DOJ proposes US data-rentention law.
Trei, Peter
ptrei at rsasecurity.com
Mon Jun 24 09:56:54 EDT 2002
I tried sending this last week, but it did not seem to go through:
Two points:
1. According to Poulson, the DOJ proposal never
discussed just what would be logged. Poulson
compared it to the European Big Brother legislation,
which required storage to Web browsing
histories and email header data (NOT email body text
or IP traffic).
2. After I posted the same info to /.
http://slashdot.org/articles/02/06/19/1724216.shtml?tid=103
(I'm the 'Anonymous Coward' in this case), Kevin updated
his article. The new version may be found at:
http://online.securityfocus.com/news/489
The relevant portions read:
- start quote -
U.S. Denies Data Retention Plans
The Justice Department disputes claims that Internet service
providers could be forced to spy on their customers as part
of the U.S. strategy for securing cyberspace.
By Kevin Poulsen, Jun 19 2002 12:24PM
[...]
But a Justice Department source said Wednesday that data
retention is mentioned in the strategy only as an industry
concern -- ISPs and telecom companies oppose the costly idea --
and does not reflect any plan by the department or the White
House to push for a U.S. law.
[...]
- end quote -
Peter Trei
---------------------------------------------------------------------
The Cryptography Mailing List
Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to majordomo at wasabisystems.com
More information about the cryptography
mailing list