“Companies should be required to build in back doors for police. We must ensure that our ability to obtain communications pursuant to court order is not eroded,” FBI director Robert Mueller told a U.S. Senate committee this week. Currently, he said, many communications providers “are not required to build or maintain intercept capabilities.”
Mueller’s prepared remarks reignite a long-simmering debate pitting the values of privacy, limited government, and freedom to innovate against law enforcement requests that often find a receptive audience on Capitol Hill. Two days ago, for instance, senators delayed voting on a privacy bill that would require search warrants for e-mail after sheriffs and district attorneys objected.
The draft legislation is one component of what the FBI has internally called the “National Electronic Surveillance Strategy” and has publicly described as its “Going Dark” problem. Going Dark has emerged as a serious effort inside the bureau, which employed 107 full-time equivalent people on the project as of 2009, commissioned a RAND study, and sought extensive technical input from its secretive Operational Technology Division in Quantico, Va. The division boasts of developing the “latest and greatest investigative technologies to catch terrorists and criminals.”
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group in San Francisco, says there’s no need to expand wiretapping law for the Internet. New technologies have provided the FBI with unprecedented capabilities to conduct surveillance, making it faster and easier for the government to take a look at the increasingly intimate online portrayal of the lives of Americans. No longer does the government face anonymous pay-phones or the challenge of physically tracking a person’s location through time-consuming manual surveillance.
Plus, with more and more conversations documented by some sort of electronic record, law enforcement has had no problem getting access to digital material from telecommunications providers with little judicial oversight or scrutiny.
The FBI’s proposal would amend a 1994 law, called the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, or CALEA, that currently applies only to telecommunications providers, not Web companies. The Federal Communications Commission extended CALEA in 2004 to apply to broadband networks.
It’s not exactly clear how much of the FBI’s problems in conducting surveillance arise from wireless communications, encryption, social networks, or VoIP; the bureau has not been eager to be specific. Microsoft’s Skype service has worked with law enforcement to make online chats and other user information available to police.
This is a tough balancing act that we all need to be cognizant of and do whatever is necessary to protect our freedoms while ensuring that the internet is secure.
Thanks to Declan McCullagh and CNet News, and
Thanks for “listening”
Howard