Who's Watching the Watched?
Great piece by Declan McCullough on the FBI and Justice Department asking the FCC to make sure voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) providers make it easy on the government to listen in on your conversations using such services. The whole detailed article is worth reading, but this was my favorite:
Federal and local police rely heavily on wiretaps. In 2002, the most recent year for which information is available, police intercepted nearly 2.2 million conversations with court approval, according to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. Wiretaps for that year cost taxpayers $69.5 million, and approximately 80 percent were related to drug investigations. Those statistics do not include approximately the same number of additional wiretaps authorized by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
80 percent for drug investigations--of course. The FBI and DoJ made sure they threw in the words "terrorists" and "spies" when making the pitch for this, though. Of course, we don't know how long these 4.4 million or so tapped phone calls are lasting, but one wonders--who the hell has time to listen to all these tapped conversations?
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Well, while they're scaring old men and women into funding pet projects, they might as well get a jump on Evil Drugs.
Apparently 9/11 didn't teach our fossilized Congress enough about prioritizing. Maybe if they spent all the money on, I don't know, intel translation instead of sending kids with badges to shoot kids with dime bags, they would have actually translated the 9/11 message on 9/10 instead of 9/12. Just a thought.
When the Allah freaks bring the next building(s) down, remember the names of those who could have prevented it were they not too busy chasing moral demons. Do not even impregnate their chads.
I bet a lot of this listening work could be done offshore in Bangladesh or India. Polite, highly-skilled engligh-speaking workers at a fraction of the cost!
With decade-old free software out there for doing encrypted VoIP, this probably isn't going to be the most effective wiretap measure ever devised.
Who's the "provider" when a conversation is peer-to-peer using software that can be written by a first-year CompSci student in an afternoon?
"who the hell has time to listen to all these tapped conversations? "
Probably nobody. Just another medium for Echelon to scan. If the system detects a "hit" on a key word or phrase, it flags it for human review.