Carnivore Can Catch It All

Published: 19 November 2000 y., Sunday
The FBI's controversial e-mail surveillance tool, known as Carnivore, can retrieve all communications that go through an Internet service — far more than FBI officials have said it does — a recent test of its potential sweep found, according to bureau documents. An FBI official involved with the test stressed Friday that although Carnivore has the ability to grab a large quantity of e-mails and Web communications, current law and specific court orders restrict its use. The Carnivore system, installed by the FBI on the network of Internet service providers, has software that scans Internet traffic as it moves through that provider's network. The FBI says it configures the software to capture e-mail to or from someone under investigation and that court orders limit which e-mails agents can see. Nevertheless, based on the new documents, privacy experts said they are worried about the breadth of Carnivore's capability and questioned why the FBI even conducted such a test in June if it intends to use the tool only for narrow purposes. "That really contradicts the explanation that the FBI has provided as to the purpose of the system and how it works," said David Sobel, general counsel for the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center. In the lab report, FBI officials said Carnivore "could reliably capture and archive all unfiltered traffic to the internal hard drive" and could save the information on removable high-capacity disks as well. FBI officials say Carnivore has been used in about 25 cases, most involving national security.
Šaltinis: cbsnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

New report reveals consumer attitudes toward self-service technology

The Self-Service and Kiosk Association has published its 2009 Self-Service Consumer Survey, a comprehensive report that reveals what consumers like and dislike about self-service technology — and what they want more of. more »

“Gold-To-Go“ ATMs to hit Europe, Asia

Private investors should hold up to 15 percent of their wealth in physical gold, according to a German asset-management company that plans to set up 500 "Gold-To-Go" ATMs in Germany, Switzerland and Austria sometime this year. more »

New reports says U.S. FIs expect debit, ATM fraud to grow in 2009

ATM and debit card theft is expected to grow 10 percent to 14 percent this year, according to a survey of financial institutions that was released today. more »

Chocolate-powered racing car

Built from potatoes, steered with carrots and powered by chocolate. more »

Robot teacher wows Japan students

Students at a Tokyo elementary school are waiting quietly for a "special lecturer" in science class. But when they see "Saya", a robot relief teacher, the kids are pleasantly surprised. more »

E-readers - newspapers last best hope?

This week - the New York Times announced a deal with e-commerce giant Amazon timed to the release of its latest Kindle e-book device. more »

Wincor ATMs now housed in telephone booths in South Korea

Wincor Nixdorf AG and NICE Banking, an independent ATM deployer in South Korea, have partnered to grow a network of ATMs at sites owned by the country's top communications provider, Korea Telecom. more »

“Internet has to be free, but not regulation free” - Harbour on telecoms package

“The telecoms package has never been about anything to do with restrictions on the internet,” Malcolm Harbour told us ahead of Parliament's debate Tuesday on the telecoms package, which aims to reform the existing European electronic communications framework. more »

Ministerial Conference Safer Internet for Children

On 20 April 2009 the Prague Congress Centre will host a ministerial conference Safer Internet for Children, which is organised by the Ministry of the Interior in cooperation with the European Commission. more »

2008 was a year of security, payment card breaches, report says

Payment card breaches in 2008 led to the most compromises and security breaches of record in the last four years, according to a new report from Verizon Business. more »