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WEBINATOR COPYRIGHT © 1995-1998 THUNDERSTONE - EPI, INC.

 Sunday, September 17, 2000
 
Inside Risks 124 - Blaze / Bellovin - Tapping, Tapping On My Network Door. A good essay on the risks of Carnivore

I, Cringely | The PulpitCarnivore 3.0 - The Wrath of Olympus.

For the second disturbing fact we jump to the Olympics -- not this year's games in Sydney -- but the 2002 Winter games in Utah. Given the 1996 bombing at the Atlanta games and the 1972 hostage crisis in Munich, I really, really wouldn't want to be responsible for public safety at an Olympic games anywhere. So it isn't surprising that the security plans for Salt Lake in 2002 are very robust -- perhaps too robust for some people, including me.

At the Utah games there will be a network of kiosks set up for athletes, journalists, and the public to use for e-mail and Net access. This will be the easiest way for many people to communicate in an area that will probably have its cellphone circuits maxed-out most of the time. Try making a cellphone call in Las Vegas during Comdex or the Consumer Electronics Show and you'll know what I mean. Well, the FBI has some rather specific requirements for Olympic data security, including the ability to not only COPY e-mail from these kiosks containing passwords from users' secret list, but to actually INTERCEPT e-mail and deliver it to a security office address rather than to the intended recipient. The person manning that address is supposed to make summary decisions about what to do with the reviewed email -- maybe it gets passed along as intended by its author, maybe bounced as "undeliverable" for myriad reasons, or...

No supporting links are provided. Can anyone confirm or deny the basis for this statement?? Don't just tell me what you think is true. You must have access to the security plans for Salt Lake in 2002 to confirm or deny. Are they on the www anyplace so we can check for ourselves??

New York Times - free registration required Most Federal Web Sites Fail on Privacy Standard, Report Says. Most federal Web sites do not meet the commercial standards for Internet privacy set by the Federal Trade Commission(FTC), including the commission's own site, a government report has found.

New York Times - free registration required The Values Statement vs. Corporate Reality. Values statements that do not reflect reality can do more harm than good, by fostering cynicism and anger. Rather than creating a statement just because great businesses do so, a company's managers may better spend their time finding what values exist within the company, and determining whether those values foster the type of company they want. If the answer is no, the managers should figure out how to respond.

New York Times - free registration required Keeping Hackers' Hands Off Your Card Numbers. Recent incidents at Western Union and other sites across the country have left many consumers wondering whether credit cards and the Internet are a safe combination.
 

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