January 12, 2004

Feds seek wiretap access via VoIP

MSN Tech & Gadgets:

The FBI and the Justice Department have renewed their efforts to wiretap voice conversations carried across the Internet.

The agencies have asked the Federal Communications Commission to order companies offering voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) service to rewire their networks to guarantee police the ability to eavesdrop on subscribers' conversations.

Without such mandatory rules, the two agencies predicted in a letter to the FCC last month that "criminals, terrorists, and spies (could) use VoIP services to avoid lawfully authorized surveillance." The letter also was signed by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

This is not the first time the Bush administration has expressed concern about terrorists and other lawbreakers using VoIP to evade wiretaps. As previously reported by CNET News.com, a proposal presented quietly to the FCC in July sought guaranteed surveillance access to broadband providers. But the latest submission, which follows a recent FCC forum on Internet telephony, is more detailed than before and specifically targets VoIP providers as a regulatory focus.

Posted by Bob King at January 12, 2004 3:04 PM | TrackBack
Related Categories: Area - Social - Privacy | Area - Tech - VOIP | Industry - Telecommunications | Quadrant - Political | Quadrant - Social | Quadrant - Technological | Theme - 'Response to Terrorism'


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