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- Date: Thu, 17 Sep 1992 19:15:01 -0400
- From: Christopher Davis <ckd@EFF.ORG>
- Subject: File 5--EFF analysis of FBI Digital Telephony (wiretap) proposal
-
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- | F.Y.I. |Newsnote from the Electronic Frontier Foundation |Sep 17,1992|
- +=========+=================================================+===========+
-
- JOINT INDUSTRY/PUBLIC INTEREST COALITION RELEASES WHITE PAPER OPPOSING
- FBI DIGITAL TELEPHONY LEGISLATION
-
- WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), on
- behalf of a coalition of industry, trade associations, computer users,
- and privacy and consumer representatives, today released a white paper
- entitled, "Analysis of the FBI Proposal Regarding Digital Telephony."
- The FBI has proposed legislation which would require that all
- telecommunications equipment be designed to allow law enforcement
- monitoring and is seeking passage in the last few weeks of this
- congress. The organizations that signed the paper believe that the
- proposal would cost consumers millions of dollars, damage U.S.
- competitiveness in the telecommunications marketplace, threaten
- national security interests, and deny American consumers and American
- businesses of much-wanted security and privacy on voice and data
- communications.
-
- "Basically, the FBI's legislative proposal is premature. We hope that
- the white paper demonstrates that there are too many potential dangers
- inherent in the legislative proposal and that there are other means of
- addressing this situation," said Jerry Berman, Executive Director of
- the Washington office of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
-
- Over the past decade a host of new digital communication technologies
- have been introduced and more are being developed. New telephone
- services, such as call-forwarding and last number re-dial, are now
- being offered. The FBI is concerned about the impact these services
- -- and other digital communications techniques -- will have on its
- ability to wiretap. In the future, the vast majority of computer
- communications will also use this technology to transfer information
- and documents.
-
- Signatories included major telecommunications equipment manufacturers,
- such as AT&T; computer manufacturers, such as IBM and Digital
- Equipment Corporation; software producers, such as Microsoft and
- Lotus; network providers, such as Prodigy and Advanced Network and
- Services, Inc.; trade associations in the telecommunications, computer
- and electronic mail businesses; and public interest groups, such as
- the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the ACLU. The Electronic
- Frontier Foundation, a group of 955 members of the computer community,
- has been coordinating an industry/public interest working group on
- digital telephony.
-
- The working group has met with the FBI over a number of months in an
- effort to work out mutually-agreeable solutions to the challenge that
- the development of new communications technologies poses to the FBI.
- David Johnson, a partner at Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, drafted the
- white paper for the working group and serves as its legal advisor.
-
- "We have made significant progress and both sides better understand
- the other's needs and concerns. The bottom line, however, is that
- those who signed the paper do not see broad-based legislation as the
- right approach to this challenge. We have worked with the FBI to
- develop practical, technical solutions to the problems they are
- anticipating and intend to continue to do so," said John Podesta, of
- Podesta Associates, Inc., who coordinates the working group on behalf
- of EFF.
-
- # # #
-
- For a copy of the white paper, please call +1 202 544-6906, or use
- anonymous ftp to ftp.eff.org, file pub/EFF/legal-issues/eff-fbi-analysis.
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 17, 1992
-
- For more information contact: John Podesta 202/544-6906
- Jerry Berman 202/544-9237
-
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