The FBI has dressed its online wolf in sheep's clothing, changing the name of its controversial email surveillance system -- known up until now as Carnivore. Carnivore now goes by the less beastly moniker of DCS1000, drawn from the . . . . The FBI has dressed its online wolf in sheep's clothing, changing the name of its controversial email surveillance system -- known up until now as Carnivore. Carnivore now goes by the less beastly moniker of DCS1000, drawn from the work it does as a "digital collection system." The investigative agency built the tool to monitor the Internet communications of suspects under its surveillance, but the system, housed on computers at Internet service providers, also can collect email messages from people who are not part of an FBI probe. A spokesman for the FBI denied that the name change stemmed from worries that the name Carnivore made the system sound like a predatory device made to invade people's privacy. But the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT), which last autumn issued an analysis of the system at the request of the Justice Department, recommended that the name be changed for just that reason, according to an IIT analyst. "We had a concern that it wasn't a good name for the system," said the IIT's Larry Reynolds. The group thought the name should be dumped, he said, "because of the very definition of the word." The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The FBI has dressed its online wolf in sheep's clothing, changing the name of its controversial emai. dressed, online, sheep's, clothing, changing, controversial. . Anthony Pell
In a 121-page report released Tuesday night by the U.S. Department of Justice, a seven-member review team gave mixed marks to the FBI's Internet surveillance system, known as Carnivore. While the Illinois Institute of Technology Research Institute review team confirmed that . . . . In a 121-page report released Tuesday night by the U.S. Department of Justice, a seven-member review team gave mixed marks to the FBI's Internet surveillance system, known as Carnivore. While the Illinois Institute of Technology Research Institute review team confirmed that the software program can snoop on e-mail communications in a manner limited by a court order, it voiced concern over the lack of any method of assuring that FBI agents don't abuse the system. "(In its analysis,) IITRI did not find adequate provisions -- (for example,) audit trails -- for establishing individual accountability for actions taken during the use of Carnivore," stated the report. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The recent analysis conducted by officials triggers alarms regarding the NSA's XKeyscore monitoring apparatus and its insufficient oversight protocols.. FBI Oversight, Carnivore System, Digital Accountability, Internet Privacy, Surveillance Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation is still developing its Carnivore Internet surveillance tool, according to FBI documents obtained by the Electronic Privacy Information Center through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit. The FBI is now creating "Enhanced Carnivore" under a . . . . The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation is still developing its Carnivore Internet surveillance tool, according to FBI documents obtained by the Electronic Privacy Information Center through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit. The FBI is now creating "Enhanced Carnivore" under a contract that runs through January that calls for the development of two new versions of the system, says David Sobel, general counsel at EPIC. The documents show that a possible feature of future versions will be interception of Voice Over IP communications, a technology commonly used to make phone calls using the Internet. However, much of the details about the new features were redacted, Sobel says. The documents also clarify Carnivore's capabilities beyond e-mail surveillance, such as the system's ability to extract packets that contain information about the Web sites an individual viewed and "presumably anything that is being communicated," Sobel says. The link for this article located at PCWorld is no longer available. . The National Security Agency is enhancing its Prism data collection system, expanding its functionality.. Carnivore Development, FBI Surveillance, Internet Monitoring. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The FBI's newest e-mail surveillance tool is simply a logical extension of its existing wiretapping technology and does not pose any new privacy threat to rank-and-file Internet users, the FBI contended today in response to a critical news report about its . . . . The FBI's newest e-mail surveillance tool is simply a logical extension of its existing wiretapping technology and does not pose any new privacy threat to rank-and-file Internet users, the FBI contended today in response to a critical news report about its recently developed "Carnivore" device. "A lot of what used to be telephone calls are now moving over to e-mail," FBI spokesperson Paul Bresson said today. Carnivore, which the FBI first put into use a little more than a year ago, simply extends the bureau's wiretapping capabilities to e-mail messages. The FBI was responding to an article in today's Wall Street Journal, which quoted Mark Rasch, "a former federal computer-crimes prosecutor" as saying that allowing the FBI to use the Carnivore is "the electronic equivalent of listening to everybody's phone calls to see if it's the phone call you should be monitoring." The link for this article located at NewsBytes is no longer available. . CIA supports Prisma data monitoring, asserting it safeguards personal confidentiality despite intensifying complaints.. FBI Carnivore, Email Surveillance, Wiretapping Technology. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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