| ==Phrack Inc.== | |
| Volume Four, Issue Thirty-Eight, File 11 of 15 | |
| The Digital Telephony Proposal | |
| by the Federal Bureau of Investigation | |
| Phone Tapping Plan Proposed March 6, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| By Associated Press | |
| Law Enforcement Agencies Would Have Easier Access | |
| WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration wants you to pay a little more for | |
| telephone service to make it easier for the FBI or local police to listen in on | |
| the conversations of suspected criminals. | |
| The Justice Department is circulating a proposal in Congress that would force | |
| telephone companies to install state-of-the-art technology to accommodate | |
| official wiretaps. And it would authorize the Federal Communications | |
| Commission to grant telephone companies rate increases to defray the cost. | |
| A copy of the legislation was obtained by The Associated Press. | |
| Attorney General William Barr discussed the proposal last week with Senator | |
| Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, which | |
| oversees the FCC according to congressional sources who spoke on condition of | |
| anonymity. | |
| Justice Department spokesman Paul McNulty refused to comment on the proposal. | |
| The bill was drafted by the FBI and the Justice Department in response to | |
| dramatic changes in telephone technology that make it difficult for traditional | |
| wiretapping methods to pick up conversations between two parties on a telephone | |
| line. | |
| The Justice Department's draft proposal states that the widespread use of | |
| digital transmission, fiber optics and other technologies "make it increasingly | |
| difficult for government agencies to implement lawful orders or authorizations | |
| to intercept communications in order to enforce the laws and protect the | |
| national security." | |
| The FBI has already asked Congress for $26.6 million in its 1993 fiscal year | |
| budget to help finance a five-year research effort to help keep pace with the | |
| changes in telephone technology. | |
| With the new technology that is being installed nationwide, police can no | |
| longer go to a telephone switching center and put wiretap equipment on | |
| designated lines. | |
| The advent of so-called digital transmission means that conversations are | |
| broken into bits of information and sent over phone lines and put back together | |
| at the end of the wire. | |
| The bill would give the FCC 180 days to devise rules and standards for | |
| telephone companies to give law enforcement agencies access to conversations | |
| for court-ordered wiretapping. | |
| The attorney general would be empowered to require that part of the rulemaking | |
| proceedings would be closed to the public, to protect the security of | |
| eavesdropping techniques used by law enforcement. | |
| Phone companies would have 180 days to make the necessary changes once the FCC | |
| issues the regulations. | |
| The bill would prohibit telephone companies and private exchanges from using | |
| equipment that doesn't comply with the new FCC technology standards. | |
| It would give the attorney general power to seek court injunctions against | |
| companies that violate the regulations and collect civil penalties of $10,000 a | |
| day. | |
| It also would give the FCC the power to raise telephone rates under its | |
| jurisdiction to reimburse carriers. The FCC sets interstate long distance | |
| rates and a monthly end-user charge -- currently $2.50 -- that subscribers pay | |
| to be connected to the nationwide telephone network. | |
| Telephone companies will want to examine the proposal to determine its impact | |
| on costs, security of phone lines and the 180-day deadline for implementing the | |
| changes, said James Sylvester, director of infrastructure and privacy for Bell | |
| Atlantic. | |
| Though no cost estimates were made available, Sylvester estimated it could cost | |
| companies millions of dollars to make the required changes. But rate hikes for | |
| individual customers would probably be quite small, he said. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| As Technology Makes Wiretaps More Difficult, F.B.I. Seeks Help March 8, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| By Anthony Ramirez (New York Times)(Page I12) | |
| The Department of Justice says that advanced telephone equipment in wide use | |
| around the nation is making it difficult for law-enforcement agencies to | |
| wiretap the phone calls of suspected criminals. | |
| The Government proposed legislation requiring the nation's telephone companies | |
| to give law-enforcement agencies technical help with their eavesdropping. | |
| Privacy advocates criticized the proposal as unclear and open to abuse. | |
| In the past, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other agencies could | |
| simply attach alligator clips and a wiretap device to the line hanging from a | |
| telephone pole. Law-enforcement agents could clearly hear the conversations. | |
| That is still true of telephone lines carrying analog transmissions, the | |
| electronic signals used by the first telephones in which sounds correspond | |
| proportionally to voltage. | |
| But such telephone lines are being steadily replaced by high-speed, high- | |
| capacity lines using digital signals. On a digital line, F.B.I. agents would | |
| hear only computer code or perhaps nothing at all because some digital | |
| transmissions are over fiber-optic lines that convert the signals to pulses of | |
| light. | |
| In addition, court-authorized wiretaps are narrowly written. They restrict the | |
| surveillance to particular parties and particular topics of conversation over a | |
| limited time on a specific telephone or group of telephones. That was | |
| relatively easy with analog signals. The F.B.I. either intercepted the call or | |
| had the phone company re-route it to an F.B.I. location, said William A. Bayse, | |
| the assistant director in the technical services division of the F.B.I. | |
| But tapping a high-capacity line could allow access to thousands of | |
| conversations. Finding the conversation of suspected criminals, for example, | |
| in a complex "bit stream" would be impossible without the aid of phone company | |
| technicians. | |
| There are at least 140 million telephone lines in the country and more than | |
| half are served in some way by digital equipment, according to the United | |
| States Telephone Association, a trade group. The major arteries and blood | |
| vessels of the telecommunications network are already digital. And the | |
| greatest part of the system, the capillaries of the network linking central | |
| telephone offices to residences and businesses, will be digital by the mid- | |
| 1990s. | |
| Thousand Wiretaps | |
| The F.B.I. said there were 1,083 court-authorized wiretaps -- both new and | |
| continuing -- by Federal, state, and local law-enforcement authorities in 1990, | |
| the latest year for which data are available. | |
| Janlori Goldman, director of the privacy and technology project for the | |
| American Civil Liberties Union, said she had been studying the development of | |
| the F.B.I. proposal for several months. | |
| "We are not saying that this is not a problem that shouldn't be fixed," she | |
| said, "but we are concerned that the proposal may be overbroad and runs the | |
| risk that more information than is legally authorized will flow to the F.B.I. | |
| In a news conference in Washington on Friday, the F.B.I. said it was seeking | |
| only to "preserve the status quo" with its proposal so that it could maintain | |
| the surveillance power authorized by a 1968 Federal law, the Omnibus Crime | |
| Control and Safe Streets Act. The proposal, which is lacking in many details | |
| is also designed to benefit state and local authorities. | |
| Under the proposed law, the Federal Communications Commission would issue | |
| regulations to telephone companies like the GTE Corporation and the regional | |
| Bell telephone companies, requiring the "modification" of phone systems "if | |
| those systems impede the Government's ability to conduct lawful electronic | |
| surveillance." | |
| In particular, the proposal mentions "providers of electronic communications | |
| services and private branch exchange operators," potentially meaning all | |
| residences and all businesses with telephone equipment. | |
| Frocene Adams, a security official with US West in Denver is the chairman of | |
| Telecommunications Security Association, which served as the liaison between | |
| the industry and the F.B.I. "We don't know the extent of the changes required | |
| under the proposal," she said, but emphasized that no telephone company would | |
| do the actual wiretapping or other surveillance. | |
| Computer software and some hardware might have to be changed, Ms. Adams said, | |
| but this could apply to new equipment and mean relatively few changes for old | |
| equipment. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| FBI Wants To Ensure Wiretap Access In Digital Networks March 9, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| Taken from Communications Daily (Page 1) | |
| Proposed legislation being floated by Justice Dept. and FBI would require RHCs | |
| and equipment manufacturers to reengineer their products so that federal, state | |
| and local law enforcement agencies could wiretap digital communications systems | |
| of all types, Bureau said. The proposal is a "collaborative effort" at | |
| "highest levels" involving law enforcement officials, government agencies, | |
| telephone executives and equipment manufacturers, said John Collingwood of | |
| FBI's office for legislative affairs. It seeks to authorize FCC to grant | |
| telcos rate increases to defray the cost of reengineering the network to bring | |
| it into compliance. | |
| Associated Press reported Attorney General William Barr discussed the proposal | |
| last week with Sen. Hollings (D.-S.C.), chairman of Senate Commerce Committee; | |
| however, Committee staffers wouldn't comment. Sources at FCC said they hadn't | |
| heard of the proposal, and neither had several RHCs we contacted. | |
| The bill was drafted by FBI and Department in response to what FBI Director | |
| William Sessions said were dramatic changes in telephone technology that have | |
| "outpaced" government ability to "technologically continue" its wiretapping | |
| activities. James Kallestrom, FBI's chief of technical services section, said | |
| the bill wouldn't extend the Bureau's "court-authorized" electronic | |
| surveillance authority, but would seek simply to maintain status quo with | |
| digital technology. New legislation is needed because law enforcement agencies | |
| no longer can go into a switching center and place a tap on single phone line, | |
| owing to complex digital multiplexing methods that often route number and voice | |
| signals over different channels. Kallestrom said digital encoding also doesn't | |
| allow specific wiretap procedures, unlike analog systems, which use wave forms. | |
| Bureau wants telephone companies and equipment manufacturers to "build in" the | |
| ability to "give us what we want." He said legislation wouldn't mandate how | |
| companies comply, only that they do. William Bayse, chief of FBI's Technical | |
| Services Division, said the reengineering process would be "highly complex" but | |
| could be done at the software level. | |
| The FBI said it has been in contact with all telcos and "several" equipment | |
| manufacturers to get their input to determine feasibility. Bayse said FBI had | |
| done preliminary cost analysis and estimated changes would run into "tens of | |
| millions," declining to narrow its estimates further. The bill would give FCC | |
| the authority to allow RHCs to raise rates in order to make up the costs of | |
| implementing the new procedures. Although FBI didn't have any specifics as to | |
| how FCC would go about setting those rates, or whether state PUCs would be | |
| involved in the process, they speculated that consumer telephone rates wouldn't | |
| go up more than 20 cents per month. | |
| The bill would give FCC 120 days to devise rules and standards for telcos to | |
| bring the public network into compliance. However, the Commission isn't a | |
| standards-making body. When questioned about the confusing role that the bill | |
| would assign to FCC, FBI's Collingwood said: "The FCC is the agency that deals | |
| with phone companies, so we put them in charge." He acknowledgedn that the | |
| bill "needs work" but said the FBI was "surprised" by the leak to press. | |
| However, he said that the language was in "very early stages" and that FBI | |
| wasn't averse to any changes that would bring swifter passage. | |
| Other confusing aspects of proposal: (1) Short compliance time (120 days) | |
| seems to bypass FCC's traditional rulemaking procedures, in which the public is | |
| invited to submit comments; (2) No definition is given for "telecommunications | |
| equipment or technology;" (3) Provision that the attorney general direct that | |
| any FCC proceeding concerning "regulations, standards or registrations issued | |
| or to be issued" be closed to the public again would violate public comment | |
| procedures. | |
| FBI said legislation is the "least costly alternative" in addressing the issue. | |
| It said software modifications in equipment now would save "millions of | |
| dollars" over making changes several years from now. However, the agency | |
| couldn't explain how software programming changes grew more expensive with | |
| time. FBI's Kallestrom said: "Changes made now can be implemented easier over | |
| time, rather than having to write massive software changes when the network | |
| gets much more complicated." FBI already has asked Congress for $26.6 million | |
| in its proposed 1993 budget to help finance a 5-year research effort to help | |
| keep pace with changes in telephone technology. Asked why that money couldn't | |
| be used to offset the price of government-mandated changes as the bill would | |
| require, FBI declined to comment, saying: "We may look at having government | |
| offset some of the cost as the bill is modified." | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| CPSR Letter on FBI Proposal March 9, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| By David Banisar (CPSR) <banisar@washofc.cpsr.org> | |
| CPSR and several other organizations sent the following letter to Senator | |
| Patrick Leahy regarding the FBI's recent proposal to undertake wire | |
| surveillance in the digital network. | |
| If you also believe that the FBI's proposal requires further study at a public | |
| hearing, contact Senator Hollings at the Senate Committee on Commerce. The | |
| phone number is (202)224-9340. | |
| Dave Banisar, | |
| CPSR Washington Office | |
| ==================================================== | |
| March 9, 1992 | |
| Chairman Patrick Leahy | |
| Senate Subcommittee on Law and Technology | |
| Committee on the Judiciary | |
| United States Senate | |
| Washington, DC 20510 | |
| Dear Senator Leahy, | |
| We are writing to you to express our continuing interest in communications | |
| privacy and cryptography policy. We are associated with leading computer and | |
| telecommunication firms, privacy, civil liberties, and public interest | |
| organizations, as well as research institutions and universities. We share a | |
| common concern that all policies regarding communications privacy and | |
| cryptography should be discussed at a public hearing where interested parties | |
| are provided an opportunity to comment or to submit testimony. | |
| Last year we wrote to you to express our opposition to a Justice | |
| Department sponsored provision in the Omnibus Crime Bill, S. 266, which would | |
| have encouraged telecommunications carriers to provide a decrypted version of | |
| privacy-enhanced communications. This provision would have encouraged the | |
| creation of "trap doors" in communication networks. It was our assessment that | |
| such a proposal would have undermined the security, reliability, and privacy of | |
| computer communications. | |
| At that time, you had also convened a Task Force on Privacy and Technology | |
| which looked at a number of communication privacy issues including S. 266. The | |
| Task Force determined that it was necessary to develop a full record on the | |
| need for the proposal before the Senate acted on the resolution. | |
| Thanks to your efforts, the proposal was withdrawn. | |
| We also wish to express our appreciation for your decision to raise the | |
| issue of cryptography policy with Attorney General Barr at his confirmation | |
| hearing last year. We are pleased that the Attorney General agreed that such | |
| matters should properly be brought before your Subcommittee for consideration. | |
| We write to you now to ask that you contact the Attorney General and seek | |
| assurance that no further action on that provision, or a similar proposal, will | |
| be undertaken until a public hearing is scheduled. We believe that it is | |
| important to notify the Attorney General at this point because of the current | |
| attempt by the administration to amend the Federal Communications Commission | |
| Reauthorization Act with provisions similar to those contained in S. 266. | |
| We will be pleased to provide assistance to you and your staff. | |
| Sincerely yours, | |
| Marc Rotenberg, | |
| Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility | |
| David Peyton, | |
| ITAA | |
| Ira Rubenstein, | |
| Microsoft | |
| Jerry Berman, | |
| Electronic Frontier Foundation | |
| Michael Cavanaugh, | |
| Electronic Mail Association | |
| Martina Bradford, | |
| AT&T | |
| Evan Hendricks, | |
| US Privacy Council | |
| Professor Dorothy Denning, | |
| Georgetown University | |
| Professor Lance Hoffman, | |
| George Washington University | |
| Robert L. Park, | |
| American Physical Society | |
| Janlori Goldman, | |
| American Civil Liberties Union | |
| Whitfield Diffie, | |
| Sun Microsystems | |
| John Podesta, | |
| Podesta and Associates | |
| Kenneth Wasch, | |
| Software Publishers Association | |
| John Perry Barlow, | |
| Contributing Editor, Communications of the ACM | |
| David Johnson, | |
| Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering | |
| cc: Senator Joseph R. Biden, Jr | |
| Senator Hank Brown | |
| Senator Ernest F. Hollings | |
| Senator Arlen Specter | |
| Senator Strom Thurmond | |
| Representative Don Edwards | |
| Attorney General Barr | |
| Chairman Sikes, FCC | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| FBI, Phone Firms in Tiff Over Turning on the Taps March 10, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| By John Mintz (Washington Post)(Page C1) | |
| Technology Has Made Eavesdropping Harder | |
| The FBI says technology is getting ahead of taps. | |
| The bureau says the digital technology in new telephone networks is so | |
| complicated -- it translates voices into computerized blips, then retranslates | |
| them into voices at the other end -- that agents can't capture conversations. | |
| So the FBI wants a law requiring phone companies to re-engineer their new phone | |
| networks so the taps work again. | |
| But the phone companies warn that the proposal could raise ratepayers' monthly | |
| bills. | |
| And civil liberties groups say the technological changes sought by the FBI | |
| could have an unintended effect, making it easier for criminals, computer | |
| hackers and even rogue phone company employees to tap into phone networks. | |
| "We have grave concerns about these proposals," said Jim McGann, a spokesman | |
| for AT&T. "They would have the effect of retarding introduction of new | |
| services and would raise prices." | |
| Bell Atlantic Corporation, owner of Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Company | |
| here, said the changes could cost its own ratepayers as much as hundreds of | |
| millions of dollars. | |
| The cause of the FBI's concern is a new generation of digital technologies in | |
| which phone conversations are translated into the computer language of zeroes | |
| and ones, then bundled with other conversations for speedy transmission, and | |
| finally retransformed into voices. | |
| Another problem for the FBI is fiber-optic technology, in which conversations | |
| are changed into pulses of light zapped over hair-thin strands of glass. The | |
| U.S. government has delayed sales of fiber-optic equipment to the former Soviet | |
| Union because of the difficulty of tapping it. | |
| The FBI proposed a law requiring phone companies to modify their networks to | |
| make wiretaps easier. The agency would still have to obtain a court order to | |
| tap a line, as it does now. It also proposed allowing the Federal | |
| Communications Commission to let the phone companies pass the costs on to | |
| consumers and letting the FCC consider the issues in closed-door hearings to | |
| keep secret the details of phone system security. | |
| "Without an ultimate solution, terrorists, violent criminals, kidnappers, drug | |
| cartels and other criminal organizations will be able to carry out their | |
| illegal activities using the telecommunications system without detection," FBI | |
| Director William S. Sessions said in a prepared statement. "This proposal is | |
| critical to the safety of the American people and to law enforcement officers." | |
| In the past, investigators would get the phone company to make adjustments at | |
| switching facilities, or would place taps at junction boxes -- hard metal | |
| structures on concrete blocks in every neighborhood -- or even at telephone | |
| junction rooms in the basements of office and apartment buildings. | |
| But sometimes tappers get only bursts of electronic blipping. The FBI said the | |
| new technologies have defeated wiretap attempts on occasion -- but it declined | |
| to provide details. | |
| To get the blips retranslated back into conversation, tappers have to place | |
| their devices almost right outside the targeted home or office. Parking FBI | |
| trucks outside targets' houses "could put agents in danger, so it's not | |
| viable," said Bell Atlantic spokesman Kenneth A. Pitt. | |
| "We don't feel our ratepayers should pay that money" to retool networks, said | |
| Bill McCloskey, spokesman for BellSouth Corporation, a major phone company | |
| based in Atlanta. | |
| Since there are 150 million U.S. phone lines, a cost of $ 1 billion that's | |
| passed on to ratepayers could translate into about $ 6.60 per consumer, | |
| industry officials said. | |
| Rather than charge ratepayers, Pitt said, the government should pay for the | |
| changes. Bell Atlantic prefers continued FBI and industry talks on the subject | |
| to a new law. | |
| The FBI proposes that within 120 days of enactment of the law it seeks, the FCC | |
| would issue regulations requiring technological changes in the phone system and | |
| that the modifications be made 60 days after that. The FCC rarely moves on | |
| even the simplest matter in that time, and this could be one of the most | |
| complex technological questions facing the government, congressional and | |
| industry sources said. | |
| Given the huge variety of technologies that could be affected -- regular phone | |
| service, corporate data transmissions, satellite and microwave communications, | |
| and more -- one House staffer said Congress "will have to rent RFK Stadium" to | |
| hold hearings. | |
| Marc Rotenberg, a lawyer who has attended meetings with FBI and phone company | |
| officials on the proposal, said the FBI, by taking the issue to congressional | |
| communications committees, is trying to make an end run around the judiciary | |
| committees. | |
| Last year, the Senate Judiciary Committee, responding to civil libertarians' | |
| protests, killed an FBI proposal to require that encrypted communications -- | |
| such as banks' secret data transmissions -- be made available in decoded form. | |
| Representative Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), who chairs the House subcommittee | |
| handling the latest FBI proposal, said the plan has troubling overtones of "Big | |
| Brother" about it. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| Let's Blow the Whistle on FBI Phone-Tap Plan March 12, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| Editorial taken from USA Today (Page 6A) | |
| OUR VIEW - Congress should disconnect this unneeded and dangerous eavesdropping | |
| scheme as soon as possible | |
| The FBI -- lambasted in the past for wiretapping and amassing files on | |
| thousands of "subversives" such as Martin Luther King -- seems determined to | |
| prove that consistency is a virtue. | |
| The Bureau wants phone companies to make costly changes that critics say could | |
| let agents eavesdrop on your phone calls without detection -- and boost your | |
| phone bill to pay for it. | |
| The FBI says that this new law is needed because it can't wiretap all calls | |
| transmitted with the new digital technology. It also wants the public barred | |
| when it explains all this to Congress. | |
| Wisely, lawmakers show signs of balking. They're already preparing for high- | |
| profile hearings on the proposal. | |
| Congress, though, should go much further. It should pin the FBI's wiretap plan | |
| to the wall and use it for target practice. Here are just a few of the spots | |
| at which to take aim: | |
| *Rights: The FBI says it is still would get court approval before | |
| tapping, but experts say if the agency gets its way, electronic | |
| eavesdropping would be far easier and perhaps untraceable. The | |
| FBI's plan, they say, could make a mockery of constitutional | |
| rights to privacy and against unreasonable searches. | |
| *Need: Some phone companies say they are already meeting FBI wiretap | |
| requirements and question whether the agency really needs a new | |
| law -- or just would find it convenient. The FBI says it can't | |
| tap some digital transmissions -- but it hasn't given any | |
| specifics. | |
| *Honesty: The FBI tried to evade congressional review by financing its | |
| plan with a charge to phone users. | |
| The bureau must have realized the reception this shady scheme could expect: It | |
| tried to slip it though Congress' side door, avoiding the committees that | |
| usually oversee FBI operations. | |
| Over the decades, wiretaps have proved invaluable in snaring lawbreakers. Used | |
| selectively and restrained by judicial oversight, they're a useful weapon, | |
| especially against organized crime. | |
| But if catching gangsters never should take precedence over the rights the | |
| Constitution guarantees the citizens who try to follow the law, not break it. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| Back to Smoke Signals? March 26, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| An editorial from The Washington Post | |
| The Justice Department spent years in court breaking up the nation's | |
| telecommunications monopoly in order to foster competition and technological | |
| advances. Now the same department has gone to Congress asking that | |
| improvements in telecommunications technology be halted, and in some cases even | |
| reversed, in the name of law enforcement. The problems facing the FBI are | |
| real, but the proposed solution is extreme and unacceptable on a number of | |
| grounds. | |
| Wiretaps are an important tool in fighting crime, especially the kind of | |
| large-scale, complicated crime -- such as drug conspiracies, terrorism and | |
| racketeering -- that is the responsibility of the FBI. When they are installed | |
| pursuant to court order, taps are perfectly legal and usually most productive. | |
| But advances in phone technology have been so rapid that the government can't | |
| keep up. Agents can no longer just put a tap on phone company equipment a few | |
| blocks from the target and expect to monitor calls. Communications occur now | |
| through regular and cellular phones via satellite and microwave, on fax | |
| machines and computers. Information is transmitted in the form of computer | |
| digits and pulses of light through strands of glass, and none of this is easily | |
| intercepted or understood. | |
| The Justice Department wants to deal with these complications by forbidding | |
| them. The department's proposal is to require the Federal Communications | |
| Commission to establish such standards for the industry "as may be necessary to | |
| maintain the ability of the government to lawfully intercept communications." | |
| Any technology now in use would have to be modified within 180 days, with the | |
| costs passed on to the rate payers. Any new technology must meet the | |
| suitable-for-wiretap standard, and violators could be punished by fines of | |
| $10,000 a day. As a final insult, commission proceedings concerning these | |
| regulations could be ordered closed by the attorney general. | |
| The civil liberties problems here are obvious, for the purposeful designing of | |
| telecommunications systems that can be intercepted will certainly lead to | |
| invasions of privacy by all sorts of individuals and organizations operating | |
| without court authorization. Further, it is an assault on progress, on | |
| scientific endeavor and on the competitive position of American industry. It's | |
| comparable to requiring Detroit to produce only automobiles that can be | |
| overtaken by faster police cars. And it smacks of repressive government. | |
| The proposal has been drafted as an amendment rather than a separate bill, and | |
| there is some concern that it will be slipped into a bill that has already | |
| passed one house and be sent quietly to conference. That would be | |
| unconscionable. We believe, as the industry suggests, that the kind of | |
| informal cooperation between law enforcement agencies and telecommunications | |
| companies that has always characterized efforts in the past, is preferable to | |
| this stifling legislation. But certainly no proposal should be considered by | |
| Congress without open and extensive hearings and considerable debate. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| The FBI's Latest Idea: Make Wiretapping Easier April 19, 1992 | |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| By Anthony Ramirez (New York Times)(Section 4, Page 2) | |
| Civil libertarians reacted quickly last month when the Federal Bureau of | |
| Investigation proposed new wiretapping legislation to cope with advanced | |
| telephone equipment now being installed nationwide. | |
| The FBI, which has drafted a set of guidelines, but has as yet no sponsor in | |
| Congress, said the latest digital equipment was so complicated it would hinder | |
| the agency's pursuit of mobsters, terrorists and other criminals. But civil | |
| liberties groups like the American Civil Liberties Union, joined by several | |
| major telephone companies like American Telephone and Telegraph Company, | |
| described the proposal as unclear, open to abuse and possibly retarding the | |
| pace of technological innovation. | |
| Civil libertarians fear a shift from a world where wiretaps are physically | |
| onerous to install, therefore forcing the FBI to think twice about their use, | |
| to a world where surveillance is so easy that a few pecks on an FBI key pad | |
| would result in a tap of anyone's telephone in the country. | |
| The inventive computer enthusiasts who call themselves hackers are also calling | |
| the legislation unnecessary. If teenagers can quickly cope with such equipment, | |
| they argue, so can the FBI. | |
| "The easier it is to use, the easier it is to abuse," said Eric Corley, editor | |
| of 2600 magazine, a quarterly publication "by and about computer hackers." | |
| According to the FBI, in 1990, the latest year for which data are available, | |
| there were 1,083 court-authorized wiretaps -- both new and continuing -- by | |
| Federal, state and local law-enforcement authorities. Robert Ellis Smith, | |
| publisher of Privacy Journal, said the relatively small number of wiretaps | |
| reflects the difficulty of obtaining judicial permission and installing the | |
| devices. Moreover, he said, many cases, including the John Gotti case, were | |
| solved with eavesdropping devices planted in rooms or on an informant. | |
| Besides, Mr. Smith said, complicated digital equipment shares similarities with | |
| obstacles free of technology. "Having a criminal conversation on a digital | |
| fiber-optic line," he said, "is no different from taking a walk in the park and | |
| having the same conversation." And no one, he added, would think of requiring | |
| parks to be more open to electronic surveillance. | |
| At issue are the latest wonders of the telecommunications age -- digital | |
| transmission and fiber-optic cables. In the standard analog transmission, | |
| changes in electrical voltage imitate the sound of a human voice. To listen | |
| in, the FBI and other agencies attach a device to a line from a telephone pole. | |
| A Computer Hiss or Nothing | |
| Today phone systems are being modernized with high-speed, high-capacity digital | |
| lines in which the human voice is converted into computer code. Moreover, a | |
| fiber-optic line in digital mode, which carries information as pulses of light, | |
| carries not only clear conversations but a myriad of them. Using a wiretap on | |
| a digital line, FBI agents would hear only a computer hiss on a copper cable, | |
| nothing at all on a fiber-optic line. | |
| There are at least 140 million telephone lines in the country, and more than | |
| half are served in some way by digital equipment, according to the United | |
| States Telephone Association, a trade group. However, less than 1 percent of | |
| the network is fiber optic. | |
| The legislation proposed by the FBI would, in effect, require the licensing of | |
| new telephone equipment by the Federal Government so the agency could wiretap | |
| it. Telephone companies would have to modify computers and software so that | |
| agents could decipher the digital bit stream. The cost of the modification | |
| would be passed on to rate payers. | |
| "Phone companies are worried about the sweep of this legislation," said Jerry | |
| Berman, director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, who solicited the | |
| support of the phone companies for a protest letter to Congress. By requiring | |
| the FCC to clear new technology, innovation could be slowed, he said. "We're | |
| not just talking about just local and long-distance calls," Mr. Berman said. | |
| "We're talking about CompuServe, Prodigy and other computer services, | |
| electronic mail, automatic teller machines and any change in them." | |
| Briefcase-Size Decoders | |
| One telecommunications equipment manufacturer said he was puzzled by the FBI | |
| proposal. "The FBI already has a lot of technology to wiretap digital lines," | |
| he said, on condition of anonymity. | |
| He said four companies, including such major firms as Mitel Corporation, a | |
| Canadian maker of telecommunications equipment, can design digital decoders to | |
| convert computer code back into voice. A portable system about the size of a | |
| large briefcase could track and decode 36 simultaneous conversations. A larger | |
| system, the size of a small refrigerator, could follow up to 1,000 | |
| conversations. All could be done without the phone company. | |
| James K. Kallstrom, the FBI's chief of technology, acknowledged that the agency | |
| was one of Mitel's largest customers, but said the equipment hackers and others | |
| describe would be "operationally unfeasible." | |
| The FBI was more worried about emerging technologies like personal | |
| communications networks and services like call forwarding. "Even if we used | |
| the equipment the hackers say we should use," Mr. Kallstrom said, "all a | |
| criminal would have to do is call-forward a call or use a cellular telephone or | |
| wireless data transfer to defeat me." | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |