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New Hacker Law will allow police to look into your hard drive without court order
New Hacker Law will allow police to look into your hard drive without court order
By Steven Musil Staff Writer, CNET News.com November 15, 2002, 10:29 AM PT Hackings, viruses and unwanted intrusions into your PC are illegal, right? Well, yes--and no. A last-minute addition to a proposal for a Department of Homeland Security would punish malicious hackers with life in prison. The U.S. House of Representatives approved the bill, which would reshape large portions of the federal bureaucracy into a new department. Inserted into the Homeland Security bill, the 16-page Cyber Security Enhancement Act (CSEA) expands the ability of police to conduct Internet or telephone eavesdropping without first obtaining a court order, and offers Internet providers more latitude to disclose information to police. Citing privacy concerns, civil liberties groups objected to portions of CSEA. "There are a lot of different things to be concerned about, but preserving Fourth Amendment and wiretap standards continues to be a critical test of Congress' commitment of civil liberties," said Marc Rotenberg, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. Speaking of the Fourth Amendment, a federal judge has ruled that law enforcement officials went too far when they tried to use evidence gathered by a known hacker to convict someone of possessing child pornography. The decision is believed to be the first to say that hacking into an Internet-connected home PC without a warrant violates the amendment, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. The decision came out of a case in which a hacker uploaded a file to a child porn newsgroup that made it possible to track who downloaded files from the service. The uploaded file contained the SubSeven virus, which the hacker used to remotely search people's computers for porn. On the other side of the spectrum is an electronic greeting card that has all the hallmarks of a mass-mailing computer virus. The FriendGreetings e-mail misleads a victim into downloading an application--ostensibly to view a Web card--and then sends itself to every e-mail address in the victim's Outlook contacts file. A few systems administrators already blame the mass-mailing e-card for swamping their network. Yet it will be hard to prosecute the company that created the card: The viral card is protected by a license agreement that tricks unsuspecting users into clicking "Yes" and consenting to have the program send itself to all their e-mail contacts. Without the license agreement, the program would be considered a virus, but with the code wrapped in what could be a prosecution-proof vest. http://msnbc-cnet.com.com/2100-1083-...&subj=cnetnews |
George Orwell was right! Next thing you know, the animals will be taking over the farms!
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:eek:
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is anyone still doubting the New World Order?
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I am shopping for my new kingdom right now.
There's no place like.... Yep... gonna move to someplace ... get a satellite feed... get drunk and go swimming with the sharks. ::-| |
Most of the general public probably welcomes this kind of legislation with open arms, hoping it will be another tool that can be used to offer them the protection they are willing to pay any price to obtain.
They will support just about anything if the right spin is placed on it. |
Personally the very name "homeland security" gives me the frigging heebie jeebies. Sounds a little too much like "fatherland" to me. Maybe Dubya will grow himself a little mustache now. And this lousy little law they stuck in there is really scary. With one court order they can tap any and ALL forms of communication that you are using. Apparently they can even tap into someone else's communications if you might be using that. And start recording keystrokes on their computer too. I'm sure it won't be long before they decide that a computer is a communications device so that they can legally break into your house and take the harddrive out to see who you have been communicating with. And of course any non-communications related evidence they gather at the same time is just gravy. Sometimes I'm awfully glad that I live on the north of that border.
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