Monday, February 05, 2007

FBI turns to broad new wiretap method

By Declan McCullagh
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: January 30, 2007, 4:00 AM PST
Last modified: January 30, 2007, 10:04 PM PST


The FBI appears to have adopted an invasive Internet surveillance technique that collects far more data on innocent Americans than previously has been disclosed.

Instead of recording only what a particular suspect is doing, agents conducting investigations appear to be assembling the activities of thousands of Internet users at a time into massive databases, according to current and former officials. That database can subsequently be queried for names, e-mail addresses or keywords.

The rest can be read here.


If they are serious about their reasons for adopting this method, they are about 5-10 years behind reality. Reality is that there are currently 2 types of criminals: ones that do small illegal activity, taking few precautions on getting caught, and doing minor crimes. The other type of criminal is a career criminal that is extremely up to date with technology and efficient about not getting caught. This method will probably stop the first type of criminal in his tracks, because the small-time criminal is not likely to go out of his way to avoid getting caught on something minor, when the FBI is not likely to target him in the first place. They won't catch the second type of criminal because he'll use compromised computers(likely overseas) remotely to do his crime, so there's no way the FBI can trace the IP all the way back to him. The trade-off is the capture of criminals causing minimal damage, and invading people's privacy in the process. Either the FBI can't figure this out, or they have a different agenda. A different agenda might be using their said reason as a front for political profiling purposes, to decide who is against them and therefore spy on citizens for their advancement of political power, by isolating and undermining those that are against their ideals. Either way, it's morally wrong to retain information on citizens without a court order issuing probable cause of wrongdoing. Contacting your representatives in Congress might be a good idea, to notify them of this situation and state that it's a bad trade-off, and one that the general public absolutely refuses. Until then, I suggest using e-mail/instant messaging services that use encryption techniques to avoid becoming a possible inadvertent target of their madness.

Long Hiatus

For the few visitors to this blog, you probably noticed I haven't updated in months. The cause at first was lack of news, then after a little while I simply forgot about this blog altogther. I'm debating on whether to split into 2 blogs, one for chess and one for political/computer security news. I'm sure chess fans don't want to sift through my other rantings for the chess stuff, and visa versa. I'll try to do some update very soon though.

Update:

After a short deliberation, I decided I'm going to make this blog specific to technology/political news, and open up a chess blog, which will soon appear on the right links. Enjoy!