Looking for the back door

Published: 4 September 1999 y., Saturday
Following the passage of new wiretap rules for wireless phones and other digital networks, Washington policymakers are gearing up for a fight over the privacy of email and other personal computer files. Last week, the FBI won a small victory from federal regulators that will allow it to listen in on conversations and track the location of wireless phone users, as long as the agency first gets a court order. But law enforcement officials say this is only half the battle. The FBI is now looking for new powers to break through security software that renders email and other Internet communications incoherent when traveling along a digital network. Even if the agency has the power to tap digital communications, it still can_t read or understand the messages sent if they are protected by security software. Privacy advocates, software industry executives, and a growing cadre of tech-friendly legislators have strongly opposed the FBI_s efforts, saying that giving law enforcement easy access to protected email and other files could open the door to malicious hackers--or even official abuse. When Congress returns from its summer break later this month, it plans to take up the question of how to regulate security issues with encryption software, which allows a user to scramble computer files, email, or Internet voice conversations so they are indecipherable without a software "key." The leading bill in the debate, which would ease regulations over encryption software, is strongly opposed by the FBI. The new digital wiretap rules, passed by the Federal Communications Commission last week, stem from a 1994 law dubbed the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act. They are largely geared to make sure the FBI can monitor and trace conversations on digital networks, such as wireless or cable telephone systems, just as they can on traditional telephone networks. FBI officials have long pressed for laws that would allow them to translate the content of encrypted messages produced in the United States through a technological "back door," or special code built into the software.
Šaltinis: Internet
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

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Japan passes info-tech law to create e-nation

Japan has moved a step closer to Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori's goal of creating an e-nation when parliament approved a bill adopting the Information Technology (IT) revolution as a national goal. more »

The Problems with Online Media in Lithuania

New type of media came to Lithuania. Now it is rather controversial and there are a lot of legal and moral problems to be discussed. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Intellectual property rights high on Baltic agenda

Latvian, Lithuanian and Estonian senior government officials, judges and intellectual property specialists gathered in Riga last week more »

Vote-Auction.com Back Online

A Web site offering citizens a chance to auction their vote to the highest bidder is back online today using a pure Internet protocol (IP) address. more »

Philippines Tech Industry Looks To Life After 'Love Bug'

International attention was inadvertently focused on Manila's software community earlier this year when the most damaging computer virus ever released crippled computers worldwide. more »

Ericsson to start developing 3G mobile networks in Estonia

Ericsson's Estonian operation Wednesday launched a unit for third generation mobile network planning that will be designing new networks primarily for the international market. more »

RealNetworks, Sony update audio software

Web media streaming giant RealNetworks has teamed with Sony to introduce a new version of its RealAudio technology, which allows sound to be broadcast via the Internet. more »

3Com lets Audrey out the door

3Com lifted the curtain Tuesday on Audrey, a countertop appliance designed to give gadget-happy families a quick way to surf the Web and shoot off email. more »