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- The following are some news clips from Baltic News Service about a scandal
- in Estonia, where some government and private databases were sold on black
- market on CD-ROM disks. This brings up an interesting question, who should
- own information like police and IRS databases, and is it illegal to copy
- such information once it is available.
-
- Juri Kaljundi
- jk@stallion.ee
-
- ---
-
- SECRET INFO IS SOLD ON BLACK MARKET, ESTONIAN POLICE SAY
-
- TALLINN, Nov 09, BNS - Classified information of important state
- institutions is available on the black market, according to Estonian=20
- security police and central criminal police officials.
-
- A database containing information on hundreds of thousands of people,
- collected by the Tax Department, Estonian Mobile Telephone and
- Radiolinja companies, the Social Affairs Ministry and several other
- state agencies and large companies, has hit the black market, the
- Eesti Paevaleht daily reported on Saturday. Supposedly, also Customs
- Department and national car registry databases have been secretly
- copied.
-
- The CD-ROM with the confidential informations costs about 50,000
- kroons, according to the daily.
-
- Security Police Director General Juri Pihl and acting deputy director
- of the central criminal police, Andres Anvelt, confirmed that numerous
- institutional databases are available on the black market.
-
- Anvelt said he had happened to see a pirate copy of the buildings
- registry showing all transactions with buildings and their owners.
- "I've also heard that information on who owns which telephone number
- has leaked from mobile telephone companies," he added.
- Pihl said security police would investigate information leaks only
- when they concerned security police itself. Looking into database
- thefts is not directly the province of security police, he said.
- Such a secret database is a powerful weapon in the hands of organized
- crime, the daily said.
-
- Criminals have managed to take advantage of the insufficient
- protection of electronic databases and are sometimes better informed
- than the police, Anvelt confessed.
-
- Baltic News Service
-
- ---
-
- ESTONIAN COMMITEE CLAIMS IT HAS NO INFORMATION ON DATABASES ON BLACK
- MARKET
-
- TALLINN, Nov 11, BNS - Chairman of the Estonian parliament's security
- police committee, Vahur Glaase, said he had not enough information on
- allegedly illicit trafficking in classified databases.
-
- "I have too little information to draw any conclusions," chairman of
- the parliamentary committee controlling the activity of the Estonian
- security police told BNS.
-
- The Eesti Paevaleht daily Saturday claimed that a database containing
- information of the taxation department, the Eesti Mobiiltelefon and=20
- Radiolinja mobile telephone companies, the social affairs ministry and
- some other agencies and companies on hundreds of thousands of people
- had arrived on the Estonian black market. Presumably, the illegally=20
- copied database also contains data of the customs department and the
- motor vehicles registration center.
- Glaase said that while a large proportion of the official information
- is open to the public, the publication of a classified telephone
- number is a crime.
-
- "This seems to smack of misprision, and police must start
- investigating it when an application is filed," Glaase said.
-
- According to the Eesti Paevaleht report a CD-ROM with the illegal
- database costs about 50,000 kroons. The paper claimed that the pirated
- information is a powerful weapon in the hands of criminals.
-
- Security police general director Juri Pihl and central criminal police
- acting assistant director Andres Anvelt confirmed there was
- black-market traffic in many institutions' databases.
-
- Pihl said that the security police would launch an inquiry into the
- information leak if it also concerned the security police. He said
- investigation of database theft was not an immediate task of the
- security police.
-
- According to the criminal code, the potential punishment for
- destroying or manipulating with other people's electronically recorded
- information is punishable with a prison sentence for a term of up to
- one year.
-
- Baltic News Service
-
- ---
-
- ESTONIAN CABINET EXPRESSES SHOCK AT GOVERNMENT DATA LEAK
-
- TALLINN, Nov 12, BNS - The Estonian Cabinet is shocked by the
- appearance on the black market of government information, foreign
- minister and acting prime minister Siim Kallas said.
-
- "It is a complicated problem and the Cabinet is shocked by it," Kallas
- told reporters on Tuesday.
-
- Kallas said Interior Minister Mart Rask had known about the
- information leak since two months ago. "Investigation of the leak has
- started at the Interior Ministry and by today criminal
- proceedings
- have been taken in the first case," Kallas said.
-
- Kallas said that in the nearest future the Cabinet would adopt a
- decision obliging state institutions to protect the information at
- their disposal. "The security systems and leaking connections must be=20
- checked," he said.
-
- The acting prime minister said that it was important to establish how,
- by which channels and through whom the information came to the black
- market.
-
- Baltic News Service
-
- ---
-
- ESTONIAN POLICE QUESTION FIRST PEOPLE IN DATABASES LEAK CASE
-
- TALLINN, Nov 13, BNS - Estonian police Tuesday questioned several =20
- people in connection with criminal action brought in the databases
- leak case.
-
- An interview with an alleged author of the black market databases,
- Imre Perli, has been scheduled for Wednesday.
-
- Tallinn police deputy prefect Peeter Sults told BNS that investigators
- had contacted Perli by telephone and he had promised to come for an
- interview.
-
- "Perli is not a suspect," Sults said. "Criminal action was brought=20
- concerning the fact of the leak, not any concrete person."
-
- Sults said the perons interviewed were connected with institutiooπ
- from which information had allegedly leaked out.
-
- The Tallinn criminal police brought criminal action in the classified
- information leak case on Tuesday. The action was taken concerning
- violations of regulations of government register keeping or of the use
- of the information contained in such registers. The punishment
- stipulated for this in the criminal code is a fine or a prison =20
- sentence for a term of up to two years.
-
- The press has claimed that most of the classified databases were
- compiled by Perli, until September an Eesti Mobiiltelefon mobile
- telephone company employee. He may also have compiled the motor
- vehicles register database by which car owners can be established.
-
- [ More? ] [Y/n/=][>
-
- Please type Y for Yes, N for No.
-
- Databases containing thousands of mobile and ordinary telephone =20
- numbers, traffic offences, as well as data of the motor vehicles and
- companies registers are currently being offered for sale in Estonia.
- Such databases are of high value for organized crime.
-
- Baltic News Service
-
-
-
- --
- =-=-Graham-John Bullers-=-=-www.Freenet.Edmonton.ab.ca/eal/index.html-=-=
- Lord grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change.The courage
- to change the things I can.And the wisdom to hide the bodies of the people
- -=-=-I had to kill because they pissed me off.-=-=-alt.2600.moderated-=-=-
- --- ifmail v.2.8.lwz
- * Origin: Toronto Free-Net (1:340/13@fidonet)
-