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Big Brother Could Be Watching You
Online Casinos | October 22 2006
Comment: Notice how this site starts caring about Big Brother society and the destruction of freedom only when it becomes apparent that people might not be able to play online poker anymore.
U.S. Justice Dept. Officials Continue
Push for Increased Net-Monitoring
A call by FBI director Robert Mueller that Internet service providers (ISPs)
should record and store records of their customers' online activities to
a greater degree than that currently mandated by law, sent a chill down
libertarian and other spines this week.
Poker industry observers, already highly sensitive following the introduction
of laws that seek to interfere in player financial transactions with online
sites, negatively interpreted the move as another advance on personal privacy
rights.
One writer opined that the suggestion was part of the greater battle between
governmental control and the freedom and flow of information that the Internet
represents, predicting that it is likely to trigger fierce debate as privacy
and law-enforcement concerns butt heads in a legal battle that's now expected
to occur early in 2007.
The end-of-session flurry of activity precluded such a user-monitoring ISP
measure from being enacted in recent weeks, although the U.S. Justice Department
did try to sneak it by in a manner similar to that used for the passage
of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act [UIGEA].
According to a CNetNews.com article, 'Justice Department officials admit
privately that data retention' [the term used for the proposed practice]
'legislation is controversial enough that there wasn't time to ease it through
the U.S. Congress before politicians left to campaign for re-election.'
Data retention, as proposed by FBI Director Mueller, various states' attorneys
general and legislators such as Colorado's U.S. representative Diane DeGette,
takes one of two forms.
The first is to require ISPs, 'social' network sites and search engines
to log and store for a year or two the identifying IP [Internet Protocol]
address of each user.
The second proposed form is broader and even more offensive to civil-liberties
purists, requiring companies to record and store the identities of e-mail
correspondents, instant-messaging logs and users, and the addresses of web
pages visited.
As expected, the Justice Department seized on the extreme examples of Internet
misuse to justify this erosion of civil liberties, citing child pornography,
terrorism and money laundering. That last item was used as justification
for the UIGEA's passage as well, despite the fact that there is not a single
documented case of revenues from online poker sites being part of a laundered-money
scheme.
The fact that technologies already exist to circumvent much of the control
that data-retention legislation is designed to put in place, is being ignored,
claimed a writer - and it's a safe bet that the more egregious the violators,
the more likely they are to use these already existing tools.
One example is that of anonymizing web browsers, such as Torpark, which
re-route or otherwise obfuscate an Internet user's real identity; these
browsers are certainly in use by criminal elements but are gaining a much
wider mainstream audience, a direct response to some of the extreme freedom-restricting
measures being enacted by the U.S. and a few other governments.
Few online poker players realize that the ISP-blocking provisions of the
UIGEA are already of little value should an online player choose to circumvent
them. Poker sites already exist that are based on Shockwave Flash technology,
and when one combines the way these sites work with the data-encrypting
capabilities of a Torpark-style web browser, the IP addresses of both the
user and the online site are encrypted and never make it to the point at
the user's home ISP where address blocking would occur.
Data-retention laws make common sense on the surface, as no one wants to
see child pornographers or terrorists using the Internet for such purposes.
However, it's the making of data storage mandatory, imposing such extreme
time requirements - up to two years - and the forcing of yet another non-funded
mandate onto the private sector that has freedom-of-information defenders
up in arms.
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