• main
  • reviews
  • articles
  • authors
  • books
  • about
    • high contrast
    • default

BOOK REVIEWS / EDITORIALS

FEATURING...

ARTICLE ARCHIVES

Latest Articles

Pakistani Security Consultant Calls Mumbai Attacks A "Botched" False Flag
4 December 08

Malls are next to face foreclosure
4 December 08

Financial Crisis Expected to Make Food Shortages Dramatically Worse
3 December 08

Behavioral screening -- the future of airport security?
3 December 08

China reveals 300,000 children were made ill by tainted milk
2 December 08

Pentagon to Detail Troops to Bolster Domestic Security
2 December 08

Arabs Not Happy About Secretary of State Hillary
1 December 08

Islam does not give up
1 December 08

CORN THAT’S AS HIGH AS AN ELEPHANT’S EYE
1 December 08

GUN CONTROL: THE ROAD AHEAD
1 December 08

Social engineering: National suicide
1 December 08

The Cabal's New Strategies to Bamboozle the Public
1 December 08

Dark Secret Revealed: All Male Babies Slaughtered to Avoid Warfare in Eastern Papua New Guinea
1 December 08

Harvard Scientists Unravel The Secret Of Aging
1 December 08

Ron Paul Warns Of Secret Plans To Create International Central Bank
1 December 08

Virginia:Two Muslims Offer to Sell Missile to FBI Informant
1 December 08

The Obama “Dream Team”: Rubin-clones and political fakery
1 December 08

I was told to kill to my last breath’: Captured terrorist’s account of Mumbai massacre reveals plan was to kill 5,000
1 December 08

Obama Nominees Signal Radical Pro-U.N. Agenda
1 December 08

DOUBLESPEAK AND AMERICAN SOCIALISM
1 December 08

Article Search

Categories
[show / hide]
  • 9/11
  • Advanced Weaponry
  • Aliens
  • Banking/Financial
  • Bartley, James
  • Big Brother
  • Bizzarre
  • Black Ops
  • Casbolt, James
  • Censorship
  • Chemtrails
  • Commentaries
  • Conspiracy
  • Constitution/Law
  • Covert
  • Crop Circles
  • cults
  • Disinformation
  • Drugs/Pharma
  • Election 2008
  • Environment
  • Esoteric/Paranormal
  • Eugenics
  • Foreign governments
  • Genetic Crops
  • Government
  • Health
  • Illuminati
  • Immigration
  • Islam
  • Mars
  • Media/Disinformation
  • Microchipping
  • MIL-INTELL Complex
  • Mind Control
  • New World Order
  • Obama
  • Oil Crisis
  • Paranormal
  • Patriotism
  • Police state/crime
  • Politics
  • Religion/Spirituality
  • Science/Technology
  • Secret Societies
  • Sex Slaves/Perversion
  • Social Engineering
  • Space
  • Spying
  • UFOS
  • Uncategorized
  • United Nations
  • War on Terror
« older article         newer article »

ISPs Will All Spy On Their Customers, Professor Warns

By Ryan Singel,

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan_Singel

 September 04, 2008


If there's a candidate for the worst future violator of your privacy, look no further than the company you pay for broadband.

So says University of Colorado law professor and former federal prosecutor Paul Ohm, who argues in a new article that ISPs have the means, motive and opportunity to kill your online privacy.

Nothing in society poses as grave a threat to privacy as the Internet Service Provider (ISP). ISPs carry their users'
conversations, secrets, relationships, acts, and omissions. Until the very recent past, they had left most of these alone because they had lacked the tools to spy invasively, but with recent advances in eavesdropping technology, they can now spy on people in unprecedented ways. Meanwhile, advertisers and copyright owners have
been tempting them to put their users' secrets up for sale, and judging from a recent flurry of reports, ISPs are giving in to the temptation and experimenting with new forms of spying. This is only the leading edge of a coming storm of unprecedented and invasive ISP surveillance.

But is that true?

Ohm argues technological and economic forces virtually guarantee that ISPs will begin finding ways to make money by monitoring, categorizing and even storing everything their users do on their networks.

Those are indisputable facts.

But Ohm's argument comes right as powerful lawmakers have all but forced U.S. ISPs to abandon their dalliance with NebuAd, a Silicon Valley startup that wants to pay ISPs to let eavesdrop on their users in order to serve targeted advertisements.

This week NebuAd's CEO and founder took a new job, while a similar venture in England called Phorm is facing scrutiny as well for its secret tests.

Meanwhile, Comcast is being forced to abandon its throttling of peer- to-peer file sharing traffic after a torrent of bad press and a order (now being contested) from the Federal Communication Commission telling Comcast to cut it out.

Despite these moves by the feds, Ohm's The Rise and Fall of Invasive ISP Surveillance predicts ISPs will continue to rush to profile customers in order to get at a slice of the online advertising pie, unless the government takes strong steps to ban certain kinds of deep packet inspection.

ISPs, faced with changes in technology, extraordinary pressures to innovate, and murky ethical rules, will continue aggressively to expand network monitoring. The AT&T, Comcast, Charter, NebuAd and Phorm examples will prove to be not outliers but the first steps in a steady expansion of industry practices. Unless some force-regulatory or non-regulatory-intervenes, the inevitable result will be ISPs conducting full-packet capture of everything their users do, supposedly with their users' consent.

ISPs will and do use so-called deep-packet inspection equipment to look at many layers of an internet packet -- maybe including the content -- to make their service better by giving priority to time-sensitive packets or stop internet attacks. even to attempt to stop the sharing of copyrighted material as AT&T has proposed.

From there it is an easy step to finding ways to profile customers.

The solution, according to Ohm: Apply the current wiretapping laws to what ISPs want to do on their networks -- including ways to manage traffic flows -- and add some exceptions designated by a neutral
government body like NIST.

That's a fine notion -- using privacy as the way to enforce a largely neutral internet, while still allowing ISP engineers to do their jobs.

Unfortunately, neither Congress nor the courts seem particularly interested in wiretapping laws, except to find ways to expand exceptions for the government. or excuse self-issued ones.

Will Congress as a whole prove itself to feel differently about ISPs spying on Americans, than the nation's spooks?

You can also read more from Ohm over at Concurring Opinions, where he's blogging about the topic and responding in the comment section.
paulohm.com

permanent link

 

Copyright (C) 2001-2008: The Rose Garden - The Universal Seduction series and material listed on our authors' page - All Rights Reserved. The Rose Garden and The Universal Seduction, Piercing the Veils of Deception is a registered trademark. The collective authorship takes no responsibility for articles authored by others. They are posted for your reading edification and we are neither advocating nor disavowing the information found therein. * Republication and re-dissemination of articles with an asterisk is expressly prohibited without prior written consent.