Privacy Digest

News that can impact your privacy.
Login/Register
What is OpenID?
  • Log in using OpenID
  • Cancel OpenID login
  • Create new account
  • Request new password
Home Blogs MacRonin's blog
    • FAQ
    • Wishlists
    • Contact
    • Categories/RSS

Bookmark Us

Bookmark Privacy Digest 
Bookmark This Page 

Syndicate

Syndicate content
more

Advertisements

Tracking System
Tracking System
Private Detectives
Quality Security Services in California
Fleet Management
Hosting

Popular content

Last viewed:

  • Positive Rights News From Europe
  • Why Pete Warden Should Not Release Profile Data on 215 Million Facebook Users
  • Background images emerging tool of MySpace hackers
  • Black Hat: Security Geeks Converge on Vegas
  • Unintended Consequences: 12 Years Under the DMCA
  • Medical identity theft strikes 5.8% of U.S. adults
  • Who Owns Your Social Data? You Do, Sort of

tags in Topics

Activists Alert Anonymity Companies Congress Copyright Court (US) Databases Data Mining Editorial EFF Entertainment Exploits Fourth Amendment Government Hmmm ID Infrastructure Law Enforcement Laws Politics Privacy Remember Reports Rights Security Spin Zone Surveillance Telecommunications Tracking
more tags

View blog authority
Congressional Research
Broadcast Flag

Matt Blaze Examines Communications Privacy

Submitted by MacRonin on December 28, 2008 - 8:53pm
  • Anonymity
  • Data Mining
  • Databases
  • Editorial
  • FISA - Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
  • Fourth Amendment
  • Government
  • Hmmm
  • ID
  • Infrastructure
  • Issues
  • NSA - National Security Agency
  • Privacy
  • Remember
  • Reports
  • Rights
  • Surveillance
  • Telecommunications

Matt Blaze Examines Communications Privacy: Via Slashdot: Your Rights Online

altjira writes "Matt Blaze analyzes the implications of a recent Newsweek story on the Bush administration's use of the NSA for domestic spying on communications, and questions whether the lower legal threshold for the collection of communications metadata is giving away too much to the government: 'As electronic communication pervades more of our daily lives, transaction records — metadata — can reveal quite a bit about us, indeed often much more than a few out-of-context conversations might. Aggregated into databases with other people's records (or perhaps everyone's records) and analyzed by powerful software, metadata by itself can paint a remarkably detailed picture of connections, relationships, and other patterns that could never be recovered simply from listening to the conversations themselves.'"

Read Original Article ( Via Slashdot: Your Rights Online. )

Bookmark/Search this post with:
  • Twitter Twitter
  • Digg Digg
  • StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Technorati
  • del.icio.us del.icio.us
  • Facebook Facebook
  • Furl Furl
  • LinkedIn LinkedIn
  • Yahoo Yahoo
  • MacRonin's blog
  • Add new comment

Recent blog posts

  • The Botnet Challenge (CDT)
  • Supreme Court Takes ‘Informational Privacy’ Case
  • Major ISPs Help Fund BitTorrent User Tracking Research ?
  • Six Types of Social Spammers
  • Worker ID Card at Center of Immigration Plan - WSJ.com
  • "Your Papers, Please!" - Get Your Fingerprints Ready! Cross-Party Senate Alliance Pushing National ID Card
  • Supreme Court to Decide Case Involving ‘Right of Informational Privacy’ - ABA Journal
  • Feds Move to Break Voting-Machine Monopoly
  • All Your Apps Are Belong to Apple: The iPhone Developer Program License Agreement
  • The Cell Phone Network: Law Enforcement's Surveillance Dream
more

Performancing Metrics

Compilation © Copyright 1997-2010 Paul Hardwick, with Web Hosting provided by MacRonin.com.