R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T

Free email newsletters




ADVERTISEMENT

NSA can tap a third of world's telecoms

Uncle Sam is a great listener

Andrew Charlesworth, vnunet.com 10 Aug 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

The US National Security Agency (NSA) now has the legal right to monitor over a third of the world's telecoms traffic.

Under new provisions of the Protect America Act 2007 recently signed into legislation, as an amendment to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) of 1978, the NSA can monitor all traffic originating, passing through or terminating in the US without requiring a court order.

According to telecoms analysts, in excess of 35 per cent of the world's voice and non-voice telecoms traffic is routed through US hubs.

The bill was hotly debated in the US House of Representatives with right-leaning congressional proponents saying the amendment is necessary in the ongoing war on terrorism, and left-leaning representatives arguing that it would undermine civil liberties.

"In the 30 years since Congress enacted the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, telecommunications technology has dramatically changed," said congressman Lamar Smith, representing the 21st district of Texas.

"As a result, the intelligence community is hampered in gathering essential information about terrorists needed to prevent attacks against America. Congress must modernise FISA to address this problem."

"This bill goes far beyond what is necessary and … would grant the Attorney General the ability to wiretap anybody, anyplace, anytime, without court review, without any checks and balances," argued congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, representing the 16th district of California.

"I think that this unwarranted, unprecedented measure would simply eviscerate the fourth amendment that protects the privacy not of terrorists, but of Americans."

"Some people have some confusion, I think, over civil rights versus rights in a time of war …[and] we are in a war," said Congressman Louie Gohmert, representing the 1st district of Texas.

"This is not a bill that will allow surveilling American citizens on American soils. But the message is this: If you declare war on this country and you are a foreigner, we may just listen in on your conversations."

The bill was passed by 44 votes with 23 abstentions.

See also:

Child Safe Viewing Act could put the internet under FFC control, fear constitutional campaigners  03 Aug 2007
Is nowhere safe?  02 Aug 2007
Public hearing today will discuss security flaws  31 Jul 2007
Department of Homeland Security wants a file on everyone  24 Jul 2007
Computer crime authorities need to tread very carefully  19 Jul 2007

All Privacy & Data

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
EXCEPTIONAL .NET (ASP / VB / C#) DEVELOPER – SURREY HEDGE FUND My client is a CASH RICH leading Microsoft Technology focused Hedge Fund currently experiencing unrivalled success – they need to bring on fresh ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
Position: Software Developer – Modelling / Simulations Salary: £27-37,000 Location: Luton, Bedford, Milton Keynes Apply to: a.ross@jamrecruitment.co.uk This is an excellent chance to join one of the UK’s leading Defence businesses operating at the forefront ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
Position: Software Engineer – C/C++/GUI/UML Salary: £30-40,000 Location: Leicester Apply to: a.ross@jamjobs.co.uk This is a fabulous opportunity to join a globally recognised organisation working as part of a team taking innovative and cutting edge solutions ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
Position: Embedded Software / Systems Engineer Salary: £25-40,000 Location: Barrow, Cumbria, Carlisle, Lake District Apply to: a.ross@jamrecruitment.co.uk (inc salary expectations, availability and notice period) This is an exciting opportunity to join one of the UKs ... more >
More job opportunities