nanog mailing list archives

RE: government eavesdropping


From: "Roeland M.J. Meyer" <rmeyer () mhsc com>
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 08:18:28 -0800


Duh. The various spook services and police agencies have ALWAYS had a
tendency to "listen in". The problem is, most folks don't care. However,
isn't this why you've killed telnetd, and most of inet.conf; forwarding all
ports through SSH and firewalling the rest? Every packet on the network
should be encrypted, even internal ones. This will devalue nonsense, like
CALEA, to the level it deserves. Wire-tap won't do 'em much good when there
is military-grade encryption on the line <grin>.

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-nanog () merit edu [mailto:owner-nanog () merit edu]On Behalf Of
Jeff Ogden
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2000 5:21 AM

So what is the real story here?  Is all, most, some of our
international Internet traffic being intercepted by various
governments?  Is it only international traffic that is at issue or is
domestic traffic within the US subject to routine eavesdropping
without a court order?

For years I've been telling people that while there was some risk
that traffic on the Internet could be intercepted, that the risk was
greatest at the ends of a connection and that as long as they were
working with a reputable ISP that there was almost no risk that
anyone was eavesdropping on the traffic from the more central
networks.  I've also been telling people that data "at rest" on disks
or stored in servers is much more at risk than data "in motion" as it
moves across the Internet. Have I been misleading people?

    -Jeff Ogden
     Merit

From http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20000223/wl/eu_espionage_1.html

Wednesday February 23 9:50 AM ET

Report Details Vast Spy Network

By CONSTANT BRAND Associated Press Writer

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - A U.S.-led communications
monitoring network is intercepting ``billions of messages per
hour'' including telephone calls, fax transmissions and private
e-mails, according to a European Parliament report made public
Wednesday.

``We are not talking about a trivial thing here ... we cannot stop
them, they will continue,'' said Ducan Campbell, author of the
special parliament-commissioned report on the Echelon
spy-network.

Campbell said that the intelligence network monitors and
intercepts sensitive European-wide commercial communications.
``The level of use is getting out of control,'' he told a packed
hearing of the Parliament's Committee for Justice and Home
Affairs.

He said Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand are also
involved in Echelon. Other nations including France and Germany
also participate in a lower level in the spy-network which dates
back 50 years to the beginning of the Cold War.

``The capacity of the filtering systems is enormous,'' Campbell
said. He added that most international internet communications
are being routed through the United States and through nine known
U.S. National Security Agency interception sites.

Intelligence facilities located in the five countries can intercept fax,
e-mail or telephone communications easily he said. Campbell
urged the European Union to take action to protect against
unwanted interception of communications, which he said were
violations of human rights.

Committee chairman Graham Watson said he wanted to be sure
the international surveillance system was not abusing its powers.

Campbell said Microsoft, IBM, and a certain ``large American
microchip maker'' were providing certain product features which
allow the interception of information flow.

Campbell said he did not know whether the U.S. corporations were
benefitting from the information gathering but said previous
commercial espionage resulted in the collapse of several European
contracts in the airline industry - both military and commercial.






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