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Date: 2001-12-07

US: Real-Satire wegen Wegwerf-Handys


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Als FBI-Direktor sollte man wenigstens ab und zu Zeitung lesen -
vielleicht europäische. Dann würde man sich - aus altkontinentaler
Sicht - nicht lächerlich machen, wenn die Los Angeles Times einen
Bericht beginnt mit:

"A new threat to the nation's safety arrives in stores this month,
according to John Ashcroft, the attorney general of the United States.
Anybody with 30 bucks soon will be able to buy a bit of technology
that puts us all at risk, according to FBI Director Robert Mueller."

Für ganz Eilige verraten wir vorab die Lösung des Rätsels: Mueller
fürchtet sich vor billigen Wegwerf-Handys, die demnächst auf den Markt
kommen. Dieses Terroristen-Teufelszeug kann man doch glatt anonym
kaufen. God bless America!

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Does This Really Pose a Security Threat?
(by Dave Wilson)

A new threat to the nation's safety arrives in stores this month,
according to John Ashcroft, the attorney general of the United States.
Anybody with 30 bucks soon will be able to buy a bit of technology that
puts us all at risk, according to FBI Director Robert Mueller.

Is it Cup-o'-Pox, which lets you create a new disease by adding hot
water? Nukeman, the pocket-size atomic weapon? E-Z-Bake Nerve Gas,
recommended for ages 8 and up?

Nope. It's the disposable cell phone. That's right, cell phones so
cheap that people won't care if they're lost or stolen are arriving
in stores this month courtesy of Hop-On Corp. of Garden Grove. And the
government we have charged with keeping us safe is overwhelmed with fear.

To be fair, law enforcement has been struggling to keep up with advances
in telecommunications for decades. Tapping a telephone used to be child's
play. Now, new digital technologies, voice transmissions over the Internet
and cellular phones have complicated that task immeasurably.

The feds are pushing for new laws--in addition to those already passed
since the Sept. 11 attacks--that would make it easier for them to
monitor conversations by criminal suspects. But there's resistance to
the new requirements the Justice Department would like to impose on the
legal and telecommunications infrastructure. Corporations don't want to
spend more money implementing such changes, and civil libertarians fear
government agents would abuse the new capabilities.

Everybody involved has a good point. Eventually, the government will
impose changes that probably will preserve the balance between law
enforcement's need for information and your desire for privacy.

In the meantime, everyone is searching for any leverage they can get.
Hence the goofy attempt to hold up disposable phones as a threat
to the republic.

Disposable cell phones can be purchased and used anonymously. People--
including terrorists--can pay cash, communicate with each other and
then grab a new phone, making it difficult for law enforcement to
track criminal activity. Ashcroft and his lackeys contend that
changes in the law are needed immediately because the new phones
offer anonymous communication.

But nobody's talking about installing retinal scanners at pay phones
to eliminate anonymous calls. The Sept. 11 hijackers used equally
anonymous telephone calling cards to communicate with each other.

Where anonymous calls are a problem--such as in drug-infested
neighborhoods--pay phones are yanked out. But nobody is yanking out
pay phones today because of the new terrorist threat. And nobody wants
to force everybody to pay for a calling card with a credit card. How is
making that same kind of call from a disposable phone any different?
It's not.

In terms of anonymity, disposable cell phones--which at the moment
only let you dial out-- don't let you do anything you can't do with
a pay phone, which is what Ashcroft and company are complaining about.
But they do offer a new way of thinking about telecommunications by
altering economic reality.

A cell phone that costs about $30 and comes with a limited amount of
usable minutes offers a solution to a number of problems.

They're perfect for your irresponsible teenager. Because they're
maintenance-free--you don't have to keep charging the batteries--you
can keep one in a purse or glove compartment. They make a great
designated hitter if you're worried your real cell will get damaged
or lost. And there are no roaming or long-distance charges, saving
some people money.

Several manufacturers will be rolling out disposable phones in the
coming months, but Hop-On is first to market.

The phones aren't supposed to be thrown away; you can mail them back
to the home office for a $5 credit on your next purchase, said Hop-On
Chief Executive Peter Michaels. They contain a lithium ion battery
that's designed to last a year, and they lack a keypad. You dial by
speaking the number aloud through a combination earpiece/microphone.

Despite all the hand-wringing in Washington, Michaels said he never
had any qualms about introducing the phones.

"As a matter of fact, nobody from the government ever contacted me
about that," he said. "There were never any discussions."

That's probably because there wasn't any reason for them.

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Volltext:
http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-000096999dec06.column?coll=la%2Dheadlines%2Dtechnology
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relayed by: bademeister@quintessenz.at
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edited by Harkank
published on: 2001-12-07
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