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Order broadens surveillance of Internet users
By Mike Ingram
26 October 2005
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In a serious attack on democratic rights, the US government
has greatly increased the scope of legislation introduced in 1994,
regarding the electronic monitoring of telecommunications providers.
The legislation, known as the Communications Assistance for
Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) obliges telephone companies to make
it possible for law enforcement agencies to intercept any phone
conversations carried out over its networks, as well as making
call records available. The act also stipulates that it must not
be possible for a person to detect that his or her conversation
is being monitored by the respective government agency.
An order issued by the Federal Communications Commission in
August and first published in the Federal Register of October
13 extends the requirement of the 1994 legislation to cover broadband
Internet access services, including wireless and voice-over-IP
(VoIP) Internet telephony services.
Universities required to comply
The far-ranging implications of this are highlighted in an
appeal being prepared by lawyers for the American Council on Education.
The largest association of universities and colleges is preparing
to appeal the order before the United States Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit. According to the New
York Times, the universities do not question the governments
right to implement wiretaps but are appealing on the grounds of
costin excess of $7 billion, according to estimates by some
professionals. But the cost is itself indicative of the extent
of the threat to privacy and democratic rights contained in the
order.
Universities provide Internet access from hundreds of buildings
across campuses and entire cities, including lounges, dorms, classrooms,
laboratories, libraries and other areas that offer either wired
or wireless Internet access.
Universities already comply with requests by law enforcement
officials who produce court orders requiring wiretaps. At present,
this requires them to work with campus officials to single out
specific sites and install the equipment needed to carry out surveillance.
The new legislation requires universities to have every Internet
access point send all communications to a network operations center,
where the data packets could be put together into a single package
for delivery to a law enforcement agency.
If this is done, then the government will no longer require
the collaboration of campus officials to monitor the activities
of students or staff. The technology will be in place for automatic
surveillance from a remote location without the knowledge of either
the individuals being monitored or the institution itself.
Beyond the university campus, the order extends the 1994 wiretap
provisions to Internet service providers, libraries, airports
providing wireless services and municipalities that either provide
Internet access to residents or plan to build their own Internet
access networks, such as Philadelphia or San Francisco.
CALEA to cover Internet telephony providers
As well as extending CALEA to broadband Internet access providers,
the order states, We conclude that CALEA applies to providers
of interconnected VoIP services, which include those
VoIP services that: (1) enable real-time, two-way voice communications;
(2) require a broadband connection from the users location;
(3) require IP-compatible customer premises question; and (4)
permit users to receive calls from and terminate calls to the
PSTN [public switched telephone network].
This poses huge compliance problems for companies providing
so-called peer-to-peer (P2P) services, where communications are
not routed through a central server. Though the legislation requires
compliance only from systems that allow connection to the PSTN,
it nevertheless requires that on such systems, all calls be wiretappable,
not just those interacting with the phone system.
This would potentially require P2P telephone service companies
such as Skype to re-engineer its system to make customers wiretappable
because it offers the SkypeIn and SkypeOut paid services that
permit customers to receive calls from and make them to the traditional
phone system. Skype is the best known of such services, which
was recently purchased by eBay for $2.6 billion. The service registers
well over 3 million users online at any one time.
The expansion of CALEA to cover VoIP services is the latest
in a long line of attacks on democratic rights and civil liberties
carried out on the basis of the supposed war on terror.
When CALEA was set up in 1994, it explicitly differentiated
between telecommunications and Internet services. CALEA originally
carried a complete exemption for all information services.
This was in part a response to broad-based criticisms on civil
liberties grounds and concerns that to place such requirements
on an emerging technology would stifle innovation and leave American
capitalism unable to compete against its rivals.
As the Internet emerged as a mass medium, however, there were
increasing attempts by police and intelligence agencies services
to undermine such a separation. The terrorist attacks of 2001
provided the political climate in which this could finally be
achieved. It was demanded that all such concerns be put aside
in the interests of the war on terror.
On September 13, 2001, just two days after the attacks on New
York and Washington, the Senate approved the Combating Terrorism
Act, which among other things extended the powers of the FBI and
other police agencies to spy on the Internet using new technology
to monitor e-mail messages as they pass through Internet service
providers.
Previous laws on telephone wiretapping made it relatively easy
for the police to obtain the records of incoming and outgoing
phone calls, a procedure called trap and trace, resulting
in a list of all numbers called from or calling to a target location.
A much higher standard of evidence must be met to get an actual
wiretap that records the substance of telephone conversations.
In the past, the monitoring of Internet traffic was limited
to this more restrictive standard, but with the Combating Terrorism
Act, Internet monitoring was treated the same as a trap-and-trace,
although the information obtained goes far beyond a simple list
of phone numbers.
The expansion of CALEA to require that any institution providing
broadband Internet services must implement the technical means
to facilitate such spying on an automatic basis is an ominous
warning of things to come. The FCCs own press release describes
the ruling as the first step to apply CALEA obligations
to new technologies and services that are increasingly used as
a substitute for conventional services.
See Also:
Internet privacy threatened
following terrorist attacks on US
[24 September 2001]
Democratic rights in
America: the first casualty of Bushs anti-terror war
[19 September 2001]
The FCC ruling can be found at:
http://www.cdt.org/digi_tele/20050923fcc-calea.pdf
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