BIG BROTHER REALLY DOES WANT TO WATCH YOU
2 May 2008
FBI's Internet surveillance proposal raises
privacy, legal concerns
CNET News writers Declan McCullagh and Anne Broache
wrote an excellent article this week on the extent of
FBI Internet surveillance ambitions, reporting that the
FBI director and a Republican congressman have a
far-reaching plan for warrantless activity in monitoring
Internet users.
The article recounts that during a House of
Representatives Judiciary Committee hearing this week,
the FBI's Robert Mueller and Rep. Darrell Issa of
California discussed a two-step approach to a
potentially wide-ranging monitoring plan.
Step 1 involves asking Internet service providers to
open their networks to the FBI voluntarily; but Step 2
would be a federal law forcing companies to do just
that.
Issa suggested that Internet providers could get
"consent from every single person who signed up to
operate under their auspices" for federal police to
monitor network traffic for attempts to steal personal
information and national secrets.
Mueller had a more direct approach and said that
"legislation has to be developed" for "some omnibus
[read: all-embracing] search capability, utilizing
filters that would identify the illegal activity as it
comes through and give us the ability to pre-empt it."
The writer accurately opines that these are remarkable
statements. The clearest reading of them points to deep
packet inspection of network traffic - akin to the
measures Comcast took against BitTorrent and to what
Phorm in the United Kingdom has done, in terms of
advertising - plus additional processing to detect and
thwart any "illegal activity."
"That's very troubling," said Greg Nojeim, director of
the project on freedom, security, and technology at the
Center for Democracy and Technology. "It could be an
effort to achieve, through unknowing consent, permission
to monitor communications in a way that would otherwise
be prohibited by law."
Unfortunately, neither Issa nor Mueller recognised that
such a plan is probably illegal. California law, for
instance, says anyone who "intentionally and without the
consent of all parties to a confidential communication"
conducts electronic surveillance shall be imprisoned for
one year.
"I think there's a substantial problem with what
[Director] Mueller's proposing," said Al Gidari, a
partner at the Perkins Coie law firm who represents
telecommunications providers. "He forgets the states
have the power to pass more restrictive rules, and 12 of
them have. He also forgets that we live in a global
world, and the rest of the world doesn't quite see eye
to eye on this issue. That consent would be of dubious
validity in Europe, for instance, where many of our
customers reside."
Strangely, the FBI seemed reluctant to expand on its
efforts when CNet pursued the matter.
McCullagh reports: "After we made repeated attempts to
get the bureau to explain what Mueller was talking
about, FBI spokesman Paul Bresson responded by saying,
"At this point, I'm going to let the director's
comments, in the context of the exchange with Rep. Issa,
speak for themselves."
So what is 'consent?'
What Step 1 appears to involve is persuading Internet
providers to amend their terms of service and insert an
'FBI-can-monitor-everything clause.' Informed consent is
one thing. But does anyone actually read the fine print
on their contracts with their broadband or wireless
provider? If not, is that fine print good enough?
Informed consent is important because of the wording of
the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, or ECPA,
which says providers may share the contents of
customers' communications only "with the lawful consent"
of the user. Otherwise, providers are breaking the law
and can be sued for damages. And without consent, the
FBI would bump up against the Fourth Amendment's
prohibition on unreasonable searches.
The 2003 In Re Pharmatrak decision from the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the 1st Circuit offers one useful
measuring stick on proving consent. The court ruled in a
case involving Web tracking "that it makes more sense to
place the burden of showing consent on the party seeking
the benefit of the exception." The judges approvingly
cited a second case, which said "consent can only be
implied when the surrounding circumstances convincingly
show that the party knew about and consented to the
interception."
The Federal Trade Commission, too, has taken a
relatively strict view of informed consent. In its
lawsuit filed against Odysseus Marketing, the FTC argued
that it was unlawful for a company not "to adequately
disclose" to customers that it was sharing information
with third parties. The case ended in a settlement.
McCullagh translates these findings as: "Obtaining
"lawful consent" for FBI monitoring means making sure
that your customers actually know what's going on and
agree. Hiding it in the terms of service doesn't
qualify."
Step 2 is more draconian
Having examined the practical and legal rights problems
associated with following Step 1, the CNet piece then
turns to Step 2, observing that this would require a
revision of U.S. surveillance law.
Because the FBI would run into serious problems doing
wide-scale Internet surveillance under existing state
and federal law, step 2 may be necessary.
In the closed hearings, Rep. Issa said he wants to
"craft" legislation that would give the FBI the power to
look "for those illegal activities, and then act on
those, both defensively and, either yourselves or
certainly other agencies, offensively in order to shut
down a crime in process."
He worried about "national-security secrets and just the
common information of private individuals" being at
risk.
In his response, Mueller said he wants Congress to "give
us the ability to pre-empt that illegal activity."
"Looking for" a crime in progress on the Internet can
take multiple paths. If it's a denial-of-service attack
against eBay or Amazon.com originating from Russian
servers, it can be detected by measuring the amount of
traffic without inspecting the contents each packet.
But to detect fraud and "national-security secrets," as
well as personal information being transferred, deep
packet inspection would be necessary - roughly on a
scale of the Great Firewall of China, McCullagh
observes.
Needless to say, detecting "illegal activity" would soon
be extended to copyright infringement and peer-to-peer
networks.
"I think you bump squarely into the Fourth Amendment
when you get into the required waiver of constitutional
protections to use a service," said attorney Gidari.
"Why don't we extend it to include not criticizing the
government? Which right is next? You've still got to
have, at the end of the day, a constitutionally
supportable legal process to get access to anyone's
communications. This cannot be an end run around that."
The problem of how to "shut down a crime in process" and
"pre-empt that illegal activity" is more difficult and,
perhaps, more worrisome.
The surveillance society is the best society?
Given a copy of the hearings transcript, Kurt Opsahl, a
senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier
Foundation in San Francisco, said: "It certainly is
[Director] Mueller's responsibility to explain what it
is that he's looking for.
"But it seems that he's saying, essentially, that the
surveillance society is the best society. A society in
which the government has complete information about
illegal activities and is able to enforce that.
Throughout our country's existence, we've lived in a
society where the government doesn't have perfect
information.
"The FBI has some obligation to explain: what is it
going to focus on here? Once you have the technology in
place, will it then be used for more and more?"
If you thought the tussles over Net neutrality were
heated before, imagine a broadband provider throttling
certain applications - and being able to blame that
throttling capability on law enforcement. At the very
least, it would be a wonderful excuse.
Which is why it's a shame, and somewhat troubling, that
the FBI has chosen not to say what its director is
proposing (and apparently will be working with Congress
to write into law).
The Einstein plan
McCullagh postulates that one possible germ for this
Internet-monitoring idea lies in Homeland Security's
so-called Einstein program, which is designed to monitor
Internet mischief and network disruptions aimed at
federal agencies. Not much about Einstein is public, but
a privacy impact assessment offers some details.
Homeland Security Spokeswoman Laura Keehner said in a
telephone interview with CNet that the primary focus of
Einstein at the moment is protecting federal-government
networks.
"Obviously, the FBI could clarify or elaborate on what
they said," Keehner said. "I do know that (from Homeland
Security's perspective) we now first need to get our .gov
in order. We need to concentrate on our federal
networks...We're also bringing in the private sector to
open those lines of discussion and figure out ways that
the private sector can better equip themselves to stop
any cyber-incursions."
Secret orders
Another possibly related effort is the Bush
administration's so-called Cyber Initiative. In January,
President Bush signed a pair of secret orders--National
Security Presidential Directive 54/Homeland Security
Presidential Directive 23 - that apparently deal with
detecting and preventing Internet disruptions.
Rep. Issa is a member of the House Intelligence
Committee, which held a closed-door hearing on Thursday
devoted to the Cyber Initiative - and, during the
exchange with Mueller a day earlier, he said his
monitoring idea was related.
The House Intelligence committee didn't want to talk
when pressed by CNet. But a representative of the House
Homeland Security committee chaired by Rep. Bennie
Thompson (D-Miss.) sent three bullet points in an e-mail
message:
1. Chance of a legislative initiative that would allow
FBI to place filters to identify illegal activity at
choke points on the .com space:
2. We still have concerns and questions about the
initiative, and we continue to do oversight.
3. Legislation is not being considered for any of the
new proposals, outside of the budget requests made by
the administration.
Point 3 seems to relate to the administration's 2009
budget request, which asks Congress for $293.5 million
to expand Einstein to the entire federal government.
The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Committee, which is headed by Joe Lieberman of
Connecticut, also held a classified hearing last month
on the administration's Cyber Initiative.
But a committee aide told CNet: "The idea of filtering
for criminal activity has never been discussed with us.
Nor has any new statutory authority been discussed. In
fact, the administration explicitly said it didn't need
any legislation. Furthermore, the idea of monitoring
non-government domains has never been proposed in
briefings the committee has received."
Of some comfort is McCullagh's observation that at least
in the current political climate, legislation of the
sort Rep. Issa wants to draft isn't likely to slide
through Congress unopposed.
Still, as McCullagh opines, it's worth keeping in mind
that the FBI has a recent, and not very flattering,
history of trying to expand the scope of surveillance
methods. Bureau agents used so-called exigent letters to
obtain records from telephone companies, claiming that
an emergency situation existed.
In reality, there was often no emergency at all. The
Justice Department's inspector general found similar
abuses of national-security letters. The FBI also tried
to bypass the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
when it denied requests to obtain records.
The CNet article ends with the valid comment that maybe
Director Mueller can provide a convincing argument for
why laws giving the FBI "omnibus search capability
utilizing filters that would identify the illegal
activity" would be wise. Or not.
But when politicians weigh the idea of trusting the FBI
with such broad and unprecedented authority, they should
consider the abuses that have already taken place with
far less powerful tools.
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