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Protection from prying NSA eyes
Mark Rasch, 2006-05-15

From the U.S. Fourth Amendment, the Stored Communications Act and U.S. wiretap laws to the Pen-register statute, Mark Rasch looks at legal protections available to the telecommunication companies and individual Americans in the wake of the NSA's massive spying program.

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Protection from prying NSA eyes 2006-05-15
Bob Radvanovsky
Protection from prying NSA eyes 2006-05-15
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Bell South Responds 2006-05-16
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No Hope! 2006-05-16
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Re: No Hope! 2006-05-19
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Re: Re: No Hope! 2006-05-25
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Protection from prying NSA eyes 2006-05-16
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Protection from prying NSA eyes 2006-05-17
Matthew Murphy (2 replies)
If I don't want the NSA reading my data (e-mail contents, etc.), I have an easy solution: encrypt it.

The problem with metadata is that I can't encrypt the touch tones on my phone or the headers on an e-mail. The reason for that, of course, is that every party along the route of my communication(s) has to have access to that routing information. That makes encryption worthless against the NSA because those people along my route of communication are the people I'm trying to protect myself against.

Given the sensitive-but-necessarily-exposed nature of those pieces of information, the swiss cheese legal protections for them are of significant concern to me.

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/403/33616#33616
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