posted on Feb, 6 2010 @ 03:56 PM
This got me:
"Federal regulations in place since at least 1986 require phone companies that offer toll service to "retain for a period of 18 months" records
including "the name, address, and telephone number of the caller, telephone number called, date, time and length of the call."
This guy has no idea where to start questioning, he's working off 100% hearsay.
While what he stated in that is partially true, the fact he couldn't cite the law it was piggy backed on, the real scope of it, or even the 3 letters
the system goes by (or went by rather) suggests enough, or even the real reasoning behind the system...well...lame.
As someone who was actively engaged in the phracking scene of the time, oh, it's burned into my memory fierce.
I think, too, more important is that he completely missed the CDA- the Communications Decency Act. Louis Freeh was besides himself in joy when that
passed.
Now, if you can actively remember the CDA, and can cite the immediate effects of it, then you'll know where I come from. Most of you can't. It's
not a slam on you, but rather that many of you, like the guy writing the article, simple have zero idea about the history of such legislation, yet act
as if you do, and as if every thing that gets passed into law means we're all doomed.
A brief refresher: Remember Gays in the Military during Clinton's time in office? ya. That was the smoke screen. Everyone was "GAYS IN THE
MILITARY!! ONOES!" Meanwhile at a 'midnight' session of the house the CDA was passed into effect (literally), but more importantly a list of
requirements for electronic devices were tacked onto the CDA for the FBI.
Louis Freeh, as it later came out in the Time magazine article, and 2600 (take that source as you will), was pressing, personally, for the inclusion
of a law which forced manufacturers to build electronic items (TV's, computers, radios, phones, etc) with a lock-and-key system. Basically the FBI
would have all the 'keys', and be able to unlock the desired item and collect data, legally, whenever they wanted.
It all passed. Glorious.
Fortunately Time and 2600 broke the stories, then other news agencies woke up. The CDA is so swiss cheesed as to be null/void at this point.
What it is immediately: We were reminded every time we logged onto the net via browser or telenet or BBS (even if you were off the net, but on a BBS
you had to obey the CDA) that we could be fined $100,000, and face jail time, and the owners of the service/ISPs could be fined the same amount if we
even said "#" "#" or anything deemed offensive.
Ayup. How many of you remember actively being censored for nearly a year and a half? I do.
See, the internet wasn't really opened up till 96 when AT&T got the hair brained idea to offer it to the masses. And thus you people came along.
The point is this: These laws aren't new. The government wanting to do this isn't new. You should always presume the government is watching- always.
Don't like it? Don't log on. I've lived this way since I was a child with a 16bps modem- it was made very clear to me the what, the why, the how.
How you fight these desires from the government? By not writing sensational tripe as is usually done here on ATS, but rather reporting facts to the
masses outside of ATS.
Enjoy