Sunday, August 12, 2007

The W007...a President's New Phone

A lawsuit was filed with US Federal court in San Francisco to invalidate the new law which allows wiretapping without a court order. The suit was filed by lawyers from the Center for Constitutional Rights, who also represent the Guantanamo inmates. Apparently, the FISA court seemed to be delaying US govt's earnest attempts to catch terrrrrists. In fairness, this legislation could probably be plugging a loophole by explicitly removing barriers for interception of any communications with foreigners.

From my perspective, at least this new legislation has a sunset clause and needs Congress to renew it in six months. Hopefully, there'll be enough Americans who dare to talk about the President's new clothes...to restore their constitutional rights and fix the root cause of the problem. I honestly believe that the root cause is a foreign policy that creates many more problems than are intended to be resolved.

There's already some fallout, with Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe citing the US program to justify using "the dictator's toolkit". So before you think I'm engaging in Bush-bashing, I'll come right out to say that the same issues are occurring in many more countries with much less debate or oversight.

There also seems to be an attempt to apply the law in retrospect in order to grant AT&T immunity in the lawsuit filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Ironically, AT&T testified in court during the 1920s, "The telephone has become part and parcel of the social and business intercourse of the people of the United States, and this telephone system offers a means of espionage to which general warrants and writs of assistance were the puniest instruments of tyranny and oppression."

As Bob Dylan used to say, the times they are a-changing. All that we've grown to understand about peace, war, dictatorship, democracy, elections...are a-changing. Pretty soon, the concept of property ownership will also be reversed back a few hundred years. Back then, search warrants weren't required, since all property belonged to the state.

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Unlawful Involvement of Telecoms Has Impact On People

A recent TV program on PBS Frontline talks about wiretapping capability. Spying on the Home Front touches a great deal of issues and tries to achieve a balance by allowing all those involved a chance to voice their perspective. AT&T's involvement shows that telecoms networks are in a position to be convenient tools for unlawful interception of communications, which can be indexed and stored for periods beyond their utility of preventing terrorism.

Even though the PBS program talks about events and issues in the US, it is quite reasonable to expect similar scenarios in many different countries around the world. Of course, some governments may be working with less than USD 60 billion budget. Compare the ability of the average person with a low budget laptop to search and obtain a lot of information for free from Amazon.com, BBC News, CNN, ESPN, Expedia, Flickr, Google, IMDB, LinkedIn, Lonely Planet, MarketWatch, Priceline, Reuters, Technorati, Weather Channel, Wikipedia, Yahoo...and you get a glimpse. If you are willing to spend some money online, you can obtain even more details from various high quality information aggregators and industry specific analysts.

While many people may trust their government, one particular viewer of the PBS program commented online, "Here's an easy scenario of abuse...I decided to run for Congress and someone who is a fan of the incumbent happens to work in the NSA/FBI/etc. They scan all of this massive data collected for years and can correlate my travel, shopping and hotel activities. This data indicates a pattern that I might have had an affair 5 years ago. They leak this information to my opponent's campaign and they hire a private investigator to confirm and dig up this information. A week later, this information is leaked to a news paper, journalist, tabloid etc."

Dick Cheney was certainly not amused when the press and politicians had a field day about his daughter being openly lesbian.

Now, not everyone has aspirations for political office. But there's a fundamental need for privacy in order to protect each person's family relationships and business interests.

There are also dangers of inaccurate information being held for too long. In the UK, a little girl made a remark "My dad bonked me last night." A lady at the cafeteria overheard this and reported it to the school authorities, which sparked an investigation into the father being a sex offender. They later confirmed that the girl was talking about her father tapping her playfully on the head with an inflatable hammer. Five years later the father discovered he was being refused work because he was still classed as a suspected paedophile.

BTW, you can also watch the full PBS program online

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