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Author US ISPs slam into wiretap deadline
Nomen Nescio

2007-05-21, 1:13 am

US ISPs slam into wiretap deadline
Broadband and VoIP providers must set up a system that allows
wiretapping; those that don't comply may be referred for enforcement.

Stephen Lawson
PC World
Tuesday, May 15, 2007; 10:32 AM



U.S. broadband and VOIP providers on Monday hit a deadline to prove
they could accommodate law-enforcement wiretaps.

The Federal Communications Commission in 2005 required broadband
Internet service providers (ISPs) and VOIP (voice over Internet
Protocol) carriers that connect to the public telephone network to
comply with a wiretap access law. Under the Communications Assistance
for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), service providers have to prove
they're equipped for investigators to carry out the equivalent of a
traditional wiretap.

The broadband and VOIP providers had to send the FCC by March 12 a
plan to comply with CALEA, and by Monday they had to either set up a
system that allows monitoring or hire an outside company to make it
possible. Those that don't comply must make a good-faith effort to do
so and may be referred for enforcement.

Lawmakers have voiced concern, especially in the wake of the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks, about the potential for hidden communications
among criminals over the Internet. The drive for surveillance is not
limited to the U.S. and has raised concerns among privacy advocates,
including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is suing AT&T Inc.
over alleged participation in what EFF calls an illegal wiretapping
program by the U.S. government. EFF also sued the government over the
extension of CALEA, arguing it overstepped the law, but lost in
appeals court last year.

The rule has hit some smaller VOIP companies hard, according to IDC
VOIP analyst Will Stofega.

"The technical issues are for the most part solved, but getting people
to comply and making sure everyone's up and running is tough," Stofega
said. Vonage Holdings Corp., the most prominent independent VOIP
service provider, is testing its compliance system with the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, according to spokeswoman Brooke Schulz.

The cost of compliance has also posed challenges for the country's
thousands of mostly small wireless ISPs, according to Michael
Anderson, chairman of Part-15.org, a national WISP group. But all want
to comply and the government has been flexible, he said.

Having the government approve Internet infrastructure is bad news for
innovation, said Lee Tien, a senior staff attorney at EFF.

"If the Internet 15 years ago had been subject to CALEA, it probably
wouldn't have gotten off the ground," Tien said.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
dyn/content/article/2007/05/15/AR2007051500716.html

macarro

2007-05-22, 7:13 am

Nomen Nescio wrote:
> US ISPs slam into wiretap deadline
> Broadband and VoIP providers must set up a system that allows
> wiretapping; those that don't comply may be referred for enforcement.
>


Check out Zphone for VoIP encryption, from the Phil Zimmerman the PGP
creator, I think it is already out of beta.


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