Privacy - Surveillance & Wiretapping Archive
NSA Spying Program Information
See the PATRIOT page for USA PATRIOT Act and the
Terrorism directory for
"anti-terrorism" surveillance legislation.
» US v. Councilman
Files in this Archive
- 20040427_CALEA_reply_comments.pdf (59k)
Final Draft of comments as filed
- 20040413_EFF_CALEA_comments.php
EFF Files Comments on FBI Plan to Surveil Net
- surveillancemonitor.html
EFF report on Surveillance and Monitoring
- 20020919_eff_FISCR.html
Collection of documents filed in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review
- EFF CSEA Analysis
EFF Analysis of the Cyber Security Enhancement Act
- 20000607_s2448_cdt.comments
CDT comments to Senate Judiciary Committee
Chairman Orrin Hatch about problems in S. 2448, "Internet Integrity and
Critical Infrastructure Protection Act of 2000", a bill relating
principally to enhancing law enforcement ability to investigate computer
crimes. It includes a number of troubling provisions, included expanded
wiretapping authority, snooping on citizens who've violated no laws,
vagueness that could result in criminalization of political expression,
and weaker privacy standards for satellite as opposed to cable
subscribers. Also criticizes S. 2092.
- s2448_net_security_2000_bill.html
S. 2448, "Internet Integrity and
Critical Infrastructure Protection Act of 2000", a bill relating
principally to enhancing law enforcement ability to investigate computer
crimes. It includes a number of troubling provisions, included expanded
wiretapping authority, snooping on citizens who've violated no laws,
vagueness that could result in criminalization of political expression,
and weaker privacy standards for satellite as opposed to cable
subscribers. A.k.a. "International Computer Crime Enforcement
Assistance Act of 2000"
- s2092_net_security_2000_bill.html
S. 2092, untitled Net
security/surveillance bill. Includes many problematic provisions,
one of the worst of which is a vague and open-ended expansion of
wiretapping authority.
- s2430_net_security_2000_bill.html
S. 2430, "Internet Security Act of
2000", a bill relating principally to enhancing law enforcement
ability to investigate computer crimes. It includes modifications
to wiretapping rules (pen register and tap-and-trace authority) that
both increase law enforcement authority in this area but also tighten
the requirements for doing wiretaps a little.
- hr833_s625_bankruptcy_2000_bill.html
A huge "Bankruptcy Reform
Act" (H.R. 833/S. 625) that has passed both houses and as of July
2000 was in joint conference committee. The Senate version of the
bill passed with most of the S. 486 "Methamphetamine
Anti-Proliferation Act" attached as a rider. This language is in
the joint conference version, and includes dangerous censorship and
privacy invasion provisions. Essentially replaced earlier Senate
and House versions such as S. 1428 and H.R. 2987. The independent
S. 486 has indepently passed the Senate and could pass the House.
- s486_meth_2000_bill.html
A later version (S. 486) of the
"Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act", as passed by the
Senate. Includes dangerous censorship and privacy invasion
provisions. Replaced earlier Senate and House versions such as
S. 1428 and H.R. 2987. Not (yet) passed by House as of July, 2000.
Most of its provisions were also attached to the H.R. 833/S. 625
"Bankruptcy Reform Act" as a highly inappropriate "rider" amendment
in conference committee after the 833/625 BRA bill passed both
houses. (NOTE: This yr. 2000 version of S. 486 as amended, should
NOT be confused with the original 1999 version of S. 486 as
introduced. That version, the "DEtermined and Full Engagement
Against the Threat of Methamphetamine Act" or "DEFEAT Meth
Act", did NOT contain any censorship or privacy-invasion
provisions.)
- hr4553_clubdrug_2000_bill.html
"Club Drug Anti-Proliferation
Act" (H.R. 4553), the House version of the Senate's "Ecstasy
Anti-Proliferation Act" (S. 2612). Basically a clone of the
dangerous "Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act" which exists
in various forms. The CDAPA, as of July 2000, appears to be
stalled.
- s2612_ecstasy_2000_bill.html
"Ecstasy Anti-Proliferation
Act" (S. 2612), the Senate version of the House's "Club Drug
Anti-Proliferation Act" (H.R. 4553). Basically a clone of the
dangerous "Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act" which exists in
various forms. The EAPA, as of July 2000, appears to be stalled.
- decrypting_puzzle_palace.article
John Perry Barlow's July 1992 article
"Decrypting the Puzzle Palace," describing how the NSA seeks to
dominate cyberspace. A wealth of early background material on FBI
and NSA surveillance, political moves to oppose general public
possession and use of strong encryption, and erection of export
controls against encryption.
- hr1501_sp1344_1999_bill.html
Bloated and threatening Juvenile Justice
bill, as passed by the Senate. Numerous free speech, privacy
and other problems. Considered by many the most anti-democratic
legislation introduced in this country in decades. Bill
numbers: H.R. 1501 (House), S.P. 1344 (Senate). Senate version was
originally S. 254. (Oct. 1999)
- 19990927_armey_reno_let.html
Letter from Dick Armey to Janet Reno
following the administration's "relaxation" of the export control
rules. Asks for clarification and intent in proposing the Cyberspace
Electronic Security Act of 1999 (CESA) and asking questions that still
remain after the administration apparently has given up its ambition
to have FIDnet monitor civilian as well as government networks.
- 19990730_armey_reno_let.html
Letter from Dick Armey to Janet Reno asking
clarification on the Clinton Administration position on encryption and
the possibility of the Federal Intrusion Detection Network which would
not only monitor federal networks but also make possible a "desktop"
monitoring system for all phone and data traffic in the U.S.
- 19990421_leahy_electr_rghts.bill
This is a bill introduced by Senator
Leahy some sections of which were eventually
incorporated in other bills and in the FCC implementation
order relevant to CALEA. This bill
was read twice on the floor and referred to committee and
never was voted on in this
form. The titles were:
Title I: Privacy Protection for Communications and Electronic
Information
Title II: Promoting Use of Encryption
Title III: Privacy Protection for Library Loan and Book Sale Records
Title IV: Privacy Protection for Satellite Home Viewers
- 15usc1681u.law
recent amendment to the Fair Credit Reporting Act, adding
a new section covering FBI obtaining and use of consumer credit
information, and providing for penalties for abuse of this information.
- 200001_us_fed_wiretap_laws.html
US federal wiretapping statutes as of
Jan. 2000, in full text: 18 USC 2510-2522, 18 USC 2701-2711,
18 USC 3117, 18 USC 3121-2127, 47 USC 1001-1021. (Includes CALEA's
amendments to older statutes.)
- 960722_deadbeat_databases_article.excerpt
Excerpt from Reuters article
regarding Clinton Administration and Congressional plans to increase
databasing of citizen information, in an effort to catch more "deadbeat
parents" avoiding child support duties. Both houses of Congress
are (as of July 1996) considering legislation to create a "central unit"
that will automatically "register" child support data, "track deadbeat
parents who cross state lines", and maintain "directories to track new
hires", with no longer than a 20-day turnaround, so that states can
"establish paternity and enforce child support orders". The White
House plan, already set into motion with an Executive Order,
establishes a "computer database to track [parents] behind on their
payments as they move from job to job", again by tracking employment.
These frightening plans would almost certainly be extended very
quickly to allow law enforcement to monitor the populace based on any
enforcement criteria, not just deadbeat parenthood. Yet another ugly
example of how the rhetoric of "protecting children" is being used
as a very sharp weapon to undermine American privacy and other civil
liberties.
- cpsr_fincen.paper
CPSR's December 1991 article describing FinCEN as
an ambitious office dedicated on paper to fighting drug trafficking and
other financial crime but warning that in reality FinCEN smacks of big
brother.
- crypto_abernathy.article
Joe Abernathy's June 1992 cryptography article
"Promising technology alarms government - Use of super-secret codes
would block legal phone taps in FBI's crime work"
- denning_wiretap.paper
Dr. Dorothy Denning's September 1993 article
"WIRETAP LAWS AND PROCEDURES WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE U.S. GOVERNMENT
TAPS A LINE"
- nsa_library_database.notes
Notes on NSA's Digital Librarian, an online
library database, and the surveillance implications of the National
Security Agency getting into the field of library information systems.
- pen_reg_18usc3121.law
18 USC S. 3121 Pen Registers (as of 4/93), S.
3121. General prohibition on pen register and trap and trace
device use; exception, S. 3122. Application for an order for a pen
register or a trap and trace device, S. 3123. Issuance of an order
for a pen register or a trap and trace device, S. 3124.
Assistance in installation and use of a pen register or a trap
and trace device, S. 3125. Emergency pen register and trap and
trace device installation, S. 3126. Reports concerning pen
registers and trap and trace devices
- s266_91.comments
comments from the Senate Bill 266 (1991), Sen. Biden's
predecessor to the Digital Telephony bill.
- s1948_natl_security.bill
Full text of the "Counterintelligence and
Security Enhancements Act of 1994" which would amend the National
Security Act of 1947 to improve the counterintelligence and security
posture of the United States intelligence community and to enhance the
investigative authority of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in
counterintelligence matters, and for other purposes. (In short,
it's a bill to enable increased surveillance of govt. employees to
prevent national security leaks.)
- us_crypto-policy.faq
January 1994 FAQ of data encryption software and
technical data controls in the US. Also goes into many details on
FBI and NSA surveillance in general.
- wiretap_cost_hanson.paper
Robin Hanson's May 1993 article "CAN WIRETAPS
REMAIN COST-EFFECTIVE?"...SUMMARY: Compared to an average monthly
phone bill of seventy dollars, the option to wiretap the average
phone line is probably worth less than twelve cents a month to
police and spy agencies. Claims that this option is worth over a
dollar a month ignore the basic economics of law enforcement. Thus
recently proposed government policies to preserve wiretap
abilities in the face of technological change must raise phone
costs by less than one part in seven hundred to be cost-effective.
Why not let a market decide if wiretaps make sense?
Subdirectories in This Archive
- biometrics/
Information on Biometrics
- CALEA/
Directory of information on the Communications Assistance
to Law Enforcement Act of 1996 (CALEA, a.k.a. the "Digital Telephony"
Surveillance Bill), and resistance to related FBI attempts to gain
new KGB-style surveillance powers.
- Carnivore/
Directory of information relating to the FBI Internet
surveillance system known as "Carnivore".
- Foreign_and_local/
Directory of files about surveillance in US states
and other countries besides the US.
- ICPPA/
directory of info on H.R. 1029, the Insurance Claims Privacy
Protection Act (ICPPA), a piece of legislation introduced in 1997 by US
Rep. Ed Towns (D-NY) to preclude a "crime bureau" from establishing an
"all-claims" database to which law enforcement officers have easy access
for privacy-invasive "fishing expeditions" in which data on all
insurance claimants is treated as if it belonged to crime suspects.
- Know_Your_Customer_FDIC_banks/
directory of info on bank surveillance,
government financial privacy invasion, and the draft FDIC "Know Your
Customer" regulations.
- Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)
Directory of information on RIFD
- Terrorism/
Directory of information on
privacy concerns, surveillance, and censorship and free expression
issues as they relate to media and political
responses to terrorism and fears of terrorism.
Related On-Site Resources
- Total Information Awareness -
Directory of of information relating to the DARPA TIA project.
- Key_escrow - Directory of
information relating to encryption "key escrow", the Clipper/Capstone/Tessera
surveillance/encryption scheme, and the Escrowed Encryption Standard.
-
Digital_Telephony_FBI - Directory of files pertaining to
the FBI and their 'Digital Telephony' or "Communications Assistance to Law
Enforcement' legislation
-
Profiling_cookies_webbugs -
[currently offline] Directory of information on
online (and offline, but computer-related) profiling (dossier-building) on
individuals. Cookies are one of the major ways people are tracked on the web and
webbugs aka web bugs are another way one can be tracked. Cookies can be turned
off and refused, and if you want to avoid personal tracking by webbugs they
should be turned off as webbugs are dependent on cookies already in your
system.
Links to Related Off-Site Resources
-
EPIC's Wiretapping &
Privacy Archive
-
Fidnet Eases Up on Net Plan A Declan McCullagh on fIDNET
monitor private nets, only the government net. This is a big about face. (Sept.
1999) [currently offline]
-
Rachel Bobrow's "Big
Brother Is Watching You..."
a study of surveillance technology
and personal privacy protection. [currently offline]
-
Wiretapping includes huge list of links to articles about
illegal wiretapping around the world. [currently offline]