Carnivore Can Catch It All

Published: 19 November 2000 y., Sunday
The FBI's controversial e-mail surveillance tool, known as Carnivore, can retrieve all communications that go through an Internet service — far more than FBI officials have said it does — a recent test of its potential sweep found, according to bureau documents. An FBI official involved with the test stressed Friday that although Carnivore has the ability to grab a large quantity of e-mails and Web communications, current law and specific court orders restrict its use. The Carnivore system, installed by the FBI on the network of Internet service providers, has software that scans Internet traffic as it moves through that provider's network. The FBI says it configures the software to capture e-mail to or from someone under investigation and that court orders limit which e-mails agents can see. Nevertheless, based on the new documents, privacy experts said they are worried about the breadth of Carnivore's capability and questioned why the FBI even conducted such a test in June if it intends to use the tool only for narrow purposes. "That really contradicts the explanation that the FBI has provided as to the purpose of the system and how it works," said David Sobel, general counsel for the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center. In the lab report, FBI officials said Carnivore "could reliably capture and archive all unfiltered traffic to the internal hard drive" and could save the information on removable high-capacity disks as well. FBI officials say Carnivore has been used in about 25 cases, most involving national security.
Šaltinis: cbsnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Microsoft Corp. on Monday capitulated to customer pressure

Microsoft Bows to Pressure, Extends Support for Older Windows Versions more »

Gates Unveils Innovative New Products and Services at CES

In his keynote address at the 2004 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), Microsoft Corp. Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates expanded on the company's vision for "seamless computing" more »

2004 to be year of the 'superworm'

Virus writers create secret P2P virus network more »

Intel launches Celeron M chip line

Lower-cache processors are designed for thin and light notebooks more »

Japan, China, S. Korea developing next Net

Japan, China and South Korea are reportedly planning to jointly develop Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6), the next-generation Internet standard more »

Online crime up in 2003

It seems 2003 was a productive year for phishers, online auction scammers and Nigerians professing a deep sense of purpose and utmost sincerity more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

'Phisher' site targets Visa, as holiday scams abound

Ruse uses e-mail, Web site to snag account numbers and personal identification numbers more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »