Most of us are very protective of
our email, online banking, and even social networking accounts. We know
what a nightmare it can be to get hacked, or just as bad, to have a
stranger learn all sorts of personal information about us. But according
to a new CNET report, it's not strangers we should be the most worried about eavesdropping on our comings and goings on the net — it's our own government...
According to the report, the FBI
has opened a new $54 million Domestic Communications Assistance Center
(DCAC) in Quantico, Virginia. The goal of the DCAC is simple: To develop
technology to allow the government to break encryption, eavesdrop on private communications, and even intercept Skype calls. The DCAC also serves to assist federal, local, and state authorities in their digital wiretapping efforts. The center does not perform wiretapping itself; it simply helps other agencies execute their own wiretapping plans.
Predictably, civil liberties groups are up in arms over the agency — especially its secrecy. Says Jennifer Lynch of the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
"they're doing the best they can to avoid being transparent. The big
question for me is why there isn't more transparency about what's going
on? We should know more about the program and what the FBI is doing."
Source: yahoo.com
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