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              | Date: 1999-04-08 
 
 Near-on Live: CFP99 Update, news.com Story-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 Gerade sass Lawrence Lessing, im Prozess gegen Microsoft einer
 der wenig angenehmeren Zeugen für letztere, am Podium, jetzt sitzt
 ACLU-Präsdentin Nadine Stroessen dort. 17.45 Ortszeit. Hurry off to
 the Closing Panel. Mehr folgt im Lauf der Nacht.
 
 http://www.cfp99.org
 
 Angehängt: Die news.com story über den Auftritt der Europäer gegen
 den Überwachungstaat, dem Panel, das erstunlicherweise medial die
 höchsten Wellen geschlagen hat .
 
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 Courtney Macavinta
 
 April 7, 1999, 4:00 a.m. PT WASHINGTON--The message at this
 year's Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference has a familiar
 Orwellian ring: Civil rights should be strengthened because digital
 technology sharpens that "big eye in the sky."
 ...
 At the ninth annual conference's kickoff, panelists feverishly pointed
 to evidence about international governments building widespread
 surveillance systems for email, phone, and wireless communication,
 while noting that many regimes, including the United States, refuse
 to lift controls on the data-security technologies based on encryption.
 ....
 On closely watched session yesterday, the "Creation of a Global
 Surveillance Network" focused on what many would call a privacy
 nightmare. Examining policies in the United Kingdom, France,
 Russia, and Austria, as well as the European Union, panelists
 discussed the trend toward unethical cooperation among
 governments.
 
 The panel also focused on the EU and FBI's so-called Enfopol
 network, which could allegedly force telephone and Internet service
 providers to build "tappable" networks, according to a January report
 delivered to the Scientific and Technical Options Assessment Panel
 of the European Parliament.
 ....
 "We worried that this system was being tied to other systems," said
 Steve Wright, of the nonprofit Omega Foundation, who wrote the
 report.
 ....
 "If every phone call on the planet is being listened to, that is wrong,"
 said Scott Charney, head of the Justice Department's Computer
 Crime Unit. "You have to establish the practices that govern the
 surveillance and have internal and external reviews."
 
 Fears about increased surveillance come at a time when a conflict is
 simmering between the European Union and United States over the
 EU's strict privacy directive.
 
 ....
 Overall, pressure is building to more adequately balance corporate
 and individual interests when it comes to collecting and storing
 personal data, which many at CFP say is prime currency in the
 digital age.
 ...
 "It is indeed not natural resources, geography, or capital that is the
 most precious commodity--it's information," said Rep. Bob Barr (R-
 Georgia).
 
 "It will require more than legislation--it will require oversight," added
 Barr, who sits on the House Judiciary Committee, which has called
 for Net privacy hearings.
 
 Some countries are rejecting self-regulatory models in favor of
 government supervision. Stephen Lau, the privacy commissioner for
 personal data in Hong Kong, says China is "one country with two
 systems" and leads an independent agency that is implementing
 policies based on OECD principles.
 
 Last year his staff conducted a sample study based on the country's
 approximately 7,000 Web sites and found that only 6 percent were in
 compliance with OECD-based guidelines, such as disclosing what is
 done with data that is collected from consumers.
 ....
 full text
 http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,34750,00.html
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 edited by
 published on: 1999-04-08
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