Neuter Carnivore

dZ

New member
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URGENT ACTION ITEM! Congress agrees to hold hearing on Monday
in response to public outrage over FBI's e-mail spy scheme
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You are receiving this alert because you participated in
DefendYourPrivacy.com’s successful 1999 campaign against the
FDIC’s proposed Know Your Customer bank spying regulation. If
you do not want to receive further updates, please use the
unsubscribe directions at the end of this message.
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* Immediate action required: Help us Kill the Carnivore!

On July 14 we issued a press release about an FBI cybersnooping
device code-named Carnivore, which can scan millions of e-mails
per second. Because Carnivore has unlimited power to spy on
almost everyone with an e-mail account, it may be the biggest
threat to your digital privacy ever.

Almost immediately after the existence of this project was
disclosed in a July 11 Wall Street Journal article, public
outrage began to mount -- and now Congress has been pressured
into holding hearings on Carnivore.

To capitalize on Monday's hearing before a House Judiciary
Committee panel, we’ve launched a campaign to "Kill the
Carnivore"!

Politicians on Capitol Hill may be planning to mollify the
public by starting an "investigation" into the system, but
that's not enough: We want to stop the Carnivore in its tracks
and kill it -- before it devours your privacy.

Please read this e-mail and *IMMEDIATELY* take the action
below. Then forward this e-mail to friends, and ask them to do
the same.

BACKGROUND: Carnivore is a hardware-software device that the
FBI secretly developed at its lab in Quantico, Va. Dubbed
Carnivore because of its ability to find "the meat" among
millions of e-mails, Carnivore scans every incoming and
outgoing e-mail message on a network looking for telltale words
or names, and saves those messages for later retrieval by law
enforcement. Carnivore can also track instant messages, visits
to websites, and Internet relay chat sessions.

The FBI admits that Carnivore will scan millions of e-mail
messages from innocent people to find a tiny number of messages
from people suspected of crimes. That's no different than if
the FBI opened everyone's mail hoping to find a letter from a
criminal, or listened in on everyone's phone calls just in case
a crime was being discussed.

Though Carnivore's existence was just publicly revealed, the
FBI has already installed the device at dozens of Internet
Service Providers (ISPs) around the country, and claims it has
used it "fewer than 50 times" so far. In many cases, the FBI
keeps the device in a locked cage on the ISP's premises, with
agents making daily visits to retrieve the captured data.

Many ISPs have refused to allow the FBI to install Carnivore,
citing concerns that the privacy of all their customers could
be violated. But earlier this year, a federal judge ruled
against one such ISP, leaving it no choice but to allow the FBI
access to its system.

Predictably, the FBI promises to limit surveillance to messages
from suspected hackers, terrorists, or drug dealers. But
considering that this is the same agency that quietly inserted
"roving telephone tap" authority into federal law and illegally
turned over confidential personnel files to the Clinton White
House, you shouldn't be expected to trust it with your
confidential e-mails.

But Carnivore is more than a threat to your ordinary e-mail
correspondence -- it also gives government bureaucrats the
ability to spy on your online banking transactions, because it
has the ability to monitor all digital communications. The
bottom line is that your privacy won't be protected as long as
Carnivore is on the loose.

At this point, no legislation to eliminate Carnivore has been
proposed. However, with your help we can change that. Keep in
mind that we kicked off our campaign to kill the FDIC's "Know
Your Customer" bank spy scheme last year before any legislation
existed. But once we informed the public about this threat to
their financial privacy, they swung into action and demanded an
immediate end to the program. Americans flooded Capitol Hill
with over 300,000 angry e-mails and phone calls, and within
weeks, Know Your Customer was withdrawn.

We believe that once Americans learn about Carnivore's
outrageous assault on their electronic privacy, they will
demand legislation to abolish it as well.

That's why we're asking you to join the "Kill the Carnivore"
campaign!


WHAT TO DO:

Call the Congressional switchboard, toll free, at
1-888-449-3511. If that number is busy try 202-225-3121 or
202-224-3121. Then ask to speak to the office of your
Congressional representative. The switchboard is open 24 hours,
and most House offices have voice mail, so please make the call
as soon as you get this message.


WHAT TO SAY:

(1) Identify yourself and let them know you are a voter in
their district. Leave your name, address, complete with ZIP
code, and phone number. Please be brief, especially if you are
leaving a message.

(2) Let them know that you're calling in response to Monday's
hearing on the FBI's Carnivore e-mail spy scheme. (The hearing
is being held by the House Judiciary Committee's subcommittee
on the Constitution.) Tell them that Carnivore poses an
immediate threat to your e-mail privacy and that you want it
abolished. Specifically, ask your representative to personally
sponsor or co-sponsor legislation to abolish the FBI's
Carnivore program now! Insist that you do *not* want an
investigation, or Congressional hearings, or a "blue ribbon"
commission -- you want to Kill the Carnivore now!

(3) Ask them to write you a letter spelling out their position
on Carnivore, and detailing what they intend to do.

One more thing: Please forward this e-mail to friends, and ask
them to call their representative, too. Thank you for your help!
 
Sounds like another typical chain letter.

IF YOU DON'T FORWARD THIS TO 8,000 PEOPLE IN THE NEXT 30 SECONDS YOU WILL HAVE BAD LUCK AND YOUR FIRST CHILD WILL HAVE GREEN, SCALEY SKIN!
 
DZ or others-
Can we get some corroborating info regarding the authenticity of this message. While I'm willing to believe it, I'd hate to have 800 or 1,000 of us wind up with egg on our faces.
Rich
 
Its true....its been splattered in all the papers and national news shows the past week.

BTW...its not a "chain letter"...its from a political action group....just like the stuff we get from NRA, GOA and JPFO...they are known as "action alerts". Its not like impending legislation when we have time to do something about it....its already been implemented, without Congressional and voter approval.

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"Quis custodiet ipsos custodes" RKBA!
 
I would suggest that it is a fluke that this was even brought to light, if it is indeed true, and that the technology will be used regardless of legality.
 
SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE CONSTITUTION

Committee on the Judiciary

U.S. House of Representatives

Oversight Hearing on "Fourth Amendment Issues Raised by the FBI’s ‘Carnivore’ Program"

Monday, July 24, 2000

1:00 p.m.; 2141 Rayburn House Office Building

TENTATIVE WITNESS LIST

Dr. Donald M. Kerr, Director, Lab Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation

Larry R. Parkinson, General Counsel, Federal Bureau of Investigation

Kevin V. DiGregory, Deputy Associate Attorney General, Department of Justice

David Green, Deputy Chief, Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section, Department of Justice

Barry Steinhardt, Associate Director, American Civil Liberties Union

Alan Davidson, Staff Counsel, The Center for Democracy and Technology

Robert Corn-Revere, Attorney, Hogan & Hartson

Matt Blaze, Research Scientist, AT&T Labs

Stewart Baker, Attorney, Steptoe & Johnson

Peter William Sachs, ICONN, L.L.C.

Tom Perrine, Principal Investigator, Pacific Institute for Computer Security
http://www.house.gov/judiciary/con07241.htm
 
FBI Makes Case For Net Wiretaps

By John Schwartz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday , July 25, 2000 ; E01

Federal law enforcement officials defended "Carnivore"--the FBI's controversial Internet wiretap system--through more than two acrimonious hours of
grilling by Democratic and Republican lawmakers yesterday, painting a chilling picture of an Internet that would become a safe haven for crooks and
terrorists without proper surveillance.

"Criminals use computers to send child pornography to each other using anonymous, encrypted communications," FBI Assistant Director Donald M. Kerr
told the House Judiciary subcommittee on the Constitution. "Hackers break into financial service companies' systems and steal customers' home addresses
and credit-card numbers, criminals use the Internet's inexpensive and easy communications to commit large-scale fraud on victims all over the world, and
terrorist bombers plan their strikes using the Internet."

Many of the lawmakers seemed just as concerned with the actions of the law enforcement officials. "The potential for abuse here is tremendous," said Rep.
Spencer Bachus (R-Ala.). "What you're saying is 'Trust us.' "

Carnivore is a modified version of a common network-maintenance program known as a "packet sniffer." Carnivore offers great specificity--the ability to
quickly collect just the "to" and "from" information in e-mail messages, for example, and not online banking transactions. That gives law enforcement the
equivalent of the telephone world's "pen register" and "trap and trace" data--the origin and destination of all calls related to the subject.

Civil liberties groups and Internet service providers say the system raises troubling questions about what constitutes a reasonable search and seizure of
electronic data. In sniffing out potential criminal conduct, they note, the new technology also could scan private information about legal activities, taking in
vast amounts of information from innocent people as well as the suspect.

The critics also note that past experience has shown that law enforcement has overstepped its wiretap authority numerous times in the past.

Barry Steinhardt, associate director of the American Civil Liberties Union, said in his testimony: "Carnivore is roughly equivalent to a wiretap capable of
accessing the contents of the conversations of all the phone company's customers, with the 'assurance' that the FBI will record only conversations of the
specified target."

Officials of Internet service providers who oppose the technology say they are wary of putting equipment designed by others on their networks. They want
the FBI to publish information on the software used so that ISPs can be sure that it does what the agency says.

The law enforcement officials pledged to present the system to a neutral third party for review but said they cannot release so much information about the
system that it will become a target for evasion and hacking.

They insisted the Carnivore system actually provides greater privacy than previous methods of gathering electronic information because it can fine-tune what
the machine hands over to investigators.

The FBI's Kerr also argued that agents won't "risk their integrity, their jobs and their futures" by abusing the law.

The toughest questioning came from Reps. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) and Robert L. Barr Jr. (R-Ga.), two congressmen rarely on the same side of an issue.
Nadler peppered the officials with a series of questions that underscored the point that Carnivore, under the laws that govern pen-register surveillance, could
be used without the difficult showing of "probable cause" required in a telephone wiretap.

Barr cited the investigation of missing White House e-mail and scornfully said the Clinton administration asserts that "we don't even know how to keep
track of our own e-mail" while "now we see a very sophisticated system for keeping track of other people's e-mails!"

After the hearing, House Majority Leader Richard K. Armey issued a statement saying members of both parties showed "strong concerns that the
administration is infringing on Americans' basic constitutional protection against unwarranted search and seizure.

"Until these concerns are addressed," he concluded, "Carnivore should be shut down."

© 2000 The Washington Post Company
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A38301-2000Jul24.html
 
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