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Tuesday July 15, 2008

Great FISA Comparison Flowchart

I’m sure anyone that bothers to read this blog already reads BoingBoing, but I thought this was important enough to post over here as well.

On the face of it, this new loophole might not seem to be such a big problem, barring the facts of a) retroactive telecom immunity and b) the implication that Bush will never be held accountable for numerous felonies. Unfortunately, it also really is, as far as I can tell, a back door to greatly expanded wiretapping powers. Beyond the obvious fact that it requires only certification and loose judicial review rather than a warrant, it does so in the following way:

1. It Eliminates the requirement that there be probable cause that a foreign target is a suspect of any kind - terrorist, criminal, ore “foreign agent.” They merely need be your French grandmother, as long as they are outside the United States and not a U.S. person, and if the government says wiretapping them is for the purpose of collecting “foreign intelligence information” (e.g., her Pommes Frites recipe)
2. It requires the cooperation of telecoms in these efforts
3. It eliminates of the need to specify a particular email address or phone number to be wiretapped
4. 1-3 together imply that certifications of wiretapping on individuals is not the issue. The point is to use telecom cooperation to target large collections of data on communications between U.S. Persons and foreigners. This implies data mining - where, for instance, because a foreign target has communications passing through a given domestic switch, any communications (domestic or international) passing through that switch are subject to collection, analysis, and storage. There are “minimization requirements” meant to ameliorate this, but it is unclear if they really help.
5. The compromise of domestic communications in (4) is exacerbated by the fact that targets need only be “reasonably believed” to be outside the U.S.
6. It includes only minimal court oversight - who it is that is subject to warrantless wiretapping will not be know to the FISA court; the government can wiretap before it court order is sought and continue to do so even if it is denied - during a lengthy appeal process.

Here’s the full blog entry from KetchupandCaviar.com

Politics, Technology — Tags: — Viking Brian @ 3:31 pm


2 Comments »

  1. it’s the data-mining again. i really do think that some of bush’s business-military-intelligence-industrial complex body have some serious sci-fi schemes in the works.

    Comment by nathan — Tuesday July 15, 2008 @ 5:12 pm

  2. i think it will be interesting to see what effect this has on business. we’ve now put ourselves comfortably at the top of the intelligence mountain legally (at least in american courts) able to capture and go through everyone’s emails who is not an american citizen. the advantages that will give us in international business dealings will be substantial… and the ingenuity in encryption technologies should explode. i know there’s folks already working on a version of ParanoidLinux http://paranoidlinux.org/ and here’s a nice thread from boingboing on how to protect your ass http://www.boingboing.net/2008/07/11/howto-protect-your-o.html

    i think this will certainly bring advantage to the forces who are attempting to fight real terrorism, strangling down communication channels electronically. unfortunately, this is also going to bring a seriously arhimaic fucking stand still to forces of change, culture and innovation in both the public and the private sector.

    i’m a strange mix of ambivalent and kind of sad about this. it seems inevitable and fairly destructive. i wish we could have done better.

    Comment by Viking Brian — Tuesday July 15, 2008 @ 7:37 pm

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