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Advanced Surveillance System Introduced for the FBI's Carnivore Project

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A graduate student at Dartmouth College wants to tame the FBI's Carnivore surveillance system. Alex Iliev has proposed a way to force anyone who wants to monitor e-mail or Web browsing to follow the rules -- and not snoop on private . . . A graduate student at Dartmouth College wants to tame the FBI's Carnivore surveillance system. Alex Iliev has proposed a way to force anyone who wants to monitor e-mail or Web browsing to follow the rules -- and not snoop on private data that should be off-limits.

Iliev's system relies on technology, not Congress or federal judges, to keep Carnivore on a very short leash. Much of the public outcry over Carnivore and similar eavesdropping methods arises because they take a vacuum-cleaner approach, sucking in all the data flowing through a network and then storing only the desired information. But if the snooperware is buggy or if police agencies go beyond what a court order allows, the system will snare far more traffic than it is authorized to retain.

The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. 

 

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