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- Path: sparky!uunet!centerline!noc.near.net!mars.caps.maine.edu!maine.maine.edu!io92142
- Organization: University of Maine System
- Date: Tuesday, 28 Jul 1992 00:42:58 EDT
- From: James <IO92142@MAINE.MAINE.EDU>
- Message-ID: <92210.004258IO92142@MAINE.MAINE.EDU>
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems
- Subject: Digital Telephony/FBI?
- Lines: 46
-
- Hi. I ran across this article in MacWeek, and I would like to know
- if there is anyone who is following these current issues?
- Any responses via email will be greatly appreciated.
- Digital Telephony-MacWeek-7.12.92
-
- Washington
-
- The FBI has sharpened language in proposed legislation that would require
- government wiretap access to all U.S. voice and data networks.
-
- The proposal, known as Digital Telephony, is a response to new telephone
- technology, which the FBI claims makes eavesdropping more difficult. The new
- draft includes and explicit call for law enforcement monitoring facility with
- remote access to every voice and data network in the country. The FBI also
- called for the Federal Communications Commission to relinquish its
- standards-setting and device-certification authority to the U.S. Attorney
- General, who could force wiretap-secure networks open with fines of up to
- $10,000 a day.
-
- The FBI told computer and communications industry leaders that its wiretap
- shopping list includes access to all present and future network technologies,
- including Ethernet, X.25, cellular networks and Electronic Data Interchange
- systems.
-
- "In its current form Digital Telephony would open the entire universe to
- wiretaps," said Don Gilbert, information services directory at the Washington,
- D.C.- based American Petroleum Institute. He is among 40 industry leaders
- opposing the proposal.
-
- The bill still has not found a sponsor on Capitol Hill. Nevertheless, the FBI
- has not backed down.
-
- Attorney Mike Godwin, counsel to the Cambridge, Mass.-based Electronic Frontier
- Foundation, said the FBI remained adamant because Digital Telephony is a
- backhanded attempt to prevent the use of encryption on U.S. networks. The
- Department of Justice, the FBI's parent agency, launched anti encryption
- legislation in 1991, Senate Bill 266, which did not pass.
-
- "They are asking for an outrageous level of access because they can back down on
- the condition that a ban be placed on encryption," Godwin said.
- "It leaves us where we would have been if S.B. 266 has passed."
-
- =-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=
- James Gray Bitnet : IO92142@Maine
- University of Maine Internet : IO92142@Maine.Maine.Edu
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