Posted on 12/03/2007 6:36:29 AM PST by steve-b
As a technician for AT&T, Mark Klein says he helped connect a device three years ago that copied onto a government supercomputer every phone call, e-mail and Internet search made through the company's network.
"AT&T provided the National Security Agency with everything that ordinary Americans communicated over the Internet," Klein said recently on Capitol Hill. "This program included not only AT&T customers, but everyone who used the Internet because AT&T carries messages for other carriers also."
President Bush denies that. "We're not mining or trolling through the personal lives of millions of innocent Americans," he said. "Our efforts are focused on links to al Qaeda and their known affiliates. The privacy of ordinary Americans is fiercely protected in all our activities."
Only one of those men can be telling the truth. That the White House is frantically lobbying weak links in the Senate to pass a revised Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) granting immunity for AT&T and other telecom companies suggests who fears exposure....
(Excerpt) Read more at examiner.com ...
Isn’t it interesting how someone can acquire just enough technical jargon to say something really, abysmally stupid about technology? One of my current favorites is the 3-minute battery recharge - the amount of current required would turn the car into a puddle of molten metal.
Seems technically impossible to me, but I dunno.
I’ll defer to those who actually know something about the technology.
So far the thread seems to be 3-0 against the technical feasibility of this claimed intrusion.
Old news, from May 2006
Wonder why it’s being rehashed now.
(He’s also an ex-employee - anyone know if the parting w/ AT&T was mutual?)
But I think the answer is somewhere in the middle. Copying all data? No way. Loading pen traces and email addresses into a big data wharehousing system to tie phone numbers and email addresses to terrorists? Quite possible. That lets our government know who they should be paying attention to.
bmflr
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Why the smart money is on Duncan Hunter
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1926032/posts
Posted on 11/15/2007 3:43:17 AM PST by Kevmo
Go ahead, type your name into Google. Youll probably find messages on one site or another that you dont even remember posting.
As far as I know, Google doesn't search Outlook or Outlook Express or Thunderbird mail files, etc, on your personal hard drive, just web sites.
AMEN, you speak with facts not emotion.
I have a very close relative who is involved with intel gathering. Some of what the post says is true. While I am not privy to secrets, I’m told they don’t store them for any length of time, everything is passed through filters. They are searching for words, phrases, hints, etc of impending attacks, and other nefarious actions that would harm our Country.
If something happened that we could have prevented, and we found out it could have been prevented by using technological means, I would be among the first to raise hell about it. Who wouldn’t?
I ain’t got nuttin’ to hide, and if I did, I would hide it!
Not so.
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