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              | Date: 1999-03-11 
 
 IDG.net ueber ENFOPOL-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 Dies hier [siehe unten] ist vor zwei Stunden in IDG.net
 erschienen. Morgen publiziert Christiane Schulzki-Hadduti
 auf einer URL, die wir erst nennen werden, wenn es soweit
 ist, eine voluminöse Enfopol-Timeline aller einschlägigen
 Events von 1991-1998, derer wir bis dato hab/haft werden
 konnten.
 
 post/scrypt an die p.t. Fern/meldespezialist/inn/en auf der
 Liste: Wie paranoid soll man den Umstand finden, wenn
 ISDN-Apparate bei - sagen wir - Anrufen vom ISDN-Festnetz
 in Koblenz auf deutsche Mobilfones neuerdings neben
 Fehlverbindungen völlig bescheuerte, fünfstellige
 Rufnummern/anzeigen zur Folge haben?
 
 
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 Mary Lisbeth D'Amico
 IDG News Service, Munich Bureau MUNICH (03/10/99) -
 Privacy advocates in Germany have erected a Web site
 called Freedomforlinks to protest what they perceive as plans
 by the European Union (EU) to allow "legally empowered
 authorities" to put in place European-wide surveillance
 systems.
 
 The protest comes in response to reported plans by the
 European Commission's Council of Justice and Home Affairs
 (JHA) to put into place mechanisms for law-enforcement
 agencies to access all kinds of transmitted messages,
 including data traffic over the Internet. The JHA is the
 organization within the European Council responsible for
 coordinating police, customs and justice activities of the EU's
 15 member states.
 
 The planned surveillance system, called Enfopol, was
 reported on by Telepolis, a German online technology
 magazine that late last year began publishing excerpts over
 the Internet from what it said were top-secret internal EU
 memos.
 
 Contacted about the reports, Telepolis editor Erich Moechel
 said that Telepolis reporters have received numerous copies
 of these memos from more than one source, which he called
 "100-percent reliable."
 
 "People still don't understand the technical aspects (of
 surveillance)," said Moechel, who has authored some of the
 articles on Enfopol. "They still think cellular phones are
 anonymous and they can't imagine what people would even
 do with their data."
 
 Now, German privacy advocates have launched the "Stop
 Enfopol" campaign, publicized on the Freedomforlinks Web
 site (http://www.freedomforlinks.de), to raise public
 awareness of what they see as a real potential threat to
 citizens' privacy. The Web site's sponsors, who call
 themselves online advocates, have asked concerned citizens
 to send e-mails to the European Union's Ombudsman
 (citizen's representative), Jacob Södermann, demanding that
 the issue be clarified. But Södermann has responded with a
 form letter stating that he is not responsible for the matter,
 according to information posted on the Freedomforlinks Web
 site. He has directed the thousands who sent him e-mails to
 contact the European Parliament in Luxembourg, according
 to the Web site authors.
 
 Enfopol surveillance plans target any form of
 telecommunications, be it data, encrypted or not; mobile
 telephony; or communications over the new Iridium system
 and other satellite mobile phone services that may follow,
 according to a document compiled by Moechel based on
 numerous Telepolis reports. "If these plans can be
 implemented, Enfopol will be able to monitor almost every
 communications mode, leaving no gaps," the report said.
 
 If Enfopol becomes legal reality, police forces will get any
 surveillance power they wish, the article said. As soon as the
 surveillance gateways to Internet providers, GSM (Global
 System for Mobile Communications), Iridium (the
 communications network) and other networks are
 established, "legally empowered authorities" other than
 police forces are expected to log on, the article said.
 
 "The danger here is that the European Union is mixing police
 issues with secret service issues," Moechel told IDG News.
 According to the language of the Enfopol documents, the
 interception of messages would be allowed for any "legally
 empowered authority," which he said could mean secret
 service employees as well as police. Citing the internal
 memos published by Telepolis, Moechel suggests that
 Enfopol is even targeting the central terrestrial masterstation
 of the Iridium network in Italy as a main spot from which to
 monitor telecommunications traffic.
 
 Diplomatic sources confirmed that efforts to define
 "interception" efforts were underway, but said that
 statements that a European surveillance system was being
 established were "overdoing it." The origin for the proposal,
 the sources said, was a 1995 resolution, signed by all
 European Union members, which detailed the technical
 requirements that had to be fulfilled to enable interception of
 telecommunications messages in cases where member
 states work together. This is the genesis of the Enfopol
 drafts, the sources confirmed.
 
 This document was a memorandum of understanding with the
 file number Enfopol 112 10037/95, according to Telepolis.
 Although it was signed by all EU members, Telepolis said, it
 was never officially published. A copy was published,
 however, by the British anti-surveillance group Statewatch in
 February 1997.
 
 With the technological progress that occurred over the
 ensuing years, the diplomatic sources said, there has been
 an effort to update this agreement. Talks have gone on
 among what the sources call "police experts" and technical
 experts as to which technical requirements would have to be
 fulfilled to enable data interception. Some kind of final draft
 could be expected around May, the sources said.
 
 When a draft in this area is finalized, the diplomatic sources
 said, ministers of the JHA would have to decide whether it
 would be implemented. And, even if
 adopted, it would be up to individual judges on a national level to decide
 whether to apply the recommendations, the sources said.
 
 Officials with the Justice and Home Affairs Council could not be reached for
 comment. The topic will reportedly be brought up at the next JHA ministers
 meeting, scheduled for March 12 in Brussels, according to Telepolis.
 
 But the diplomatic sources contradict that. "That meeting will discuss
 interception in the framework of criminal investigations, whereas Enfopol has
 to do with interception for intelligence or security reasons," the sources said.
 
 Telepolis' Moechel, however, thinks this simply isn't true. "It's going to be
 the number-one topic among the JHA secretaries when they
 meet," he said.
 
 Telepolis can be reached on the World Wide Web at
 http://www.heise.de/tp/english/default.html.
 
 
 
 
 
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 Diese q/depesche wurde für telepolis produziert.
 Wir ersuchen bei Übernahme durch Dritte höflich, obige URL zu zitieren
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 edited by
 published on: 1999-03-11
 comments to office@quintessenz.at
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