Obama May Back FBI Push for Total Internet Surveillance Law
18
May, 2013
President
Obama is reportedly considering endorsing an FBI plan for a new
series of laws requiring all Internet companies to build-in to all
online systems a “capacity
to comply with wiretap orders.”
The
Obama Administration, and the Bush Administration before them,
have previously
tried to expand existing legislation into
the Internet, demanding online companies give them virtually
limitless access to anything that might be used for communication.
The
problem is that an awful lot of existing systems not only don’t
have the capability to spy on their users, but in many cases are
explicitly designed with privacy in mind. This is the antithesis of
the FBI goal of total information awareness.
Which
has the FBI pushing for these new laws “requiring” all this
software to be revised with their spying in mind. First efforts at
the law were stalling in Congress over fear of “stifling
innovation,” sparking the new proposal of just
fining every companythat
the Justice Department feels like going after who doesn’t comply.
If
President Obama does endorse it, analysts say it could spark a major
Congressional debate about privacy, something the FBI clearly doesn’t
want. More importantly, however, is that open source software will by
definition allow end users to remove all of these wiretapping
“features,” which makes the law completely unworkable to a broad
segment of communications software.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.