From: azur@netcom.com (Steve Schear)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 5a4e20b5896bab082b5b822468d5296bfec9ff1c7f9518b91ec44aa7a5361b33
Message ID: <v02140b01af0bcea6142d@[10.0.2.15]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1997-01-22 14:02:43 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 22 Jan 1997 06:02:43 -0800 (PST)
From: azur@netcom.com (Steve Schear)
Date: Wed, 22 Jan 1997 06:02:43 -0800 (PST)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: FBI Gets 500 Mil to Tap Your Communications
Message-ID: <v02140b01af0bcea6142d@[10.0.2.15]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
>||| FBI moderates its communications-surveillance request |||
>
>TBTF for 5/4/95 [6]
>
>In 1995 the FBI asked for and was granted $500 million to augment the
>government's ability to tap communications (of this total $100M has
>been released to the FBI so far). Privacy advocates expressed outrage
>at the FBI's stated capacity goal: to be able to listen in on 1% of
>installed telephone lines at any time. This translates to about 1.6
>million taps simultaneous of all kinds: pen registers, trap-and-trace,
>and wiretaps. The FBI withdrew its initial proposal under fire and on
>1/14 submitted a revised proposal -- press release at [7], analysis
>at [8]. Unlike the earlier draft, this essay lays out its assumptions
>and straightforwardly projects needed capacity growth. The result is
>a capacity figure of fewer than 60,000 intercepts, less that 4% of
>the original request. This level of capability would allow the FBI
>simultaneously to monitor more than 500 phone lines in an area with
>the population of Manhatta still an enormous increase on historical
>numbers of intercepts.
>
>[6] <http://www.tbtf.com/archive/05-04-95.html>
>[7] <http://www.fbi.gov/pressrel/tele/telephon.htm>
>[8] <http://www.cdt.org/publications/pp_3.01.html>
>
At least as important was their request to legally tap any telephone line
for 48 hours w/o a warrant. What ever happended to that?
-- Steve
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1997-01-22 (Wed, 22 Jan 1997 06:02:43 -0800 (PST)) - Re: FBI Gets 500 Mil to Tap Your Communications - azur@netcom.com (Steve Schear)