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NSA vacuuming down Internet traffic
- To: [email protected]
- Subject: NSA vacuuming down Internet traffic
- From: [email protected] (Anonymous)
- Date: Fri, 19 Jan 1996 10:23:43 +0100
- Organization: RePLaY aND CoMPaNY UnLimited
- Sender: [email protected]
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WRT:
"...the same article had Madsen stating that the NSA is
vacuuming down Internet traffic. he gave the likely entry
points that they are doing this."
It's a virtual lead-pipe cinch that this is being done and
probably has been going on for longer than anyone would like to
think.
In the 1960's - 1970's when international cable traffic was in
its computer infancy, access was had to EVERY CABLE MESSAGE
passing through the message switches of U.S. common carriers.
This means no only every international cable message originating
from or destined to a U.S. point, but also included every message
ROUTED THROUGH the U.S., such as Europe <--> South America.
There was no great skullduggery involved -- the common carriers
simply made copies of their own log tapes and handed them to
messengers from the, ah, FCC (ahem). It was on the operations
checklist and no one thought twice about it. It may be urban
legend to some, but I've seen it with my own eyes, handled the
tapes with my own hands.
If anyone else wishes to move this from the status of urban
legend to something more solid, all they have to do is locate and
ask people who worked in message switch operations at RCA Global
Communications, ITT World Communications, or Western Union
International, the three common carriers of that time.
Knowing this, I would assume something similar was done at
overseas locations of the same carriers and at such other access
points as could be compromised. An organization such as NSA that
viewed this as SOP would have to be brain dead not to be doing
the same thing with the Internet. The only question in my mind is
how far they have gone beyond USENET and the newer, fertile
ground of web sites. Are they vacuuming packets and reassembling
email? Just how many laser discs have been filled with coherent
traffic?
Time to exercise those plain, brown envelopes.
We Jurgar Din
(that will have to suffice: I do not yet live in a free country)
+"The battle, Sir, is not to the strong alone. It is to the+
+vigilant, the active, the brave. Besides, Sir, we have no +
+election. If we were base enough to desire it, it is now +
+too late to retire from the contest." -Patrick Henry 1775 +
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