the right places.

      The main disadvantage with old-fashioned bugs is that planting them is labor-intensive. This is a minor PITA if the FBI only wants to monitor the relatively small number of targets (a few thousand per year) for which they have legitimate warrants. However, it is a show-stopper if the FBI wants to conduct wide-ranging fishing expeditions -- sooner or later, they'd be caught red-handed breaking the law and leaving physical evidence thereof.

      The fact that the FBI treats new communications technologies as a harbinger of TEOTWAWKI thus raises grave suspicions as to their real agenda.

      Think about it, you're opening Pandora's box; and folks like don't care who gets hurt.

      Number of people murdered by their own governments in this century: 10^8, give or take a factor of two.

      And you say the people who oppose dangerous expansions of government power are "opening Pandora's box"??

      Riiiiggghhhttt.

      True you take the risk that the law may be abused at some time

      If you hire a convicted embezzler as your accountant, you "take the risk" that he may steal from you. This is more or less what the "trust the Feds" side of this debate is asking of us.

      but then if you don't have such a law.. you can be certain that the loophole will be exploited by terrorists or criminals

      The Constitution is not a loophole.

      unfortunately our Founding Fathers had no idea of nukes, germ warfare, car bombs, etc.

      This is the same braindead argument advanced by the people who pushed through the CDA -- our Founding Fathers had no idea of the Internet, so the First Amendment can't be applied to it. The Supreme Court correctly rejected this notion.

      I've said it before, I'll say it again. If you have nothing to hide, you really have nothing to fear.

      No matter how many times you have said it before or will say it again, this slogan remains as inane as ever. As long as governments abuse their powers, anyone who opposes government policy has something to fear.

      But I personally support the right for the Law to fight back. You fight the Law...the Law will win.

      I certainly hope so. The FBI is fighting the Law (specifically, the Fourth Amendment), and deserves to lose.
      /.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    6. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by Harik · · Score: 1
      How about your right to make an honest living? Are you willing to give that up? It's not as far-fetched as it seems.

      Lets take another "good idea" law, this one from the "war on drugs". This law gave the police the right to sieze any money from people carrying large amounts, by saying "anyone with lots of cash is buying drugs. Period. That's our probable cause."

      Sounds reasonable, right? Only drug dealers would carry that kind of cash, of course, so no honest citizens would be affected...

      ... or so you would think. So, a cattle rancher takes out a large loan at the start of a new season. He converts it to cash, and drives to an auction. Oops, he was late so he sped a little, and got pulled over. Now he goes to jail.

      Mind you, it dosn't end there. He quickly proves that he's not a drug dealer, and is released. No problem, right?

      Nope. He forfit the entire loan. All of it. Even though he is an honest citizen, his money now belongs to the state. And they do not HAVE to give it back.

      Do we really want to wait for a blatent abuse of this new law before we decide that it too is a bad idea?

      Remember, the "War on Drugs" was to "save the children" from drug abuse. A noble goal, for sure, but it has failed and has done nothing but to increase the violence. Sometimes good ideas go astray, which is what the founding fathers understood. I wish we had their guidence today.

      --Dan

    7. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by barleyguy · · Score: 1

      First of all, in order to be paranoid, you must be scared. It's very much a different matter to be paying attention. The reason we get upset about this is because we are SUPPOSED to be free. The ONLY reason the government was originally created was to protect out borders from outside interference, and to standardize the economy. Controlling the general population was not even intended.
      For some reason, you seem to think our founding fathers were not smart enough to see what direction things would be headed. I think exactly the opposite. The reason they TRIED (and apparently are failing) to protect our freedoms is because they did see what direction things were headed. I do NOT think they would support infringing on the people rights in order to create a "greater good". This is the sacrificing of rights for a false illusion of safety. If you think they are protecting you, you are a fool. When you decide to call them to protect you, they will be happy to show up and clean up the mess afterwards.
      "THE LAW" was created by the people - out of fear. The people trying to protect freedom are not the ones who are paranoid. The ones who blindly give up freedom for a false sense of security are the ones who are paranoid. I DON'T support the "law"'s "right" to fight back by infriging freedom. And I don't hold a fear of fighting against it.

      The "nothing to hide, nothing to fear" analogy is also pure bull. What if the law makes something illegal that you believe in? Liberty is the right to do what you believe in. We have a right to liberty. Should we hide our liberty, so we have nothing to fear? NO! NO! NO!

      When it comes down to it, it's really about good and evil. Evil comes in many forms. There is the evil the law is pretending to protect us from, and there is the evil the law creates - by lack of freedom, by giving crime as an option, and by having a standard "consequence" for evil actions. Law has very little true effect on the balance of good and evil on the planet. So allowing law to do evil, in order to feel protected, is pure foolishness. It simply makes it easier for abuse of power to occur.

      --
      --- "So THAT's what an invisible barrier looks like!" - Time Bandits
    8. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by Zigurd · · Score: 1

      Oh come on! If I have nothing to hide... my ass! Outside of first-world countries official corruption is endemic. Inside the U.S. there is a long history of IRS abuse and other federal law enforcement corruption. It is completely reasonable for the law-abiding to protect themselves. Ask youself: Are the odds greater that a terrorist will blow me up or that some bureaucrat with a hair across his ass is going to mess up my day?

    9. Re:Government Taps..Paranoia Runs Deep.. by Gleef · · Score: 2

      Anonymous Chemist wrote:

      Once more, I hear paranoia at /. The Gvmnt right to a digital feed of phone info is emminent domain.

      No, "eminent domain" is the right of the government to take private property in exchange for just compensation. It is completely unrelated to what we are talking about here. The government has no right to a digital feed of phone info, in fact, the Fourth Amendment explicitly says the opposite, that a citizen has the right to security against such searches unless probable cause exists, and an appropriatly detailed warrant is issued.


      Believe it or not, they don't have time to track ordinary law abiding citizens, just the criminals.

      Believe it or not, even without bringing paranoia into the mix, they sometimes have trouble distinguishing between law abiding citizens and criminals, and try to track them anyway. That is one reason why we have a Fourth Amendment, to ensure that there are checks and balances on the government when it comes to investigating citizens.


      Would you have a terrorist/drug trafficker in the US able to coordinate activities without any way for law enforcement to track his communications?

      First, you are misrepresenting the issue. We are not preventing the government from tracking terrorists. If they pay attention to the rights of citizens it is merely more difficult to track a terrorist or drug trafficer, not impossible. Secondly, I, and most people I know, know and accept that if they maintain our rights as citizens, law enforcement's job is harder, and there might be more crime. That is the price of freedom.


      Think about it, you're opening Pandora's box; and folks like don't care who gets hurt.

      No, the Feds are opening Pandora's box by removing the citizen's right to protection against searches. They don't care who gets hurt. In addition, if we get another J. Edgar Hoover in the FBI, than the paranoid fears are all justified.


      True you take the risk that the law may be abused at some time, but then if you don't have such a law.. you can be certain that the loophole will be exploited by terrorists or criminals.

      Such laws don't prevent terrorists from using these products. A terrorist can easily go to Europe, buy an Iridium phone, and use it in the US. A terrorist is more likely to do this than a private citizen.


      unfortunately our Founding Fathers had no idea of nukes, germ warfare, car bombs, etc. I have no
      doubt if they had, they would have supported the ability to infringe on those folks rights (who would commit such crimes) for the greater good of the nation.


      I disagree. One of the key rights that was implicit in many of the ideas put forth by the founding fathers (especially Thomas Jefferson) was that the Constitution must maintain the citizen's rights to the means of revolution, should the citizens decide that a change of government was necessary. That thread strongly underlies the bill of rights. Why should a government not allowed to hunt for muskets and bombs be allowed to hunt for automatic weapons and car bombs?


      I've said it before, I'll say it again. If you have nothing to hide, you really have nothing to fear.

      I have nothing to hide, but I disagree. I have a lot to fear from the US Government intruding in my rights. The key fear is "how far will they go?"!

      ----

      --

      ----
      Open mind, insert foot.
  25. Iridium... by Rabbins · · Score: 1

    Well, this will come close to nailing the coffin lid shut on Iridium. That company has had virtually nothing good happen to them, and are on the verge of filing for chapter 6 protection.

  26. Re:s/criminal/citizen/ by Syslevel · · Score: 1

    If we all showed up at big friendly 2600 meetings, whom would be left to "human engineer"? (translation- lie to, deceive, and steal from).

  27. Ya nailed it right on the head! by leereyno · · Score: 1

    You sure got that one right. It the same reason why you have so much effort going into gun control. An armed populace is a free populace.

    --
    Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
  28. Re:Like Ben Franklin said... by Syslevel · · Score: 1

    The old "UNIX" license plates were intended as humor. People wanted a Unix license. So somebody produced one. Get rid of the GPL and we can have such fun again.

  29. Iridium by theguru · · Score: 1

    Funny, last night Art Bell was talking to some woman in South America over an Iridium phone.. it sounded like she was in the studio with him. I was impressed.

    1. Re:Iridium by mykey2k · · Score: 1

      For US$4000 for the phone and something like US$8 a minute it better sound like the person is in the next room!

      But really, this is the absolute last thing Iridium needs... they're so far in the debt tank I feel sorry for them now. Again, another great idea far ahead of its time.

      (You can see this story at the Chicago Sun-Times... today August 4th for more Iridium woes.)

    2. Re:Iridium by Saige · · Score: 1

      If you think this version of the phone is bulky, you should see some of the prototypes of the Iridium Phone and Iridium Pager they have inside the Motorola Museum. They make the current one look sleek...
      ---

      --
      "You know your god is man-made when he hates all the same people you do."
    3. Re:Iridium by ben.b · · Score: 1

      Well, they may be in debt, but this news hasn't hurt their stock (yet).


    4. Re:Iridium by kev31mc · · Score: 1

      phone is something like $3k now and $3/min to use. Motorola is getting railed because their product has trouble inside buildings but the next gen of phones are supposed to be smaller and stronger than the bulky first model. The only other competitor in terms of handset has yet to release their phone because of quality issues so Motorola isn't doing so bad.

    5. Re:Iridium by Ensign+Nemo · · Score: 1

      I heard quite a while back that the band that iridium uses is right next to the band that ground based radio astronomy uses and so effectively trashed it (radio astronomy) Has anyone else heard this?

    6. Re:Iridium by Syslevel · · Score: 1

      Just a few weeks ago, I remember reading on The Register that the US government had pumped an infusion of cash into Iridium (buying a thousand or so phones for various government agencies) to keep Iriduim from going under.

      So it's clear that Iridium is seen as a friendly resource by the powers that be.

    7. Re:Iridium by theguru · · Score: 1

      Great.. something else for me to pick up on my Seti@Home client.. is it ET or Wolf Blitzer reporting life from the Gulf?

  30. ? by spinkham · · Score: 1

    Acording to this, the FBI is scared that they can't tap the phones easily, and when they can they can't trace it to a location. I happen to like that...
    What business does the FBI have having my location and phone call audio handed to them? If it's really that important for them to monitor a few "national security" cases, they can expend the energy themselves. However, making the phone companies set up their systems to trace everyone smacks of random monitoring and other Orwelian measures...
    I don't like our governments stand on privacy these days... Not at all.. It's only getting worse too...

    --
    Blessed are the pessimists, for they have made backups.
    1. Re:? by Fatty · · Score: 1

      According to the article I would be lead to believe that the FBI needs the location so that they know if the call falls within their boundaries. If the FBI were to tap a call between, say, two Canadians, then they would be violating Canada's national security by wiretapping across a border.

      Of course, there are probably other reasons for them wanting this information, none of which contribute to my privacy.

      Sean

  31. iridium by sashae · · Score: 1

    Too bad Iridium seems to be in such bad shape... after all their initial hype, they're losing so much money that they're apparently near closing their doors. Motorola is near pulling funding for them as well.

    Check out this article on wired for more.

    -s

    --
    ---- noi non potemo aver perfetta vita senza amici -- Dante
  32. s/criminal/citizen/ by Stiletto · · Score: 1

    Replace all occurrances of the word "criminal" with "citizen" and "terrorist" with "law abiding American" and you will see what the US government is really concerned with--tracking ordinary people to sell their information to the corporations who are really holding the strings.

    1. Re:s/criminal/citizen/ by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1
      ...you will see what the US government is really concerned with--tracking ordinary people to sell their information to the corporations who are really holding the strings.

      To paraphrase the saying: Don't apply deceitfull motives to what can be explained with laziness.

      The US Government, and their agencies such as the FBI, have a job to do. They'd prefer it if they could do that job in an effective manner as easy as possible.

      By the nature of these tasks, some jobs are easier to do when liberties and freedoms are sacrificed. The leaders of the agencies, in their belief of a rightious cause, will call for those small sacrifices. They know what they need to do their job and they trust their agency to use the power vested in them correctly.

      This is as it should be. Agencies SHOULD do what they can to be effective. However, the goals of the Governmental machine do not always coincide with those of a free society. That society should always be wary of how "efficient" a Government and its agencies get.

      The conflict between society and its Government is the abuse of power given to said Government. Though leaders may feel that their agency deserves the power it seeks and won't abuse its authority, history has shown otherwise. Someone, somewhere in a beuocracy will abuse the power they are given. Take a look at the IRS (from employees illeagaly searching celebrity files, calous disreguard for citizens' financial lives, to charges of revenge seeking). The trick is to allow the agency in question just enough power to be effective without providing it so much power that the inevitable abuse will be too damaging.

      Do Corporate interests have an effect on Government? Certainly. And quite often its not in the interest of a free society. However, in this case, I think the charge of Corporate incentive is off base. A power play IS involved; but it is beurocratic, not corporate, dynamics causing it.

    2. Re:s/criminal/citizen/ by bjorng · · Score: 1

      It is depressing to see that the FBI's "right" to spy on the citizenry supersedes the right to privacy. So much for that constitution/bill of rights thing.

      From an international perspective, this is even more disappointing -- one gets the impression that this means the FBI will essentially be hooking these satphone ground stations into Echelon.

      --

      --
      This is why I don't post much.
    3. Re:s/criminal/citizen/ by Syslevel · · Score: 1

      Replace all occurances of the word "criminal" with "big fuzzy kitty cat" and and "terrorist" with "glazed doughnut with purple frosting" and you will see what the US government is really concerned with--tracking big fuzzy kitty cats who keep eating all the glazed doughnuts with purple frosting on them.

      Or run ROT-13 on it all, and it delivers a message telling us to wave to Barney up there in the black helicopter.

      Or whatever.

  33. Correct... but... by Danse · · Score: 1

    In this so called democracy of ours, we, the minority, have to bend to the will of the majority. That works ok in many cases, but shouldn't there be a limit on what the majority can impose on the minority? Taking someone's privacy away crosses that line I would think.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    1. Re:Correct... but... by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      In this so called democracy of ours, we, the minority, have to bend to the will of the majority. That works ok in many cases, but shouldn't there be a limit on what the majority can impose on the minority?

      That's why the Founders of the American Republic (they specifically and firmly rejected the notion of "democracy", which they understood to mean three wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for dinner) wrote specific limitations on government power into the Constitution.

      Unfortunately, the government violates these limits left and right, and more often than not gets away with it.

      As P. J. O'Rourke once put it: "Term limits aren't enough. We need jail."
      /.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  34. Iridium Sucks by magnetx · · Score: 1

    We have an Iridium phone, they say a global connection is possible, but we could not get it to work in China or Hong Kong without being 1 mile from any building or tree. They must have 10 sats above the US and 1 above the whole cont. of Asia. It works fine in the states. But who needs it in the states right? This tech has a while to go before I use it again.

    1. Re:Iridium Sucks by Jburkholder · · Score: 2

      >well now.. who would need it in the states? people who don't live there ofcourse.

      Huh? If you don't live/travel in the states, why would you care if its available in the states? He didn't say if you don't live in the states you don't need it. He asked if you *do* live in the states, why would you need it? (if you are out of coverage of traditional terestrial wireless away from populated coverage areas.)

    2. Re:Iridium Sucks by shogun · · Score: 1

      Sounds more to me like the Chinese government is doing something to prevent the system working in there area Iridium Jamming anyone?. Or maybe it just works that bad everywhere.... There are a great many Iridium sattellites, somewhere around 60, and they are all in low orbits , not geostationary ones. Hence you cannot have a certain number sitting above any fixed area.

    3. Re:Iridium Sucks by jovlinger · · Score: 1

      The satelites are in LEO, so they are anything but geostationary. If memory serves, their orbits are in the order of hours from horizon to horizon. (the name iridum comes from the number of such satelites necessary for global coverage under such a scheme == the atomic number of iridium (79?)).

      It's like passing from cell-to-cell when driving on the high-way, but in this case, the phone is stationary, and the cells move.

      So look elsewhere for an explanation of why your coverage was poor.

      Since the system always knows (exactly) where a satelite is, it should be possible to analyze signal strengths from a phone to various satelites to give a rough guestimate of where the phone is (accurate enough for the stated use, probly). So the GPS thingie should be easy enough to implent purely in software.

      Johan

    4. Re:Iridium Sucks by radja · · Score: 1

      well now.. who would need it in the states? people who don't live there ofcourse. there's quite a lot of those, several billion (not counting myself)

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
  35. Why does the FBI have to do this? by Mr+T · · Score: 1

    Isn't irridium pretty much shutting themselves down? They are 4+billion in debt and can't hold on to subscribers. Their service costs and arm and a leg, it's worth it to the small segment that needs it but that's really small.

    --
    This is my signature. There are many signatures like it but this one is mine..
  36. It is happening... by Dast · · Score: 1

    Doesn't take much editing to produce:

    The FBI and other U.S. law enforcement agencies are worried that new space-based telephone systems, which theoretically allow a citizen to use a wireless phone from virtually anywhere on earth, will undermine their ability to control people and trace thought criminals through cellphones.

    Some may argue I am just paranoid. But I offer this: being paranoid is the way we protect our rights. The problem these days is we have been tricked into no longer caring. We are so wrapped up in petty material addictions, we can't even focus on the real issues. And when no one cares anymore, we will lose all of our rights.

    my $cents = $penny x 2;

    --

    This sig is false.

  37. There are enough reasons to be paranoid by bgarrett · · Score: 1

    Blah, think I might have posted a blank message by mistake. Anyway:

    There are sufficient reasons to feel somewhat paranoid about this. "Why would governments collect this information and sell it to corporations, why not just raise taxes?" Because increased taxation looks bad, because lowering taxes has been a traditional campaign promise, and because it's harder to track monies coming from the sale of personal data than it is to track monies from taxation.

    But why else would the government want to collect this sort of information? A barrel of political reasons stick out. The slippery slope from "tracking criminals" to "tracking undesirables" has existed since the advent of computer technology. Another possibility is the same theory that drives insurance rates -- if the Jews, or the people making $25,000 to $45,000 a year, or the fathers of 2.5 or more kids are more likely to commit crimes, statistically, then monitoring those groups more closely would lead to prevention. Right?

    While it's easy to say "They are out to get us", I hope people will settle for "This makes it easier for them to get us" -- prepare for the worst, rather than expect it.

    --
    Nothing worth doing is worth doing today.
  38. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by ksheff · · Score: 1

    I thought that quote was from Chairman Mao....doesn't matter.

    --
    the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
  39. Well said. by YankeeCowboy · · Score: 1

    Amen... you hit it on the head. In the current frenzy for politicians to seem like they are "doing something" freedom is going right out the window. Amazing how little sense of history (or outrage) the body politic currently possesses.

  40. A different tactic by BitPoet · · Score: 2

    I've been considering just emailing the FBI, CIA and NSA whenever I do something. Just so that their info is up to date. Maybe send some general outlies of my phone calls every now and then. For example "today a telemarketer called, I told him I didn't want any" or "well, I'm off to the bathroom. more email when I get back"

    Only problem is that I haven't figured out exactly whom to send it to. DDI maybe? Now if everyone did this, imagine how much money we could save in taxes! Could probably also flood their systems if enough people did it.

  41. Re:FBI stops school room note-passing... by hopeless+case · · Score: 1

    How about voting libertarian instead of democrat or republican?

    Bush and Clinton have both supported the spooks in their insistence that crypto be regulated and every phone be tapped.

    Nah. We want our hand-outs too bad. We would much rather watch the two parties have a pillow fight over a tax cut that amounts to 1% of GDP and accept the fact that they agree on everything that matters.

    Better to let the status quo proceed to the point where we are all fitted with wireless monitors and shock collars, which would only be invoked after due process and a court order, so don't worry.

    ;-)

  42. Re:american ingorance??? by Wah · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately corporations controlling things is what you get in a capitalist democracy. Especially a large one. It's caused by the need for vast amounts of money to get the name recognition necessary to win an election. So you go to the "people" with vast amounts of money, corporations. Thus, you are beholden to the folks that _really_ got you elected, not the people that voted to get you elected. Anyone follow that? It's why I'm chanting "Jesse in 2004", if for no other reason than to shake up a stagnant system.

    Reform is needed, communication is needed, education is needed, and VOTE GADDAMMIT! If people here spent half as much time researching candidates and picking the ones they want as they did bitching about the ones they have...they would save half their wasted time.

    The problem is the one of the fat and happy man. Being that because he is fat and happy he doesn't give a shit about what else happens, especially to "other" people, as long as he stays fat and happy....right up until the time his heart bursts.

    --
    +&x
  43. Re:Too much paranoia in the world. by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    >Check out the other reply, I mean; can't people express themeselves without juvenile vulgarity? The again he's probably a pubescent 21 year old who thinks every f*ur letter word is a great way to make a point.

    Sometimes a good expletive is exactly what fits, to borrow a bit from Buddy Hacket, if you were working in your garage and dropped an anvil on your foot, what would you scream "Speing is here!"? No, what would fit is something along the lines of "F*CK, my foot! I think I F*CKING broke it! OWWW, F*CK!"

    I'm sick of pointy heads pretending that they're too evolved to use profanity.

    >My reply...easy; I like being safe; and while it's shame that happened to you, ask yourself if she was your sister or wife; if that wouldn't make you feel better.

    If it was my sister or wife (I'm not married yet, 45 days and counting) I'd be happy that someone was nice enough to try to keep her from breaking down in the in middle of nowhere where some REAL sick could rape/murder her.

    >I have friends in Law Enforcement, and the trick is.. they are all fine people, who think of the greater good. Not Hitler types who want to infringe rights at every turn.

    I too have friends and relatives in law enforcement. MOST of them are great people, but some cops (the minority, but still far too many) get into the field because they have a power fetish and are too into the "I'm a cop" thing.

    There are two types of people who become LEOs, one is the honest caring person who wants to help society, the other is an asshole who wants to abuse power and push people around.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  44. Re:More about communism by Kaa · · Score: 2

    Neither Lenin, nor Stalin, nor any other Russian, Chines, or Eastern European leader claimed to run communist states, because a communist state is an oxymoron

    That is entirely correct. However, the common usage in the West was to call countries like the Soviet Union "communist" and countries like Sweden "socialist". The Marxist terminology, as you said, would be to call the first one "socialist", and the second one "capitalist".

    Furthermore, Marxism has been tested with warying degrees of success several places

    I claim that the "varying degrees of success" was not varying at all -- everywhere the "test" turned out to be a complete failure.

    However, in none of these cases where the conditions that Marx himself set forth (for instance in The German Ideology, and also of course in the Manifesto of the Communist Party) for a foundation for a successful transition to socialism and later communism present.

    That is also entirely correct, although the conditions that Marx set forth did not occur anywhere. I would argue that this point to (one of many) weaknesses of Marx's ideology, rather than serve as an explanation why the USSR could not be called a marxist state.

    ... a lot of early Soviet history skipped ...

    You are applying the classical western-marxist analysis to the Russian revolution. I myself tend to think that among the Russian revolutionaries some were idealistic "good guys", some were bloodthirsty sadists on a power high, and some were pragmatic "whatever it takes for me to keep my job/position/comforable existence". The ranks of the idealists thinned in the late teens and early twenties when they had to deal with a chaotic country that almost fell apart into many pieces, and the rest of them were shot during the purges on the late 20s and 30s. In the 30s the bloodthirsty sadists came to power (with very unfortunate consequences to the country) and since the 50s the pragmatists ran the slowly dying colossus. I am quite sure that the preponderance of peasants in the Russian population didn't make that much of a difference and even if the majority of the population *were* proletariat, things would have turned out to be much the same.

    Face it, Marx was wrong.

    Kaa

    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
  45. Approaching convergence by jabber · · Score: 2

    Agreed on the cause --> effect sequence. The same [c|w]ould happen in an anarchy, so the government doesn't impart the fear.

    My take on the government 'will to power' draws on Nitsche's Zarathustra however. As stated, governments are composed of individuals. Individuals are hungry for power, and being in a position to enforce one's will simply provides the means. A corrupt politician is the example. So is 'you can't fight city hall'. If you call their motives or reasoning into question, you are undermining their means to retain (or continue to gain) power - the resonse is driven by self-preservation. {tangent!! Ooga! Ooga!}

    This is why Communism failed {IMHO}. Individuals were handed means, and their individual interests overpowered the ideology.

    So, same conclusion: We should prevent (through inspection, peer-review, whatever) individuals and interest-homogenous groups of individuals (government, corporations, special interests, ethnicities, religions, earning brackets... umm.. thin ice?) from achieving too much power over other individuals or groups thereof.

    Thomas Jefferson said that a majority has no more right to enforce it's will onto an individual than an individual does to enforce his will onto a majority. This was said in the context of tyranny vs democracy. Oddly, Jefferson was a slave owner. Go figure! :)

    --

    -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
  46. A brief history of privacy... by Cu · · Score: 1

    04.08.1999

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) places a ban on satellite phones, deeming them a risk to National Security. This ban remains in effect until the 43rd amendment (2011), outlawing any audio communication not routed through FBI voice-processing computers (VPCs).

    21.03.2000

    U.S. cryptography export regulations are tightened, limiting which countries cryptographers are allowed to visit. Banned countries include Tibet, Botswana, and the entire continent of Antarctica.

    02.04.2001

    President Bush Jr. (xtR)announces a "new commitment to making this country safe," and demands a four billion dollar budget for the Selective Wire-tapping Initiative Group (SWIG).

    21.09.2001

    SWIG begins random wire-taps under direction of the Federal Bureau of Investgation and Communication (FBIC).

    13.10.2002

    FBIC announces an alliance with France (a wholly owned subsidiary of Microsoft Global) with the goal of "stopping all those France people from speaking in code."

    01.02.2004

    The US government places a temporary ban on fiber-optic pathways. Senator Slade Gorton (xtxtxtR, WA) cites that they "pose a very real, very present, very immediate threat to national security."

    30.01.2005

    President Bush Jr. signs into effect legislation requiring all citizens to carry Personal Identification Cards (PICs) which state relevant information including height, weight, gender, marital status, and political affiliation.

    25.05.2007

    After being re-elected by a landslide vote in the first MS Vote(tm) presidential election, George Bush pushes for stronger personal information availability. Personal Informative Devices (PIDs), which must be left on at all times, broadcast the wearer's religious affiliation, sexual orientation, and Operating System. A group of renegade Linux hackers, lead by known occultist Linus Torvalds, re-preogram their devices, thus creating Personal Un-identification Devices, and a great furor over the use of their PUDs.

    05.11.2008

    In a show of just how stupid they really are, the American people vote George Bush Sr. (xtxtR) back into the White House.

    07.04.2009

    President Bush Sr. gets lost on his way to the bathroom. In a breach of policy, he is not replaced by Vice President A Mr. Potato Head Doll, but by a vat-grown clone of J.E. Hoover.

    08.04.2009-03.01.2013

    History not available as it poses a risk to National Security.

    04.01.2013

    MS George Bush 3 takes office.

    07.01.2013

    MS George Bush 3 collapses in the Oval Office from apparent heart-failure.

    013.07.2013

    The Federal Bureau (FB) places a temporary ban on eye-contact, citing a high risk to national security.

    --
    I'm Abram Bender. You're not.
  47. Re:Sorry, I must of missed this... by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    Isn't it true that organisations only render evidence inadmissable as evidence if they don't gather it under a warrant? This means, they can do as much wiretapping as they like when out fishing for criminals, then they can apply for a warrant to get the evidence needed to nail the criminals.

    No, the fact of illegal search or wiretap not only invalidates it as an evidence against the person who was searched or wiretapped but can also get them sued just for doing it regardless of the reasons or purpose. There probably can be a lot of trouble with proof (unless they attempted to use it in court -- that makes proof of their illegal activities self-evident), however once it's proven, they are guilty.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  48. Approaching convergence asymptotically by Kaa · · Score: 2

    So, same conclusion: We should prevent (through inspection, peer-review, whatever) individuals and interest-homogenous groups of individuals (government, corporations, special interests, ethnicities, religions, earning brackets... umm.. thin ice?) from achieving too much power over other individuals or groups thereof.

    We are almost in complete agreement, except that I would add a big stick to the means to prevent groups from getting too much power. Big sticks on occasions can be very useful...

    You are also right that the issue boils down to the philosophy of individual vs. a group. There is a basic, axiomatic choice to be made: in case of conflict of an individual and a group, whose values/interests/goals/points of view are more important? It's almost impossible to argue this issue, as it is too basic -- it's like arguing the existence of God. The issue under discussion -- what are acceptable limits to what a group can impose upon an individual "for the common good" -- follows directly from the stance taken in the base issue. Obviously, libertarians tend to favor the individual, and utilitarians tend to favor the group.

    Kaa

    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
  49. it's not paranoia by kaisyain · · Score: 2

    When the FBI says in 1993 that crime statistics show that 8 out of 10 Americans will be the victim of a violent crime during their lifetime, it's not paranoia.

    It's common sense.

    Have you ever read Strong on Defense? It's a thoughtful book. One of his main points is My safety first, your feelings second. His book is full of stories of people who were raped and murdered because they were trying to be considerate and didn't want to offend people.

    Really, who gives a fuck if you are insulted or think I'm rude as long as I am still alive and okay?

    What's more, I think the girl did the right thing by not pulling over. She should have kept driving until she found the first open business. Sorry that some police did the prudent thing by checking you out. Sorry that you were offended that they did their job. Sorry that some girl was afraid of stopping in a dark road in the middle of the night at the urging of some guy she does not know.

    I'm sorry if I'm coming across as harsh here, but really, I think she was prudent to not take the chance by stopping.

    I also think that the insecurity the average person feels on a dark street when a group of youths carrying guns approaches them has nothing to do with the government's paranoia of Iraqi terrorists or biological weapons. It has to do with the fact that Americans kill, rape, and rob other Americans.

    Finally, how exactly were you punished? Were you crucified? I don't think so. So just chill down and get off your offended high horse.

    Or would you prefer that when a scared woman calls the police they just ignore her complaint and don't follow up on it? What's the next step? You call the police because you think there is an intruder in your home, or because you were mugged and they figure you're just overreacting? Please. The police have an obligation and all they did was ask you some questions. Were you charged with anything? Did they incarcerate you?

    You weren't punished in any way. So don't try to pretend that you were.

    1. Re:it's not paranoia by jabber · · Score: 2

      Ok, a lot to reply to here, so I'll be terse. No offense intended.

      Really, who gives a fuck if you are insulted or think I'm rude as long as I am still alive and okay?

      I refuse to live in that level of fear. I think that quality of life matters as much as it's continuance.

      Sorry that some police did the prudent thing by checking you out. Sorry that you were offended that they did their job. Sorry that some girl was afraid of stopping in a dark road [...] some guy she does not know.

      Not at all. 7:30pm is light, road was busy, but that's besides the point. I'm glad the police followed up, although I was surprised. I'm surprised that the sense of threat was her first impression.

      Finally, how exactly were you punished? Were you crucified? I don't think so. So just chill down and get off your offended high horse.

      My name is now on a police report. It's not an official 'record', but it's in a computer. I wasn't crucified, but I wouldn't be surprised if it came back to bite me. Say I try to get a job working on a government security project. Guess what the background check will turn up... I guess the paranoia is contagious.

      As for my high horse... Apologies. Next time I'll be sure to be more sensitive to your personal point of view, and tailor mine so as to not offent you. After all, it's your world - I just get to live in it.

      You weren't punished in any way. So don't try to pretend that you were.

      Not as such, no. But I ended up feeling like an idiot, and boarderline criminal, for trying to help. Does the name Pavlov ring a bell? I've formed an association now, and if you're broken down along my highway, I'm not likely to stop to help anymore.

      --

      -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
  50. Exactly by It'sRed · · Score: 1

    You've hit the nail right on the head. It's always annonying to hear anti-communists rants from people who have obviously never read the Communist Manifesto.
    Additionally, there is a big difference between big-c Communists, and small-c communists. Big-c Communists are members (or supporters) of the traditional Communist Parties in China and the former USSR. Neither of these parties have exactly adhered closely to the ideals laid down by Marx. Small-c communists, on the other hand, are simply people who believe that the society Marx proposed would be a good one to work towards. This is analogous to the relation between small-d democrats and big-d Democrats. Just about everybody in America calls themselves democrats, but not everybody votes for the Democratic Party.

  51. A brief history of privacy... by Cu · · Score: 1

    04.08.1999

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) places a ban on satellite phones, deeming them a risk to National Security. This ban remains in effect until the 43rd amendment (2011), outlawing any audio communication not routed through FBI voice-processing computers (VPCs).

    21.03.2000

    U.S. cryptography export regulations are tightened, limiting which countries cryptographers are allowed to visit. Banned countries include Tibet, Botswana, and the entire continent of Antarctica.

    02.04.2001

    President Bush Jr. (xtR)announces a "new commitment to making this country safe," and demands a four billion dollar budget for the Selective Wire-tapping Initiative Group (SWIG).

    21.09.2001

    SWIG begins random wire-taps under direction of the Federal Bureau of Investgation and Communication (FBIC).

    13.10.2002

    FBIC announces an alliance with France (a wholly owned subsidiary of Microsoft Global) with the goal of "stopping all those France people from speaking in code."

    01.02.2004

    The US government places a temporary ban on fiber-optic pathways. Senator Slade Gorton (xtxtxtR, WA) cites that they "pose a very real, very present, very immediate threat to national security."

    30.01.2005

    President Bush Jr. signs into effect legislation requiring all citizens to carry Personal Identification Cards (PICs) which state relevant information including height, weight, gender, marital status, and political affiliation.

    25.05.2007

    After being re-elected by a landslide vote in the first MS Vote(tm) presidential election, George Bush pushes for stronger personal information availability. Personal Informative Devices (PIDs), which must be left on at all times, broadcast the wearer's religious affiliation, sexual orientation, and Operating System. A group of renegade Linux hackers, lead by known occultist Linus Torvalds, re-preogram their devices, thus creating Personal Un-identification Devices, and a great furor over the use of their PUDs.

    05.11.2008

    In a show of just how stupid they really are, the American people vote George Bush Sr. (xtxtR) back into the White House.

    07.04.2009

    President Bush Sr. gets lost on his way to the bathroom. In a breach of policy, he is not replaced by Vice President A Mr. Potato Head Doll, but by a vat-grown clone of J.E. Hoover.

    08.04.2009-03.01.2013

    History not available as it poses a risk to National Security.

    04.01.2013

    MS George Bush 3 takes office.

    07.01.2013

    MS George Bush 3 collapses in the Oval Office from apparent heart-failure.

    013.07.2013

    The Federal Bureau (FB) places a temporary ban on eye-contact, citing a high risk to national security.

    --
    I'm Abram Bender. You're not.
  52. Re:Communism == dictatorship by bgeiger · · Score: 1

    Urgh.

    "Communism is not an economic system at all. It is a political repression system, where one of the major ways to make the people completely dependent on the government is to prohibit private property (other than personal one)."

    This is not true. Communism, as it was originally intended, is the united force of the population taking care of itself through cooperation. ("Workers of all nations unite" (At least, I think that's how it goes)) What most misinformed Americans (including myself up until about two or three months ago) believe the only form of communism is the supposed Russian atrocities, but this is false. Many countries are using some form of communism.

    In true communism, people give up their possessions voluntarily, to provide for a better life for others. It is only when these rules are enforced at penalty of death that communism becomes what most consider it to be.

    Personally, I'll forever be thankful that I live in the United States, but I can actually see that other systems are not totally evil.

    --
    o/~ All God's children shall be free in Pirates of the Caribbean, when we reach that Magic Kingdom in the sky... o/~
  53. Gov & indiv paranoia connected by jabber · · Score: 3

    Point well taken, but as I see it, the two issues are strongly interconnected.

    I agree that distrust of the establishment is the duty of all citizens. After all, the gummint is there to represent US, it is there to work for US and to carry out our orders. We tell the gov what we want by voting. [If politicians tell us what we want to hear to get elected, and then do their thing, the system fails, but that's another matter]

    But as people are distrustful of the gov, their distrust is unfocusable. It becomes a heat-seeker, and targets the strange, the unknown and the different. A black family in a white neighborhood, or the smiling stranger in a faceless crowd.

    My point is that the overall level of distrust in the country is such, that it is out of control. It should be applied rationally, but there's simply too much of it. Each day we hear about murders, molesters, shooting sprees... Who has time to think through the latest anti-encryption legislation and what it really means, when they're worried about "road rage", Tim McVeigh and the kids in the local high-school??

    The government is (intentionally or not) playing the same game that makes the insurance companies tick. The probability of any given individual being a homocidal freak is small, but eveyone has to pay [with their liberties] to provide some semblance of security. This is why kids have to pass through metal detectors on their way into a school. They are uniformly subjected to heavy-handed authoritative behavior control, to protect them from the freak. But the message they receive is that any one of them might be a freak, and so they should be afraid of everyone.

    Our rights and liberties are being reduced to the lowest common denominator level. It's akin to political correctness - you're not allowed to do anything that someone, somewhere, somehow, might construe as offensive or threatening. You can no longer extend your hand to a stranger, because there is the potential that you will hit them. So if you hold out your hand, you're likely to get a hand-cuff on your wrist as a result.

    Looking back, I truly regret making that girl nervous enough to call the police - the thought never crossed my 'eager to help' mind. But more importantly, I'm sorry that she lives with so much fear in her life. I'm sorry she'll pass it on to her kids and friends and co-workers - just because some freak tried to flag her down on the highway.

    I'm sorry that she's so concerned about her immediate safety, about the threat of another individual, that she doesn't think rationally, and is therefore likely to vote for a liberty abridging ordinance to settle her worried little mind. And this, Kaa, is how being paranoid of individuals is connected to being paranoid of the government - at least in this freak's head.

    --

    -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
  54. Re:Too much paranoia all over the world. by Rotten · · Score: 1

    Well, I had a similar history.
    While I was waiting for the bus to go back home from work, I saw a fight, two guys of my age, looked like normal persons, but really upset. In a moment a guy dressed "civilian" came running into the scene with a gun. From the bus stop I yelled "hold on, is not that serious". A simple fight, mostrly insults, don't require a 9mm gun.
    Well, the guy was a cop, and in minute one of it's partners arrested me for being involved in a street fight...(?!). Just because I tried to tell them that it was a simple fight (traffic problems) and a gun was a bit out of place.
    Next time I'll keep silent and I'll watch the guy kill someone. Who cares? This is the new millenium society!

  55. Re:Oh please by barleyguy · · Score: 1

    This is the information age. It has nothing to do with money. It has to do with information. They are trying to figure who is on their side, and who's not.

    By the way, I'M NOT ON YOUR SIDE, YOU BASTARDS!!!

    --
    --- "So THAT's what an invisible barrier looks like!" - Time Bandits
  56. That's good for UK sales by Zemran · · Score: 1

    So all the potential buyers will have to buy and register somewhere else then.

    --
    I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
  57. Re:Iridium vs. Radio Astronomy by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    Yes, and your statement is essentially correct. There is a band in the 1.6GHz range that is very popular for radio astronomy use, and the Iridium phones are transmitting right next to it. This adjacent signal can overwhelm the extremely sensitive receivers used in radio astronomy. They can't really filter Iridium out because the filter circuits reduce the sensitivity in the band they are interested in.

    There have been some agreements between astronomers and satellite telephone providers; take a look here.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  58. Re:Too much paranoia in the world. by Anonymous+Chemist · · Score: 1

    Check out the other reply, I mean; can't people express themeselves without juvenile vulgarity? The again he's probably a pubescent 21 year old who thinks every f*ur letter word is a great way to make a point.

    My reply...easy; I like being safe; and while it's shame that happened to you, ask yourself if she was your sister or wife; if that wouldn't make you feel better.

    I have friends in Law Enforcement, and the trick is.. they are all fine people, who think of the greater good. Not Hitler types who want to infringe rights at every turn.

    But you're right, there is too much paranoia, as the reply's to this /. post will show.

  59. Status of Iridium by daviddennis · · Score: 2

    Since I've had fantasies about living on a cruising yacht, where exactly this kind of highly portable, global service would make a lot of sense, I was intrigued by Iridium and did some careful checking.

    (1) It's useless for data. I believe the top transmission speed is something like 2400 baud.

    (2) It's horrendously expensive. The older Inmarsat technology can deliver a similar service using a suitcase-sized phone for about $ 1.50 a minute. This is less than half the cost of Iridium, and the phones cost about the same. Reports I've read about Iridium say that Inmarsat service actually works, with far superior service quality.

    (3) Service quality is terrible. It must be used outdoors, line of site with the satellites. Again, the old technology works a lot better.

    I read a news.com article (linked to the original story) which said that Iridium is failing because of marketing deficiencies. This is not true at all; I think Iridium's ads were pretty cool. The problem is the product and the pricing, both of which are terrible. As a cruising wannabe, I can only hope things get better.

    I hope GlobalStar realizes that unless they give much better service than Iridium, they will go down the same path. Lower per-minute rates are a good start, but they'll need to supply decent service, too. And that's going to be tough.

    D

    ----

  60. Re:Communism == dictatorship by Xtacy · · Score: 1

    "In true communism, people give up their possessions voluntarily, to provide for a better life for others. It is only when these rules are enforced at penalty of death that communism becomes what most consider it to be. "

    hmm so what do i live in? false communism? heh here in Canada and I imagine in the States as well is my taxes are "involuntarily" used for welfare, to provide a "better?" living for others. Its all shit no matter how you look at it.

  61. Re:Too much paranoia in the world. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
    I have friends in Law Enforcement, and the trick is.. they are all fine people, who think of the greater good. Not Hitler types who want to infringe rights at every turn.
    Ah, but those who would destroy freedom always think they're acting for the "greater good". McCarthy was quite sincere. COINTELPROers really believed that Martin Luther King was a dangerous subversive. Even Hitler and Stalin though they were doing the right thing.

    Didn't Justice Brandeis say something about how the greatest danger to liberty comes from well-meaning men?

    No one ever sets out to be an evil tyrant.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  62. Re:Communism == dictatorship by Kaa · · Score: 2

    You're making several factual errors.

    I don't think so.

    I suggest you READ the Communist Manifesto - it's available on the web

    I have. I've read it before there was a Web.

    Prohibiting private property has nothing to do with communism ... Prohibiting private ownerships of the means of production has.

    And that's exactly why I said "other than personal". Private property other than personal is, to a great degree, property of means of production.

    ...Some Marxist ideology skipped...

    That's all fine, but we are not talking about Marxism, we are talking about communism. See the my post above about the two meanings of the word "communism". You may argue that the system that existed in the Soviet Union, etc. was not really Marxist, and technically was not communist at all, but the common usage in the Western countries clearly points to the USSR as the quintessential "communist" country. Marxism in its pure form was never implemented anywhere, so there is not much point in discussing what society might have looked like it it has happened somewhere. Communism (again, in the common meaning) has happened -- and the consequences were very brutal and unpleasant.

    Kaa

    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
  63. here's an idea... by Kabby · · Score: 1
    does anyone know what some of the keywords they pick up on are? I'd assume bomb, and possibly saddam hussein etc.

    Maybe we should pick one specific time to all call someone we know and put the slashdot effect to work :)

  64. I believe it was mao who said... by Larry+L · · Score: 1

    "Power comes from the barrel of a gun".

    The metaphor still works today, but it's a little different. More like: power is in the hands of those who are feared.


    Now assuming the FBI isn't the corrupt force that we believe it to be and that they actually are looking out for our "national interests," this means that the people get the power. This is the point of a democracy. So we aren't really loosing any power, just sacrificing direct control of it for indirect control.

  65. Re:Oh please by DuaneGriffin · · Score: 1

    Consider the McCarthy witchunts of a few decades ago (when super-paranoid Uncle Sam hounded his OWN citizens and demanded they answer questions abut their political views. "Are you now, or have you ever been, a Communist").
    These days, if your government wanted to track all Communists, for example, they woudl no longer need those expensive and potentially embarrassing trials.


    I take your point, but I think it is important to remember that the McCarthy trials were not in any way, shape or form about finding 'communists'. It was all about a particularly objectionable group of people retaining and increasing their power. The trials were not only desirable to those involved, they and the publicity they generated were the whole point (There may have been some rather ignorant and stupid people involved who actually believed they were fighting the 'dirty commies', such people have always and will always be used as pawns in the games of others (to paraphrase a certain astute political analyst mentioned in my .sig :)).

    --
    - "I never could learn to drink that blood and call it wine" - Bob Dylan (Tight Connection to my Heart)
  66. Re:Well, it's just about time... by Kintanon · · Score: 1

    That means abortions are legal, drugs are legal, nothing against homosexuality, etc. That makes a lot of sense to me, far more than those damn Flying Monkey Right Republicans saying all that stuff is against the Bible, so it should be outlawed.

    Especially since most of the time they are just waving the Bible around and screaming nonsense since the Bible doesn't mention a lot of the stuff that they proclaim to be evil. People like that give us real christians a bad name.

    Kintanon

    --
    Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
  67. Building real time strong encryption() for phones by bloosqr · · Score: 1

    I've been thinking about this for a while now and it strikes me this would make a really good fun project and would pretty much render any of the govt's half-assed attempts of listening in obsolete. I'm thinking something that looks like a ratshack dialer that negotiates strong encryption on pickup (providing clearvoice if negotiation doesn't work). i.e. something *really* simple to use. Well okay maybe that wouldn't work, maybe just building the specs for a phone..

    But to get around encryption policy, we'll do what all the smart kidz do, separate hardware from software :)... have a serial port or something that uploads the code automatically (via windows,macs,linux etc) .. the hardware kidz don't have to worry about export controls since they are just selling a glorified modem, and the software kidz can write their own drivers..

    I guess this can be done in steps

    1) providing strong encryption capabilities to 'net phones' would be easy to do (if this hasn't been done already)
    2) work out a simple box that basically mimics the capabilities of a modem i.e. just like above but automatically ..
    voice->digital->encyption->analog->phoneline->anal og->decryption->voice

    3)stick the code in ram use the cheapest general purpose chips available, on a cheap circuit board, provide an interface to upload the code *separately* from the hardware..
    but make the use is simple enough that everyone and their mom will use it.. (i.e again it should be no more complicated than plugging it in to a serial/usb port and running a program that asks for a number between 512->8192 for length of key for example :) )

    hell how cool would it be to make the thing
    get the code automatically by dialing up a 1800 number !


    now no one will get busted for selling the hardware since by default it doesn't do anything or just sends cleartext (or clearvoice i mean:)). The software people will do what they are good at.

    We *ALL* know how efficient it is for the govt to surpress software based encryption right? :)
    (Basically the idea is that the only thing that
    is slowing strong encryption down is ease of use rather than any matter of principle)

    What do you guys think? Have I been smoking too much crack?

  68. Corporations WANT encryption. State does not. by jeffguy · · Score: 1

    #define LONG_WINDED_MEANDERING_RANT

    Ironically, on the issue of encryption, big multi-national corporations are more-or-less on OUR side. They do not want their critical business data compromised by some corrupt agency entrusted with key escrow. If privacy is completely outlawed, that means that they can't legally have any privacy either.

    The conflict is pretty national security interests against absolutely everyone else. Statism is worse than corporatism in this case. (Admitting that the State-Corporate relationship has become rather incestuous)

    Corporations operate within the law. Usually when we rail at them it is for some erosion of our liberties that they have successfully lobbied the GOVERNMENT to enact.

    Corporations mechanistically seek the benefit of those they serve (shareholders) within limits imposed on them by the state (laws). Moral Good/Bad doesn't have much to do with it -- they are playing by game rules. I think the reason that capitalism has been so successful an economic engine is that it does not require moral 'goodness' of its participants to function.

    The institution which constrains corporate actions is the state, which in rhetoric serves all the people, particularly the non-powerful, for the principles of fairness and justice. This is the institution that has failed in its mission as well as the institution that is depriving us of freedom now.

    It is a shame that since we do not have a functioning democracy things have gotten to this point. Institutionalized corruption (i.e. campaign finance + media campaigns) masquerading as democracy has predictably failed to insure us our liberties.

    The appalling lack of vigilance in defending their liberties by an apathetic people definitely gets a big heaping serving of blame, though.

    Corporations serve those that own them. The government is supposed to serve the people. When corporations end up owning everything in sight it is the government that has failed.

    On encryption, I'm pretty sure it is not evil corporations lobbying for restrictions on encryption because they pretty much think said restrictions are stupid and make things more difficult for them. The only people lobbying for fascist encryption laws are the police/national security interests.

    A world in which information can be effectively and easily be hidden from subpoenas and spooks is a world in which these agencies cannot be effective and needn't continue to exist. (Gee, what a horrible thing that would be ;-)).

    Nations are becoming paranoic because they have realized, correctly, that they are no longer needed.

    #undef LONG_WINDED_MEANDERING_RANT

  69. There oughta be a law - wait, there *is* a law. by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    There already is a law: in 1996 the FBI got Congress to pass a law requiring the phone companies to build in silent tapping ability on all phone systems. The FBI was afraid that they wouldn't be able to tap digital phone calls with their old analog skills. This Iridium mess is an offshoot of this law.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  70. That was an Absurd comment by DrNO · · Score: 1

    This poster seems completely ignorant of history. To assert "they [Founding Fathers]would have supported the ability to infringe on those folks rights (who would commit such crimes) for the greater good of the nation." Is utterly ridiculous. In case the poster doesn't realize it, the "Founding Fathers" were revolutionaries who used armed force to overthrow the "legitimate authority" and laws of the colony.

    I suggest that the poster read a little Jefferson, Madison etc. before he further embarrasses himself by displaying such ignorance.

    Needless to say - I strongly disagree with the posters position in addition to being offended by the asinine assertions with respect to the historical context of this type of behavior. Remember, they were just enforcing the law and following the orders of "legitimate" authority in WWII era Germany, in Cambodia, in Argentina, in Chili and so on.

    --
    "I believe the children are our future: nasty, brutish and short."
  71. Re:Oh please by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    >Why woud they go to all these lengths to gather info on everybody just to sell it to corporations?

    Why do you think that several states are selling Driver's License info (along with digital pictures) to a company to make a HUGE "check fraud" database?

    We've been sold out, most of us aren't able to realize it though.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  72. Re:Too much paranoia all over the world. by r_hakz · · Score: 1

    Sounds just like something a Cop would do.

    Don't give in though! We can't let the police/gov. bully us. We are supposed to own this country god dammit! The people!

    I know some people who have had their cars searched without any probable cause at all. If a cop ever tries that with me, I'm gonna kick his ass. Sure I may take a beating and get arrested, but I will make a statement. We are supposed to have rights, we need to protect them.

    --
    The oxen are slow, but the earth is patient... - High Road to China
  73. iridium is a LEO constellation by Phil-14 · · Score: 1

    Since Iridium is a LEO constellation, the satellites are always moving wrt the Earth. The US and China should be having the same satellite coverage.


    I wonder if there's a source of electrical interference causing the problems instead, like maybe a frequency conflict with a different ground-based communications system, i.e. some wildcat mobile phone operator infringing on their bandwidth.

    br)
    Phil Fraering "Humans. Go Fig." - Rita
    --
    (currently testing something about signatures here)
  74. Read "The Flying Machine" by Ray Bradbury by ronfar · · Score: 1

    To summarize: A man in ancient China invents a kite that can be used for human flight (a sort of hang glider.) The emperor sees the man flying in the sky, and summons him to the court. After the man decribes the operation of the machine, the emperor informs him that he will have to be excecuted, regretfully explaning, (paraphrase) "It is not you I fear, but another man, one who will use the machine for evil purposes." The man is beheaded and the machine burned with his remains, because the security of the state is paramount.

    This is always the case in an authoritarian regime.

    --
    All the creatures will die, And all the things will be broken. That's the law of samurai. (Jubai, 1605)
  75. The Transparent Citizen by jetson123 · · Score: 3
    Let's look at the larger context:

    • Federal three-letter agencies strongly oppose export of encryption. The move is clearly not designed to make encryption inaccessible to criminals (since it's easy to get around the export controls), but to prevent strong encryption from becoming part of the day-to-day communications infrastructure.

    • Upcoming cell phone standards must include GPS or similar in the handsets so that the location of each phone can be determined easily.

    • Echelon and other projects suggest that widespread monitoring of voice and data communications has been carried out in the past and will continue to be carried out.

    • Store and mail order purchase data is recorded for marketing purposes, but also available to law enforcement on demand (c.f. Lewinsky's book buying habits). Purchases of some legal materials (e.g., hydroponics, fertilizer, etc.) could result in closer scrutiny by law enforcement.

    • With some current anti-theft devices and car computers that record trip data for maintenance purposes, the whereabouts of your car and your driving habits may be recorded and available to law enforcement.

    • Public, traffic, and private surveillance cameras are becoming very commonplace, and their data is increasingly networked and stored in digital form.

    • Law enforcement, banks, and medical providers are collecting DNA databases, fingerprint databases, iris databases, dental databases, medical databases, and other biometric databases for a variety of purposes. With that information on-line, it becomes very quick and easy to establish the presence of any person at pretty much any location.

    • Large, anonymous cash transactions are essentially impossible in the US these days, as is the import/export of significant amounts of money without government scrutiny.

    • Much of the data that is being collected is inaccessible by the individuals it's being collected on. Much of it is stored in proprietary databases with no requirements to give anybody (other than law enforcement) access. Even data collected by security agencies and law enforcement may not be available during routine legal proceedings, since the government may make an argument that revealing the full extent of the data collected on you would hamper future data collection efforts. That is, data may be used against you, but you may not be able to obtain access to it for your own defense.

    Now, I don't think this is one big conspiracy. Each of the individual decisions may make sense, but the overall result is that the government, and possibly other people with enough money, can find out just about anything about you that they want to.

    This might not be quite so bad if everybody understood clearly the possibilities. But most US residents still seem to assume that their privacy is protected, that their conversations are private, and that a purchase at most results in annoying junk mail.

    Similarly, the legal system and juries have no basis yet for judging the new realities. For example, setting penalties for anything from traffic violations to murder has not only been based on the severity of the infraction, but also on the likelihood being caught; penalties for speeding and car pool violations are high because people get away with them most of the time. If photo enforcement changes that, it completely changes the equation.

    There is also considerable potential for abuse of such data. Information gathered by these means may not reveal illegal behavior, but law enforcement may still be used to embarrass and harrass potential witnesses or suspects.

    The US strikes me like one of the countries furthest along in eroding privacy rights. For example, in many other countries, strong encryption is legal, large cash tranasactions are not subject to reporting requirements, and buying plant growing equipment doesn't automatically make you suspect of growing pot (or if it does, it may simply be legal).

    Many of those mechanisms have been put into place under the umbrella of the "war against drugs", "anti-terrorism measures", and "protecting US defense secrets". But the societal costs resulting from the compromises that needed to be made to achieve those goals are not well understood. I must admit, the US government's obsession with drugs, terrorism, and defense secrets strikes me as bordering on collective paranoia.

    We may well be able to live comfortably in a world in which all of our actions are very transparent and accessible to a wide variety of government agencies and businesses. But the combination of 19th/20th century laws, behaviors, and assumptions of privacy together with 21st century surveillance, tracking, and database technology strikes me as very dangerous. Either we have to regulate surveillance uses of these new technologies and enact strong privacy regulations, or our society has to undergo some profound transformation to deal with the new realities.

    1. Re:The Transparent Citizen by Gray · · Score: 1

      I think it's going to happen eventually anyway, no matter what.. Technology gets better, fast..

      The only place you'll be safe is at home, not operating anything.. The rest of the time, big brothers watching, and it's online..

      In terms on civil rights, IMO the important thing is to make sure that all these databases are available to *ANYONE*, at a resonable cost..

      If my life is going to be an open book to the goverment, I'd like it to open to everyone else just to make sure I have lots of witnesses..

      No stress with the police if you really haven't done anything wrong.. (Like the guy with the oil on his windshild).

      No more tolarance of stupid laws, because it would be impossible to just work around them as we do now..

      I'd bet the farm that the war on drugs would go away pretty quick once rich people stopped being able to get delivery dope, or any dope at all..

      It would become pretty hard to lie at all.. A world where everyone was accountable doesn't seem too bad to me..

      Not sure I'd like it, but I can see the upside of the cameras-everywhere-universe..

  76. No, *you* get a grip. DUDE! by jcr · · Score: 1

    This is the FBI we're talking about. This is the organization that was illegally surveilling every significant civil-rights organization in the US in the '60's, 70's, and 80's.

    This is the pack of jackbooted thugs who stormed Randy Weaver's house, murdering his wife and son, after he refused to show up in court on a charge that he was framed with.

    (Remember the name "Lon Horiuchi." Mr. Horiuchi shot Vicki Weaver in the head, with a sniper rifle, knowing that he himself was in no danger whatsoever from Weaver. That son of a bitch would be in the fucking gas chamber if this country still had a *justice* system.)

    This is the club of hard-core racists who sent death threats to Martin Luther King, demanding that he commit suicide.

    This is the agency who's world-renowned "crime lab" has been shown to have a habit of delivering whatever "evidence" a prosecutor asks for.

    I don't *want* their job to be any easier, god damn it. I want them disbanded, and every single agent in the chain of command of *any* illegal operation barred from working in law enforcement anywhere in the United States.

    Don't kid yourself. The FBI routinely does things that we'd all like to believe only communist governments do.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  77. Universal Criminalization by jcr · · Score: 1

    The purpose of criminalizing peaceful activities is to allow the government to fuck over anyone they find inconvenient to deal with.

    I'll tell you this, though: If the good citizens (i.e those who can still vote because they never did time on a bullshit drug-posession charge) of the USA (i.e those who can still vote because they never did time on a bullshit drug-posession charge) ever decide to outlaw Judaisim the way they outlawed being Japanese in the 1940's, I'll be the best-armed Jew anyone ever tried to ship to a camp.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  78. A Different Meaning... by Steve+B · · Score: 1
    the FBI is temporarily (although they have a different meaning for that word)

    Do you mean the word "temporarily" or the word "is"?
    /.

    --
    /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  79. Just when I thought the FBI couldn't get any worse by Kris_J · · Score: 1

    Jerks

    (Go ahead, moderate me down, I dare you!)

    Kris.

    Win a Rio (or join the SETI Club via same link)

  80. WebCams for everybody!!! by jabber · · Score: 2

    It's funny, yes... But I wonder how the CIA, FBI, NSA, IMF, KGB, etc (Echelon et al) would stand up to full disclosure. After all, the government is composed of citizens, and the citizens have the right to know. They should know. Everything. I'm installing a pressure sensor under my toilet seat right now!!

    Could the NSA and company HANDLE a denial of service data flood? Any spooks out there care to comment? Comon guys... We know you're listening... Don't be shy.

    --

    -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
  81. Re:Well, it's just about time... by Zigurd · · Score: 1

    Here here! Read the Constitution. It isn't difficult, or long. It spells out what the government is permitted to do, what it is especially not permitted to do, and reserves all other rights to the people. Read the Declaration of Independence. It is frightening that espousing those views today makes you a dangerous potential terrorist if the tone of the media these days is any indication. And if you think what a bunch of dead white guys wrote is irrelevant today, go back farther, to St. Francis, to Rome, to Greece. It is amazing how much relvance Plutarch's "Lives" has to the vicissitudes of corporate culture today. People have not changed much in 3000 years. 220 years ago, the highest and best expression of personal freedom was created and enacted into the fundamental law of the U.S. It's a damn shame to let it slip away. For all our technical cleverness, we will be regarded as especially stupid if we let it happen.

  82. Story of Three cows (was Re:More about communism) by Zugok · · Score: 1

    Market System:
    you trade one cow for three sheep

    Beauracracy:
    the government takes your three cows, kills two, and pours the milk down the drain

    Fascism:
    the government takes all your cows, and sells you milk

    Communism:
    the government takes all your cows and gives you milk

    --
    "I just can't sit while people are saying nonsense in a meeting without saying it's nonsense" J Watson, Sci Am 288:(4)51
  83. Re:Libertarians on Digital Telephony by bored · · Score: 1

    How about the important link... :> LP's statement against the Digital Telephony and Communications Privacy Improvement Act of 1994. "Therefore, BE IT RESOLVED that the Libertarian National Committee opposes enactment of the proposed Digital Telephony Act as a serious infringement of civil liberties and a gross violation of property rights."

  84. Re:stupid americans by InSaNe+ASyLuM · · Score: 1

    How many of you "stupid americans" out there actually LIKE what the Federal government does? This post seems to indicate that we are all in favor of the US government's actions, but I think the majority of people here and across the US (those capable of individual thought anyway) are getting pretty sick of the way our government is constantly involving itself in areas it has no business being. Please don't make generalized statements about Americans' intelligence. We're held prisoner by the mindless sheep that make up the majority of the voting populace.

    --

    Roses are red, violets are blue. I'm a schitzophrenic, and so am I.

  85. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by HeghmoH · · Score: 1

    Government intervention in cases like this is about trading individual
    freedom off against freedom for everyone.

    I'm sorry, but you can't do this. Freedom for everyone does not exist without freedom for the individual, so trading off individual freedom for group freedom is rather an oxymoron, and certainly doesn't work.

    --
    Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
  86. Justified Paranoia Runs Deep.. by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    That's what folks who don't want us to worry keep saying - that the feds don't have the time or inclination to spy on the citizenry. You say it yourself, when you said True you take the risk that the law may be abused at some time... However, we already have documented cases of the government abusing the law and the rights of citizens. In the case that lead to Watergate, the people in power used the FBI and other government agencies to spy on people excercising legitimate political activities (look up "White House Enemies List"). And, in the 1950s, during the 'Red Scare', J. Edgar Hoover was hip deep in spying on U.S. citizens.

    Now, the Congress has passed a law that gives the FBI the right to spy on its citizens, in the name of crime prevention, by pressing a button in the comfort of their offices. And, we have discovered that the U.S. government has teamed up with other governments (Echelon Project) to spy on their citizens, and those other governments get to spy on U.S. Citizens, bypassing those pesky laws with a wink and a nod.

    And you wonder why we're paranoid?


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  87. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by Ed+Avis · · Score: 2
    All of this wiretapping crap is done "in your best interest". Well, maybe I know what my best interest is, dumbass.

    Government intervention in cases like this is about trading individual freedom off against freedom for everyone. In many cases, it could be in _your_ self-interest to do X, but if everyone did X, we'd all be worse off. So the government has to step in and forbid X. In this particular case, you're trading off individual freedom to encrypted communciations, against freedom for everyone from terrorist attacks, crime and the like.

    This is not to say that I agree with what the US government and the FBI are doing. Quite the opposite in fact. But you can't just say 'Get your hands off me, let me do whatever the hell I want'.

    Maybe you don't agree with the tradeoff that the government has made - it gives too much emphasis to the group and not enough to individual freedoms. But in other cases, even you depend on the government to restrict people's freedom. What if everyone decided to apply your 'I know what my best interest is, dumbass' principle to serve their own 'best interest' by, say, stealing? It's in the 'best interest' of individuals, but not of society as a whole.

    Not to mention that gun thing - You can ask the poor people in Kosovo about what happens when you take all the guns.

    You can ask them what happens when you have militias with guns roaming the streets. The most important task in Kosovo right now is to disarm the KLA, and get rid of the guns. Otherwise you get revenge attacks, such as those Serbian farmers who were murdered while bringing in their harvest. If the KLA had been disarmed, that would not have happened.

    You might argue that the best answer to Serbian military aggression is to arm the KLA and let them fight back; but if countries like Russia had not armed the Serbs in the first place, the war could not have happened.

    --
    -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
  88. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by Danse · · Score: 1

    Must be nice to be able to argue without ever making an argument. Simply label someone and assume that it automatically voids their argument. Nice and neat and totally devoid of any meaning.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  89. Actually, he's wrong about the location thing by cryptwhomp · · Score: 1

    Actually, they need at least 4 sattelites to be able to determine your altitude. a nitpick, i know ...

    --
    "Those who would give up essential liberty for temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - Benjamin Franklin,
    1. Re:Actually, he's wrong about the location thing by Gestahl · · Score: 1

      Wrong my friend. Any location in three space can be determined by three intersecting spheres. You only need three satalites to determind position and altitude.

    2. Re:Actually, he's wrong about the location thing by hpa · · Score: 1

      True, but you need a fourth satellite if you also want to determine the time, so you know where the constellation is. If you know the time of transmission with high enough accuracy, you don't need that.

  90. Re:Too much paranoia in the world. by ghotiboy · · Score: 1

    I agree whole-heartedly. There tends to be a trend in society to believe that the Bad News Media is all there is out there. This is not the case, but a profile of someone who helped a homeless person yesterday doesn't seem to be very interesting to news viewers. There will always be bad people in the world, but I would say the majority of people have the same desire as the gentleman above: they want to help people out. It makes them feel good, giving a sense of accomplishment as well as adding to the common good. Ultimately, criminals will generally succeed in what they are trying to do. Need anyone be reminded of Oklahoma City? The men that did that were not geniuses or high-tech UberCriminals. They were farm-boys with too much time on their hands. They didn't use sat. phones or 1024-bit encryption. That is where the FBI has gone awry. They think that the .0001 percent of the world population that is dangerous to society is worth limiting the advancement of everyone else. Give me a break. They will NEVER NEVER catch them all, or prevent all of the crimes. When does the protection become so prohibitive that it is not worth it? When you aren't allowed to have a truly private conversation? When you aren't allowed to drive across state borders with fertilizer for your farm? When you can't buy a gun to go hunting? When you can't buy a computer more powerful than X? You should decide. Not some bozo with to much politcal weight and not enough brains or scruples.

    Just my 2 pesos.

  91. The sky is falling by DanMcS · · Score: 1


    They're not after drug dealers. It's all to protect the children, don't you understand? The terrorists are coming! The terrorists are coming!

    The FBI and all the other police forces in this country are convinced that if they can just make us too scared to leave our homes, they can achieve control over the regular people. See, regular people scare government officials. They are so disconnected from reality that they think we're crazy. Witness Clinton, calling the average American "Joe Sixpack", as if the biggest concern of Americans was football and beer. These politicians are not normal people, but they think we're the abnormal ones, just because we don't devote our lives to getting campaign contributions. Sometimes I hear a quote from a politician and I'm scared at how crazy it sounded, yet it is accepted as normal!

    --
    Communication is only possible between equals
  92. Communism == dictatorship by Kaa · · Score: 2

    Communism is a completely different thing. Communism is ONLY an economic system. It is not a philosophy of massive oppression and/or censorship on the people.

    Whaaaat? [boggle]

    Communism is not an economic system at all. It is a political repression system, where one of the major ways to make the people completely dependent on the government is to prohibit private property (other than personal one).

    You could, maybe, argue that marxism is an economic system, although there are major problems here as well. But communism?? Communism cannot exist without massive oppression and censorship.

    And yes, I know what I am talking about.

    Kaa

    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
  93. I see opportunity here... by Cb22 · · Score: 1

    Hmmm.. the FBI can't use a satellite phone to figure out where I am or listening to what I'm saying right now, since I don't own a satellite phone..

    Think I could get the government to buy me one, since it is evidently imperative to national security that the FBI be able to do those things?

  94. You are the problem by BugMaster+ChuckyD · · Score: 1

    Ther real problem with civil liberties is the attitude displayed in the above post. Civil liberties are being eroded not becuase the big bad government is out to get ordinary citizens, but because ordinary citizens voulantarily give them up. They are convinced by Law Enforcement and politicians that 1) they're not really giving much up and 2) that in doing so they'll be "protecting the children" or "preventing terrorism". The politicains want to get elected so they play on people's fears, and law enforcement always wants more tools to its job.

    Anyone seen the 4th amendment recently? Ah yes we gave that up in the "war on drugs" in the 80s, and look what a success thats been. But its much harder to regain protections against unreasonable searches or seizure of property without conviction than it is to give them up.

    Technology is yeilding more and more opportunities for law enforecement to monitor everything in order to catch a few criminals. they see a new tool and they want it, its up to us whether we give them what they want. The "know your customer" thing was stopped becuase ordinary citizens and the banks themselves told them that it was too high a proce to pay to catch a few money launderers.

    We at least have some influence over law enforcement, the REAL threat comes from entities like insurance companies and marketing firms collecting infomaation on people, over whom we have little influence but alot to loose.

    "but have ever actualy seen any terrorists?" -Brazil

    1. Re:You are the problem by HiThere · · Score: 1

      There actually is a difference between giving something up and having it stolen.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  95. my first (and maybe silly) thought by pixel+fairy · · Score: 1

    theres the FBI! what are we paying them for?
    they should not need our help to spy on us or
    whoever they feel like...

    seriously, that thing about speaking in code,
    codes can be figured out. my guess is encryption
    (email, disk, whatever) is how the carefull do it.
    cant be too paranoid...

  96. Re:the ACLU will protect you by Bobzibub · · Score: 1

    ummm... filegate?

  97. Re:american ingorance??? by CRB2500 · · Score: 1

    It's not that people don't see it. It's more like they feel powerless to do anything about it (which is exactly how the government wants you to feel). Since going to your elected "represenitive" is, more often than not (esp. when you don't have millions of $), about as effective as talking to a wall.

    When the population is polled on the things they'd like to see the government be doing (cleaning up the environment, and protecting it, or spending more on education for an example) the government does exactly the opposite. Most of this can be linked to that least talked about "special interest group", big corperations.

    As far as I'm concerned the govenment is in a state of treason against the people of the US. Who by the way own, and are what made this nation great. Our hands, backs, and minds are what make all the good things (and not so good things) in this country. Our tax dollars (which you and I contribute the lions share per dollar we make) fund so much of what creates the rich environment which allow big corperations to make the amount of money they do (more than ever in history) and when they are asked to pay their fair share, or treat us as human they get VERY indigent...

    We have seperation of church and state. Now we need seperation of corperation and state. Corperations by their nature have no morals, only the bottom line. If these entities run our nation you can safely bet that our best interest will be nowhere on the political screen.

    It took a revolution to get the church out of the state, I hope it isn't needed to do the same for corperations.

    Piece

  98. For the people, by the people - my @$$!! by Corndog · · Score: 1

    See Subject. This is out of control.

    --
    Corndog
  99. It is better elsehere. by korpiq · · Score: 1

    Question 2 - is it better elsewhere? REALLY?

    Dunno 'bout the "really" part (#define objective reality?) but I do have a habit of idling (soft-drinking) in a city park after lunch, and chat with anyone who comes over (usually sidesteppers of our society). I never have to be afraid. Only a total lunatic would pack a gun in a country where it is strictly prohibited. Robbery doesn't pay that well in a society where money is dealt somewhat evenly between individuals. Even big corps, including the gov't, with huge wealth (==power) tend to behave themselves because they are led by people grown in this society. Everyone can see that this stability is nice and want to keep it such. We even have laws strictly restricting use of databases of persons and explicitly stating it an individual's right to see the info gathered of oneself.

    I like playing paranoid and to think of most encounters as possibly hostile, play with ideas of black holes of power, but it makes me amused, not afraid. It doesn't rule my actions.

    America seems built with Colts and Winchesters; no surprise sensible worries might turn into panic. It will always be so in any society that leaves too steep a hill between loss and gain for individuals. Establish soft limits to both, and power loses some of its importance. Enough, hopefully, that life will cease to be just a fight. All hail content middle class :P

    Organizing a society that - or any - way becomes quite a hassle if its population is as enormous as quite a few nations/unions nowadays are. Too mucha fsckin' noise. So I don't see much hope for the Spirit of US to raise. They seem forced to have a war going on all the time somewhere now to keep it together.
    Have fun.

    Hmm, sun has risen. Time for some ice cream in the park.

    Off the point: VMware feels beautiful. Never to boot again. If we only had a hotswappable kernel.

    --

    I think, therefore thoughts exist. Ego is just an impression.
  100. Like Ben Franklin said... by alumshubby · · Score: 1

    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." The United States of America, 1776 - 1999 R.I.P.

    --
    "How many light bulbs does it take to change a person?" --BMcC-->
    1. Re:Like Ben Franklin said... by dmax69 · · Score: 1

      Remeber the old UNIX license plates, ala New Hampshire? Live free or die. Isn't it time we reasserted the notion of Liberty in a world technically ready to deliver?

      --
      "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." -- Aurther C. Clarke
  101. "It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3

    Again, I'm a lowly Canadian here and SOMETIMES I think that our government is a little more sane, although over time the spineless PM here knuckles under to the US for whatever reason. But these events are starting to worry me.

    All of this wiretapping crap is done "in your best interest". Well, maybe I know what my best interest is, dumbass. Freedom is not without risk. You can't have it both ways. Personally, I want less governemtn invovlement and more risk - because I can make that decision.

    Before the chorus starts up about Drug Dealers, Iraqi Nuclear Bombers, Sarin-Gas wielding manaics, etc, let's assume you're right. Why not give them what they want! Let's wiretap everything. Let's outlaw all encryption. Let's do away with that pesky probable cause. Let's take all the guns from the people. Let's have a drug test mailed in with your income tax. Let's censor the media.

    That's not a world I want to live in. That's not what millions of people died in World War II to protect.

    We're selling our souls, and it's almost to the point where only outlaws have freedom. Not to mention that gun thing - You can ask the poor people in Kosovo about what happens when you take all the guns. Ban guns in Cities - don't ban my right to OWN a gun. That's how the Wild West worked.

    I'm on a rant here - but you can fucking bet that when I get my finances to the point where I'm independantly wealthy, I'll be working on the last refuge we have - transparent encryption of all communications. You've lost all your other "freedoms".

    Remember kids.. Power comes from the barrel of a gun. Don't let anyone else tell you otherwise.

    AC.. With damn good reason.

    1. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by m0nkyman · · Score: 1
      Government intervention in cases like this is about trading individual freedom off against freedom for everyone. In many cases, it could be in _your_ self-interest to do X, but if everyone did X, we'd all be worse off. So the government has to step in and forbid X. In this particular case, you're trading off individual freedom to encrypted communciations, against freedom for everyone from terrorist attacks, crime and the like.

      NO. I am giving up the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty, and being deprived of a means of communication as a result. This is really scary stuff. The old Soviet Union would have done something like this. Stopping a form of commmunication because they can't tap into it! My god , what would you say if they decided to bar the internet, because to many people were using high power encryption. Your attitude that bureaucrats have the right to decide these things boggles my mind. Do you not understand your own constitution? For gods sakes, I'm a Canadian, and I seem to believe in the US Constitution more than you do!

      Sorry for the rant. It just really upsets me when I see someone choosing safety over freedom. That way leads to Dictatorship. Freedom is not safe. In a free country, if there are too many poor people there are repercussions. They start using guns, they start striking out. In a free country, people start noticing and maybe start fixing the poverty problem.

      A Dictatorship tries to stop the expressions of rage. They take away the freedoms of a few for the comfort of a majority.

      Freedom is not easy, and some fools are willing to give it up for comfort. It makes me sad.

      Maybe you don't agree with the tradeoff that the government has made - it gives too much emphasis to the group and not enough to individual freedoms. But in other cases, even you depend on the government to restrict people's freedom. What if everyone decided to apply your 'I know what my best interest is, dumbass' principle to serve their own 'best interest' by, say, stealing? It's in the 'best interest' of individuals, but not of society as a whole.

      The difference between preemptive silencing of a technology and making theft/rape/murder illegal, is that one tries to stop an act from happening, the other defines a consequence to the action. I am perfectly free to kill someone, if and only if I am willing to risk the consequence. If I was forced to always have a camera onthat would instantly paralyze me if I tried to break the law, some people would feel that because this made society safer it would be an acceptable curb on their freedom. I don't.

      As far as guns go, I again disagree with you. The situation in Kosovo, and other multi-generational conflicts has nothing to do with the weaponry involved. These people would be killing each other with spoons, if they didn't have guns. It has to do with hate and economics, and power. Not guns. In countries with lots of guns and education but little class conflict (Switzerland as an example) there are few problems with guns. In countries with many guns, but with lots of class conflicts and widely varying education levels (USA, and South Africa come to mind) there are insane levels of violence.

      Don't ban the symptom, cure the disease.

      --
      ~ a low user id is no indication I have a clue what I'm talking about.
    2. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1
      I am giving up the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty, and being deprived of a means of communication as a result.

      I'm not sure what you mean by 'presumed innocent'. Do you mean that the government is trying to stop you doing something, not as punishment for a proven crime, but just because of what you might do? But there are plenty of examples of this elsewhere. Firearms laws are a classic examples, but there are many others. The question is, is it going too far in this case?

      Your attitude that bureaucrats have the right to decide these things boggles my mind. Do you not understand your own constitution? For gods sakes, I'm a Canadian, and I seem to believe in the US Constitution more than you do!

      Just for the record, I do not support banning of satellite phones just because they are difficult to tap. The loss of freedom does not justify the rather hazy benefits to law enforcement. But I understand that governments do sometimes have to make these decisions. BTW, I'm not American.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    3. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by A+Big+Gnu+Thrush · · Score: 1

      Power comes from the barrel of a gun

      Well at least you had sense enough to identify yourself as a Randroid.

    4. Re:"It's all in your best interest to cooperate" by Kintanon · · Score: 1

      When an individuals actions drastically oppose the best interest of society, society tends to punish that person fairly quickly. If I started stealing randomly then the people I stole from would catch me and slap me around. We don't need police for this unless the criminals are better armed than we are.

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
  102. Re:american ingorance??? by alexo · · Score: 1

    >> It's better in Israel.

    I sure hope so but i'm doubtful. It's just that in Israel the people are less vocal (or concerned).

    >> Here, everyone who's sane and not a convicted criminal goes into the army at age 18

    Do we live in the same country? Ever heard of yeshiva students? The last official estimate talked about >30% draft avoidance.

    >> we have a society where everyone learns social responsibility and to take care of each other

    What??? The one thing that bugs me here is that everybody wants to cheat everybody else. Because if you don't cheat somebody else you're a "sucker".

    >> you'll see every able bodied person within 50 feet step up to try and prevent the crime.

    Tell that to Nethaina shootout victims. Tell that to Gil (I forgot his last name) that was knifed in front of witnesses for asking the murderer not to scratch his car.

    >> community oriented

    I would laugh if it wasn't so sad. You're totally out of touch with reality.

    >> Make the draft madatory

    And you think Ehud Barak would do that?

    >> give every one of them who wants it and doesn't have a criminal record and isn't insane a licence to carry a M-16 EVERYWHERE.

    Tell that to the torched kids.

    >> You'll see a much better society with rediculously low crime rates result from this.

    Yea, right! What would the drivers that scream and threaten each other over right-of-way do then?

    >> Israel [...] is the most densly populated country in the world.

    Really? Let's check some countries at http://194.95.119.6/basis/e/ausl/ausllae1.htm
    * Israel: 273 inhabitants/km^2
    A bit crowded but look at our neighbour:
    * Lebanon: 300 inhabitants/km^2
    Or other european countries:
    * Belgium: 334 inhabitants/km^2
    * The Netherlands: 383 inhabitants/km^2
    Going east...
    * Republic of Korea: 460 inhabitants/km^2
    * Taiwan: 599 inhabitants/km^2
    And finally:
    * Singapore: 5549 inhabitants/km^2
    * Hong Kong: 5788 inhabitants/km^2

    Better check your facts before posting, Sailor Bob.

  103. Re:FBI stops school room note-passing... by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    Actually, that sounds a lot better. At least you know the government isn't automatically spying on you. And, you have a chance to fight it in court.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  104. Blatent over-nationalism by swaldman · · Score: 1
    The FBI is concerned that it would have to go through Canadian government officials to win a wiretap
    on any calls going through these stations--an idea it strongly opposes. Allowing information about
    surveillance operations to go through foreign government channels would be a serious violation of
    national security, one FBI official said.


    Hmm. So presumably if the Canadian security services want to tap someone it's OK to go thru the FBI? This is an *international* service, why should the US get priority?
  105. Re:Sorry, I must of missed this... by Syslevel · · Score: 1

    Isn't it true that organisations only render evidence inadmissable as evidence if they don't gather it under a warrant? This means, they can do as much wiretapping as they like when out fishing for criminals, then they can apply for a warrant to get the evidence needed to nail the criminals.

  106. Re:the style looks familiar... by EasyTarget · · Score: 1

    Funny.. I was just thinking it looks fascist.

    --
    "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
  107. Re:american ingorance??? by nstrug · · Score: 1
    Why do 99% of American refuse to see their liberties being eroded right out from under them?
    They do see their liberties being eroded but they simply don't care. Given that 99% of American can be kept happy as a pig in shit with a nice big 401(k), a couch to sit their fat asses on, a fucking huge cable TV and a bag of Doritos why should they care about such outmoded concepts as "essential freedoms", "democracy" and "natural law"?

    Nick

    --
    -- "It's a sad day for American capitalism when a man can't fly a midget on a kite over Central Park" - Jim Moran
  108. Paranoia vs government is a Good Thing by Kaa · · Score: 2

    It's not about rights and liberties, it's about fear. It's about the expectation of the worst overshadowing the fact that people are inherently not evil. Bear with me...

    ... snip! ...

    And how does this pertain to the article subject matter? Well, as long as the government insists on making us feel insecure in our own country, with Commies, and Iraqi terrorists, and biological weapons around every corner, we will keep suspecting each other of cruel intentions. As long as we keep being afraid, the government will keep trying to protect us from each other. As long as the government keeps trying to keep us safe, we will feel our rights erode, and we will be even more paranoid.

    You miss the point. We (at least I, and I suspect, a lot of people on this board) are not afraid of each other or of individuals in general. The whole discussion is not about threats you face on the streets. I have not heard a single person (as opposed to a governent official or a politician) demand more stringent national security because he was afraid of Iraqi terrorists. Fear and suspicion of fellow people is a completely different topic.

    What we are talking about here is government powers and the abuse thereof. I am suspicious of governments and I believe I have good reasons to be. History, and in particular, XX century history, should teach everybody (who is capable of learning, that is) that governments have huge appetite for power and if they get this power, Very Bad Things (tm) tend to happen. It doesn't really matter if the original goals were good/idealistic -- power corrupts and does it quickly and effectively.

    I trust people -- but I definitely don't trust governments.

    Kaa

    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
  109. Too much paranoia in the world. by jabber · · Score: 3

    This is somewhat off-topic, but pertinent to the larger theme we're seeing here...

    It's not about rights and liberties, it's about fear. It's about the expectation of the worst overshadowing the fact that people are inherently not evil. Bear with me...

    Last night, while driving home from a class, I saw a car on the highway, spewing smoke out the back end. Not from the tailpipe, but from underneath the engine. It was coming out so much that when I pulled behind it, I got dropplets of oil on my windshield.

    I tried to get the driver (a girl my age) to pull over. I flashed my lights, turned on my directionals and hazzards intermittently, and tried to get this girl to pull over, since I thought she might like to know that she stood to loose the engine if she didn't keep an eye on the oil level. Silly me.

    Well, after a couple of minutes, and three lane changes later, the girl wasn't getting the point, and she seemed to be getting upset. So, I wrote a note on a piece of paper that said "leaking oil", showed it to her, and went on my way.

    About an hour later, two state cruisers, two troopers and dog show up at my house to take my statement. Apparently, the girl thought I was trying to run her off the road, and kill her, and rape her and whatever else. So much for good intentions.

    Well, they took my statement, looked at my car for damage (I should have had them look at the oil splattered on the windshield, but in the moment, it didn't come to mind - I should have kept the note, but I tossed it at a gas station since I didn't need it anymore), and left.

    It made me understand how people can stand by and watch as someone gets beaten or killed in the street, and not lift a finger. It's not worth the hassle to go out of your way for another person anymore. It's not worth watching out for your 'fellow man' anymore.

    I'm a parochially schooled, college degreed, well paid professional software engineer. I have a steady girlfriend, a nice car, a normal life, and (god forbid!) good intentions. But, with the rampant paranoia (at least in the U.S.) these days, it's hadly worth the hassle of watching out for anyone buy the proverbial 'number one'. It's a mistake I'll have to be careful not to make again.

    And how does this pertain to the article subject matter? Well, as long as the government insists on making us feel insecure in our own country, with Commies, and Iraqi terrorists, and biological weapons around every corner, we will keep suspecting each other of cruel intentions. As long as we keep being afraid, the government will keep trying to protect us from each other. As long as the government keeps trying to keep us safe, we will feel our rights erode, and we will be even more paranoid.

    We need common sense, and good upbringing. We need to NOT be punished for trying to help. We need to stop crucifying good Samaritans, and start acting like them. We need to stop looking over our shoulder, and start looking into our common good - not just as individuals, but as a nation, and as a world.

    And if someone who can afford a satellite phone wants to sneak information past Echelon, they can hire a personal courier.

    --

    -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
  110. A bit OT: Enemy of the State by RedX · · Score: 1

    This is probably a bit OT, but this story reminds of the movie I watched over the weekend, Enemy of the State. While some of what they depicted may have been over-the-top, it is quite scary to think of the ease with which the government (NSA in particular) could monitor and track every activity and conversation of anyone they wanted with a couple of keystokes. Orwell wasn't too far off in his predictions.

  111. Oh please by BugMaster+ChuckyD · · Score: 1

    While I agree that the FBI is going too far with sort of thing, and if they can't tell where you're calling from thats their problem (if there is a true national security problem the surely have the resourses to excercise alternative methods to do what they need to do) I must say this "the governement is out to get law abiding citizens" thing is such a crock! Get a grip dude!

    Why woud they go to all these lengths to gather info on everybody just to sell it to corporations? thats just ridiculous. If they want more money they raise your taxes. Duh!

  112. the style looks familiar... by BudiantoJ · · Score: 1

    aha! it's communist style.

  113. Re:What's the matter with dashsplot? by My_Favorite_Anonymou · · Score: 1

    It started yesterday around 9 pm. Rob, say something!

  114. Re:FBI stops school room note-passing... by aqua · · Score: 1

    #2 has an implementation benefit as well -- as the Echelon paper highlighted, none of the major US organizations responsible for the widespread electronic interferenec with our privacy have the CPU power necessary for widespread brute-force attacks on our ciphers. Therefore, one good way to oppose the US government's invasions of our privacy is to encrypt as great a volume of our traffic as possible, thus presenting the FBI, NSA etc. with so much enciphered traffic that they can't hope to ascertain what in it was wortht he CPU time. Crypto makes for good privacy against wiretapping in its own rights, and one can help thwart those who would trespass on our privacy simply by participating in overwhelming their CPUs.

    In other words, encrypt everything, whether it needed it or not. By a happy coincidence, the internet is wonderful for that. :)

  115. Re:Sorry, I must of missed this... by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    Where does it say that the government does NOT have the right to tap data/voice transmissions? If they don't have the right to do this, why would they have the right to tap, for instance, the phone of a mafia boss?

    There is no any "rights" for the government -- government in some cases can do various things (such as wiretapping, searches, arrests, etc.) yet there is nothing that guarantees that they will be successful. I believe that even if someone will issue an order for search inside some volcano, volcano still has no obligation to become accessible for police. If someone orders to arrest the whole population of AIDS virus, virus still will remain where it was no matter what government will do until government (or someone else) will develop a cure. In the same way government can order a wiretap of ssh connection between my boxes, yet I have absolutely no obligation to make it readable for them -- if they can break the encryption, good for them, and if not -- tough cookies.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  116. And what's this about encryption? by sbeitzel · · Score: 1
    The dispute is similar to the fight being waged by U.S. software companies, who are barred from exporting strong encryption programs overseas. The FBI has lobbied to bar these exports-- and has advocated for stricter rules governing use of encryption inside the United States (italics added)--arguing that law enforcement needs to be able to crack encryption on encoded email messages of criminals and terrorists.

    So, what are they gonna do? Take away our PGP? Man. Just when you start to get all excited about how the guv'mint is invading your privacy, you realize that although they're the Enemy, they're a big, slow, dumb Enemy.

    --
    Oh, go on, check out my job.
  117. More about communism by Kaa · · Score: 2

    Communism, as it was originally intended, is the united force of the population taking care of itself through cooperation. ("Workers of all nations unite" (At least, I think that's how it goes))

    You are somewhat confused. Let's try to clear up some of terminology.

    "Utopian socialism": forerunner to Karl Marx from which he (Marx) borrowed a lot of ideas about the desirable form of society. Under utopian socialism everybody lives in the same conditions, labors for the general good, owns nothing, and generally behaves himself. This is basically a secular form of a monastic order. People nowadays tend not to know anything about utopian socialism and tend to be horrified when they learn the details, which are very unpleasant (as in death penalties for insubordination, prohibition on any unsanctioned sex, breeding of people for genetic traits, etc.). Campanella is a good example of an utopian socialist writer.

    "Marxism": an economic, social, and political philosophy, formulated by Karl Marx. Never implemented in reality. Economically it is based on common ownership of means of production (Marx was very vague as to who would actually run factories), socially -- on utopian socialism, and politically -- on violent revolution overthrowing existing governments worldwide, with the semi-anarchic global community without any governments to follow.

    "Communism": two meanings. Meaning one, the original one: a phase in the socio-economic history of manking that follows capitalism. Very rarely used nowadays. Meaning two, the common one: the political, economic, and social structures implemented in Russia in the beginning of the century, and later in Eastern Europe, China and some other countries. It mostly has been developed by Lenin, so sometimes the word "leninism" is used. I use "communism" in it's second meaning.

    By the way, the meaning of the expression "Workers of the world, unite!" is "unite, so that we together can overthrow all the governments in the world". It has nothing to do with population taking care of itself through cooperation.

    What most misinformed Americans (including myself up until about two or three months ago) believe the only form of communism is the supposed Russian atrocities, but this is false.

    First, I am not a misinformed American. Second, the Russian atrocities are not supposed but quite real. By the best estimates Stalin killed about 20 million people by artificially induced famines in the 20s, plus about 10 million perished in labor camps during Stalin's lifetime.

    Many countries are using some form of communism.

    Right now I can think of North Korea, maybe Cuba, but that's about it.

    In true communism, people give up their possessions voluntarily, to provide for a better life for others.

    I don't know what do you mean by "true communism". Karl Marx certainly didn't envision it this way. Some utopian socialist did, but see above re their views.

    It is only when these rules are enforced at penalty of death that communism becomes what most consider it to be.

    It so happened that these rules always were enforced at the penalty of death. Doesn't it tell you something?


    Kaa

    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
  118. Re:american ingorance??? by Steve+B · · Score: 1
    Actually, corporations are generally on the side of the angels on this one. Of course, their main motive is that the government restrictions make it harder for them to make $$$, but if they help get rid of an abuse of government power then they've more than earned it.

    Perhaps the conflict between State and Corporation will ultimately do for economic liberty what the conflict between Crown and Church in the High Middle Ages did for intellectual liberty -- stir up the pot enough so that there is more room for maneuver than would be possible if either side could always get its way.
    /.

    --
    /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  119. FBI / God Allmighty by skittz · · Score: 1

    My question is this. When did the United States FBI become the dictator of the world? The FBI wants to do things that they legally don't have the right to do, nor should they. Our rights to free speech are being violated by the FBI being allowed to tap telecommunications of any sort. When you don't want someone to hear what you said, you whisper. Why is it fair that the FBI should be able to "turn up the volume"? Is nothing sacred? What next.. Mind Reading?? I see it now.. you can't think a bad thought because the FBI is watching your brainwaves and they will come arrest you. Geeze.

  120. Exactly when was the FBI given legislative power? by leereyno · · Score: 1

    The FBI should not have the ability to block anything by themselves. I can't understand why they have this power. It should take no less than an act of congress to do such a thing, and even then it wouldn't be the right thing to do.

    Its these kinds of things that reinforce my libertarianism. The federal government stopped being by the people for the people a long time ago. We need to put a stop to this kind of thing and the only way to do that is to be actively involved in government. Vote dammit! Keep track of what your senators and representatives are doing, let them know on a regular basis what you believe. Another thing we can all do is closely watch companies/industries that make campaign contributions since these are often used to buy votes. If a congressman/woman is doing things he shouldn't we should boycott the people who paid to get him in office.

    Things got to be the mess that they are because we simply didn't take responsibility for our government. The government was created to be accountable to the people, but that only works when we hold it accountable. The only real safeguard against tyrrany is an ordinary person who is informed and willing to fight to preserve freedom.

    --
    Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
  121. It makes sense, the fbi's paranoia by CiXeL · · Score: 1

    Theyre beginning to realize they're losing their grip on the power structure, so theyre getting tighter and tighter in their control. Its just like censorship issues and publicity grew dramatically when the govt realized they were losing their grip on information control and the CDA 1 and 2 were passed. What I want to see is someone design a relatively cheap device that would attach to a satellite or cell phone and encrypt voice communications even if it makes it CB style, perhaps it could be done with a palm pilot and some sort of interface that would attach to a pay phone or something else.

  122. Re:Sorry, I must of missed this... by bolie · · Score: 1

    You apparently missed the part where the federal
    government ONLY has the rights enumerated in the
    Constitution. It has NO OTHER rights, period.
    This is pretty basic. Not only that, but the
    Constitution explicitly protects citizens from
    unreasonable search and seizure. The government
    CAN do things with a warrant (due process),
    that it can't do just at will. Of course, people
    within the government may bypass the rules...

    Bolie IV

  123. Next...US guvmint will want to *license* Iridiums by alumshubby · · Score: 1

    If I understand how these things usually run, the FBI will backpedal when the furor starts, then lean hard on Congress to get legislation introduced -- or maybe just get the the FCC to write new regulations -- requiring that these point-to-point sat phones be licensed, maybe with a tagged signal that indicates the phone's license number. (Of course, if I were a terrorist, I'd just grease somebody to get their Iridium, or buy one through several layers of cutouts.) We'll have the satphone technology available to us, but at the cost of Big Brother listening in. BTW, anybody wanna bet on whether the NSA can break PGP? Wouldn't put it past 'em.

    --
    "How many light bulbs does it take to change a person?" --BMcC-->
  124. american ingorance??? by Suydam · · Score: 2
    So my question is this:
    Why do 99% of American refuse to see their liberties being eroded right out from under them?

    This WAS the land of the free, but now, every time I turn around, I'm hearing about how the FBI has the right to decrypt my e-mail, listen to my phone conversations and about 100 other things.

    Are we all so complacent that we just don't care anymore?

    Question 2 - is it better elsewhere? REALLY?


    --


    Werd.
  125. Where am I? by Pedestrian · · Score: 1

    I think I'm lost. I can't find my way. Oh look, a man with an FBI hat, he must be able to lead me to nirvana. Bastards, stay the hell out of my life and everyone elses.

  126. Paranoia! by Jimhotep · · Score: 1

    Ah, the swelling ranks of the
    newly paranoid.

    Welcome!

    About Iridium, some "end time" religious types
    think it will be used to monitor and control
    everybody.

    If Iridium goes chapter 11, who will end up
    owning the system?

    Just a little bedtime story.

  127. It's up to us by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    Who is going to stop these people? We are.

    The problem with all these phone thingies is that they are hardware. As everyone knows, manufacturing (and selling!) hardware takes a lot more capital than doing the same with software. There's only so many entities that can manufacture and sell phones, so it's relatively easy for thugs to find them and and strongarm them.

    Crypto over the internet is the way. Stuff like PGP is out of the bottle forever and nothing can stop it now. If the government starts attacking its citizens for using it, it will just frighten citizens and make them need it even more.

    We still have a couple of problems, though:

    • Even if they can't stop people from using crypto, they can still make it illegal and "pick off" citizens, like a sniper in a bell tower. Unenforced or selectively enforced laws are very dangerous for citizens.
    • A lot of people get their software from centralized sources (e.g. Microsoft) and therefore the thugs do have the means of slowing down software proliferation. Even my closests friends complained when I started using PGP for routine correspondence (and I had to stop) because their mail software didn't easily support it. A large part of the population uses a small number of mailers. Even if the thugs concentrate on just keeping crypto support out of the popular mailers, they can slow down the crypto's acceptance.


    ---
    Have a Sloppy night!
    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.