Loss of Privacy

Keeping you informed on recent losses to privacy and civil rights worldwide.

Browsing Posts published in February, 2009

The EFF has updated their legal guide for bloggers.  The guide pertains only to those living in the USA.

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Now that there are over a million names, and still counting, on the No-Fly List, the government has issued a whitelist for those that are on the list that shouldn’t be.  Instead of just taking their names off the list, they get to be placed onto yet another list saying they aren’t really terrorists.

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Two and a half years ago, Mayor Daly said that he wanted a CCTV camera on every street corner by 2016.  It appears that he might just get his wish.  Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, he still believes that this will cut crime and, now, give Chicago a shot at hosting the olympics.

Many of these cameras were installed in high crime areas in Chicago.  They are still high crime areas.  Little has changed.  No matter where in the world they are installed, CCTV cameras still don’t prevent crime.

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Two new bills in the House and Senate have been proposed that would force Wi-Fi hotspots, including personal users, to log data and keep it for up to two years.

There are several interesting notes consumers should be aware of.  The bill is sponsored by Lamar Smith, who claims that this bill will protect children.  He is also well known for taking money from RIAA and MPAA affiliates, who, in turn, want to eliminate open wifi and P2P.

If one looks at the law, it’s not even clear what is to be kept in the logs.

SEC. 5. RETENTION OF RECORDS BY ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION SERVICE PROVIDERS.

Section 2703 of title 18, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:

`(h) Retention of Certain Records and Information- A provider of an electronic communication service or remote computing service shall retain for a period of at least two years all records or other information pertaining to the identity of a user of a temporarily assigned network address the service assigns to that user.’.

Is this just forcing you to keep DHCP logs?  Or is it the information stored in RAM?  If it’s DHCP, then there isn’t any user information in the logs, only IP or MAC addresses.

This is unenforceable and major grandstanding by those who wish to appear they are doing something for the children, concerned about their constituents, and want to be reelected.  DHCP, proxies, MAC spoofing, and dynamic IPs are just a few ways to get around this bill if it should ever become a law.

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It’s getting more and more difficult to keep up with this ridiculous law in the UK.  If you take a photo of the police in the United Kingdom, you are now subject to arrest.

Read about it at

The Guardian
BBC News
Boing Boing

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