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Date: 1999-08-20

Update: Neue Abhoerplaene in den USA


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Naturgemäß dient der geplante Cyberspace Electronic Security Act,
der bestimmte US-Behörden gesetzlich ermächtigen soll, unbemerkt
in private Rechner einzudringen, der Wahrung öffentlicher
"Sicherheit."
"Dieses Gesetzvorhaben trifft die Bill of Rights mitten ins Herz" sagt
EPIC.

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August 20, 1999 The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)
today warned that a new Clinton Administration proposal could result
in an unprecedented intrusion into the sanctity of private homes and
businesses. The White House plan would enable federal and local
law enforcement agents to secretly break into private premises and
alter computer equipment to collect e-mail messages and other
electronic information.

As the Washington Post reported today, the administration is
circulating draft legislation known as the "Cyberspace Electronic
Security Act," the latest White House effort to address the growing
use of encryption technology. As described in an August 4 analysis
of the legislation obtained by EPIC, the proposal would amend
current law to authorize "the alteration of hardware or software that
allows plaintext to be obtained even if attempts were made to protect
it through encryption." Courts would, for the first time, be able to
approve covert police entries into homes and offices for the purposes
of making such alterations.

"This strikes at the heart of the Bill of Rights," said David L. Sobel,
EPIC's General Counsel. "It would be truly ironic if the use of
encryption -- which is designed to protect privacy -- gave the police a
green light to secretly break into homes." Surreptitious physical
entries are extremely rare under existing surveillance laws. Such
entries are only made in order to install hidden microphones, an
investigative technique approved only 50 times by federal and state
judges last year. According to Sobel, "extending this extraordinary
power to cases involving computer files would make police break-ins
far more common than they are today."

The latest administration proposal on computer surveillance comes
on the heels of the "FIDNET" initiative, a planned government
program that would monitor activity within both federal and private
sector computer networks. When the details of that proposal
became widely known earlier this month, it met with strong criticism
from privacy groups (including EPIC) and members of Congress.

EPIC is a public interest research center in Washington, D.C. It was
established in 1994 to focus public attention on emerging civil
liberties issues and to protect privacy, the First Amendment, and
constitutional values. EPIC is a project of the Fund for Constitutional
Government. EPIC works in association with Privacy International, an
international human rights group based in London, UK and is also a
member of the Global Internet Liberty Campaign, the Internet Free
Expression Alliance and the Internet Privacy Coalition.

Source
http://www.epic.org

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edited by Harkank
published on: 1999-08-20
comments to office@quintessenz.at
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