[3668] in cryptography@c2.net mail archive
ISPI Clips 6.50: Europol's Electronic Surveillance Not Unlike
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Nicholas Charles Brawn)
Mon Nov 23 11:04:55 1998
Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1998 19:53:35 +1100 (EST)
From: Nicholas Charles Brawn <ncb05@uow.edu.au>
To: cryptography@c2.net
ISPI Clips 6.50: Europol's Electronic Surveillance Not Unlike NSA's
ECHELON
DATE: 22-11-1998 20:34
ISPI Clips 6.50: Europol's Electronic Surveillance Not Unlike NSA's ECHELON
News & Info from the Institute for the Study of Privacy Issues (ISPI)
Sunday November 22, 1998
ISPI4Privacy@ama-gi.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This From: TELEPOLIS: magazin der netzkultur, November 20, 1998
http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/default.html
The European Surveillance Union:
Europol Seeks a Broad Structure for Tapping Mobile Communications
By
Erich Moechel
Austrian officials' appetite for coldly broadening their authority to
monitor private citizens
http://www.telepolis.de/tp/deutsch/inhalt/te/1658/1.html ] is in no way a
unique case in Europe.
As a Europol internal document obtained by Telepolis shows, massive
attempts on the part of European police forces are underway to acquire the
ability to eavesdrop on the Iridium system, currently in a sensitive stage
of expansion.
The document entitled "Enfopol 98" from the group "Police Cooperation"
dated September 3, 1998, deals with the "observation of telecommunications"
and primarily addresses the so-called satellite-supported personal
communication systems (S-PCS), but also the Internet. On the recommendation
of the European Union, a list of points desired by the European police
http://www.ecu-notes.org/atoz997/europol.html was drawn up as a "Draft for
a Recommended Resolution" in order to simplify the passage of the
resolution. The terrestrial gateway stations are to provide
[ http://www.iridium.com/gateways/neurope/inside/index.html ] comprehensive
access via Iridium
http://www.iridium.com/gateways/neurope/tech/pop_gate.html ] and other
Mobile Satellite Services (MSS) since they are "collective and simple
locations for monitoring solutions."
The demands of the "legally empowered authorities," as they are so
stereotypically called in the Enfopol papers, are listed throughout a total
of forty pages and can relatively easily be summed up with the word
"everything". Beginning with the "Proclamation for the State of
Preparedness", simply "all signals created at the observed facilities" are
to be made accessible as well as all related technical services and data:
the redirecting of telephone calls, conference calls, voice mail and other
forms of telecommunication. Even in-bound and out-bound connections which
are not completed have been taken into consideration. And "legally
empowered authorities" want all of this data immediately. "The data
relevant to connections should be available within milliseconds after the
call is made... in order to allow the collation of the event and the
details of the call." Even though "due to the global topology of the MSS,
=2E...the delivery of the data relevant to the connection is more likely to=
be
delayed" than is the case with "terrestrially cellular wireless services."
By the time these passages appear in Paragraphs 2 of the Enfopol paper, it
becomes clear that the plans of the European police will not be able to be
realized without serious effecting the topology of the network.
Only with considerable technical effort and expense would it be possible to
make the data in GSM networks, to which the catalog of demands by the
European police are oriented, available in real time. The evaluation of the
transfer protocols of every individual relay station for the purpose of
establishing charges alone for the national GSM operators, which are tiny
in comparison with the Iridium system, would take "around eight hours," as
Klaus Steinmauer of the Austrian MaxMobil remarks.
The point made in the "Introduction to the Topic of the Internet" that
there is already formal governmental approval in the USA, Australia and
Canada for national regulations to meet Enfopol demands underlines a
serious suspicion of the EU on the part of the STOA Committee
http://www.europarl.eu.int/dg4/stoa/en/default.htm ].
In their controversial "Appraisal of the Technologies of Political
Control" , Paragraph 7.4.2, the technical committee refers to an "EU-FBI
Global Telecommunications Surveillance System" which is to be established
under the "third pillar" of the Maastricht Treaty for the cooperation in
the areas of justice and police work.
[ http://www.europarl.eu.int/dg4/stoa/en/publi/166499/execsum.htm#2.4.2 ]
A related "memorandum of understanding" with the file number ENFOPOL 112
10037/95, signed by all the members of the EU, has been kept secret to this
day. The background is the fear of European secret services that the
control over analog satellite communication gained via the military
Echelon system will be lost in the digital age
http://www.freecongress.org/ctp/echelon.html ].
Copyright =A9 1996-98 Verlag Heinz Heise, Hannover
--------------------------------NOTICE:------------------------------
ISPI Clips are news & opinion articles on privacy issues from
all points of view; they are clipped from local, national and international
newspapers, journals and magazines, etc. Inclusion as an ISPI Clip
does not necessarily reflect an endorsement of the content or opinion
by ISPI. In compliance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is
distributed free without profit or payment for non-profit research
and educational purposes only.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ISPI Clips is a FREE e-mail service from the "Institute for the Study
of Privacy Issues" (ISPI). To receive "ISPI Clips" on a regular bases
(up to 3 - 8 clips per day) send the following message "Please
enter [Your Name] into the ISPI Clips list: [Your e-mail address]" to:
ISPIClips@ama-gi.com .
The Institute for the Study of Privacy Issues (ISPI) is a small
contributor-funded organization based in Victoria, British Columbia
(Canada). ISPI operates on a not-for-profit basis, accepts no
government funding and takes a global perspective.
ISPI's mandate is to conduct & promote interdisciplinary research
into electronic, personal and financial privacy with a view toward
helping ordinary people understand the degree of privacy they have
with respect to government, industry and each other and to likewise
inform them about techniques to enhance their privacy.
But, none of this can be accomplished without your kind and
generous financial support. If you are concerned about the erosion
of your privacy in general, won't you please help us continue this
important work by becoming an "ISPI Supporter" or by taking out
an institute Membership?
We gratefully accept all contributions:
Less than $60 ISPI Supporter
$60 - $99 Primary ISPI Membership (1 year)
$100 - $300 Senior ISPI Membership (2 years)
More than $300 Executive Council Membership (life)
Your ISPI "membership" contribution entitles you to receive "The ISPI
Privacy Reporter" (our bi-monthly 12 page hard-copy newsletter in
multi-contributor format) for the duration of your membership.
For a contribution form with postal instructions please send the following
message "ISPI Contribution Form" to ISPI4Privacy@ama-gi.com .
We maintain a strict privacy policy. Any information you divulge to ISPI
is kept in strict confidence. It will not be sold, lent or given away to
any third party.