Author Topic: Big Brother & VOIP  (Read 750 times)

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Offline Kosh

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http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060727-7372.html

Quote
The Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), passed in 1994, has powered its way back onto the front page this summer, and if you 1) live in the US and 2) pay taxes, you might soon be paying to implement it. And if you're a drug-dealing mobster, you might soon be experiencing it.

The FBI wants the ability to tap VoIP calls. To do this, the agency also wants access to all of your network traffic—and it looks like it's on the way to getting it. Following a long set of legal battles, the US Court of Appeals in June upheld 2-1 a newer and broader definition of CALEA's scope that could affect every university and library in the country.


Hear that? It's another nail in the coffin for American civil liberties......


And on a somewhat related note, an interesting question has been posted on Slashdot:
http://ask.slashdot.org/askslashdot/06/07/29/0223253.shtml
"The reason for this is that the original Fortran got so convoluted and extensive (10's of millions of lines of code) that no-one can actually figure out how it works, there's a massive project going on to decode the original Fortran and write a more modern system, but until then, the UK communication network is actually relying heavily on 35 year old Fortran that nobody understands." - Flipside

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