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This clipped from the Friday EFF alert:
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* EFF Challenges FCC's Jurisdiction Over Internet Services

On Friday, the DC Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral 
arguments in a suit brought by EFF and a coalition of public 
interest, industry, and academic groups challenging the 
FCC's unjustified expansion of the Communications Assistance 
for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA).  By forcing broadband 
Internet and interconnected voice over Internet Protocol 
(VoIP) services to become wiretap-friendly, the FCC ignored 
CALEA's plain language and threatened privacy, security, and 
innovation.

When Congress controversially passed CALEA in 1994 and gave 
the FCC powers to mandate backdoors in traditional telephony 
systems, it expressly exempted "information services" such 
as the Internet.  Yet after a petition from the FBI and 
other federal law enforcement agencies, the FCC ruled last 
year that companies like Vonage and private institutions 
that provide Net access must redesign their networks to 
facilitate wiretaps.  On Wednesday, the FCC announced that 
these service providers would have to foot the bill -- an 
estimated $7 billion dollars for the universities alone.

The FCC completely failed to give the law enforcement 
petitions the "hard look" that the public deserves when 
massive government surveillance proposals are on the table.  
While the FCC's unfunded tech mandate will undoubtedly harm 
the public, the government made no showing that there was 
any need to extend CALEA to Internet services at all.

Indeed, just this past Monday, the Administrative Office of 
the U.S. Courts issued its annual wiretap report -- which 
revealed that only 8 court orders for Internet wiretaps were 
issued in 2005, down from 12 orders in each of the years 
2003 and 2004 -- and the report contains no indication that 
law enforcement had any problems in conducting these 
electronic surveillances.

Petitioners in American Council on Education v. FCC include 
the American Library Association, the Center for Democracy 
and Technology, Electronic Privacy Information Center, 
EDUCAUSE, Pulver.com, and Sun Microsystems. 

More on CALEA and the petitioners' briefs: 
<http://www.eff.org/Privacy/Surveillance/CALEA/>

News.com, "FCC approves Net-wiretapping taxes":
<http://news.com.com/FCC+approves+Net-wiretapping+taxes/2100-1028_3-6067971.html?tag=nefd.lede>

For the 2005 Wiretap Report: 
<http://www.uscourts.gov/wiretap05/contents.html>

For this post:
<http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/004624.php>

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John A. Resotko
Head of Systems Administration
Michigan State University College of Law
208 Law College Building
East Lansing, MI  48824-1300
email: [log in to unmask]
Phone: 517-432-6836
Fax: 517-432-6861 

Current Chairperson of the 
MSU Network Communications Committee