Update:  The bill described below was passed.

See http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d108:s.02845:

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<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Expect: That after this Wednesday night, your most private/personal
information can be distributed and sold on the street if this bill passed:

Don't expect Databases with billions of records on Americans in the hands
of local cops to stay confidential in your town, from your neighbors and
local business associates. If this bill passes, private information about
Citizens can be passed out like canday, distributed to thousands of
sources without probable cause. There will be no stopping it. Mere contact
with an activist or organization on a government watch list will be enough
for the government to open up your private files to hundreds of agencies
and local police. That includes copies of emails you have sent to
organizations and individuals the government considers worth watching. If
this bill passes, some employers can pay to have access to your personal
records through companies that have contracts with government information
databases.  Is this still a government for and by the people?



http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,65242,00.html

Senate Wants Database Dragnet
By Ryan Singel

The Senate could pass a bill as early as Wednesday evening that would let
government counter-terrorist investigators instantly query a massive
system of interconnected commercial and government databases that hold
billions of records on Americans.

The proposed network is based on the Markle Foundation Task Force's
December 2003 report, which envisioned a system that would allow FBI and
CIA agents, as well as police officers and some companies, to quickly
search intelligence, criminal and commercial databases. The proposal is so
radical, the bill allocates $50 million just to fund the system's
specifications and privacy policies.

The Senate will likely have its final vote on the bill, sponsored by
Joseph Lieberman (D-Connecticut) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), Wednesday
night. The draft of the bill was based on recommendations of the so-called
9/11 Commission, which investigated the United States' lapse in
intelligence and security procedures prior to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

To prevent abuses of the system, the Markle task force recommended
anonymized technology, graduated levels of permission-based access and
automated auditing software constantly hunting for abuses.

An appendix to the report went so far as to suggest that the system should
"identify known associates of the terrorist suspect, within 30 seconds,
using shared addressees, records of phone calls to and from the suspect's
phone, e-mails to and from the suspect's accounts, financial transactions,
travel history and reservations, and common memberships in organizations,
including (with appropriate safeguards) religious and expressive
organizations."

But task force member James X. Dempsey, director of the Center for
Democracy & Technology, says the commercial records involved are more
limited public records, such as home ownership data, not information about
what mosque someone belongs to.

He said he believes it's "absurd" to prohibit the FBI from using a
commercial database like ChoicePoint to find a suspected terrorist's home
address (though the FBI currently can and does do this). On the other
hand, he asked, "Should they be able to go to ChoicePoint and ask for all
the subscribers to Gun Owners Monthly? No, I don't think so."

The proposed network would not look for patterns in data warehouses to
attempt to detect terrorist activities, Dempsey said. Instead, an
investigator would start with a name and the system would try to see what
information is known about that person.

But critics say the Senate is moving too fast and the network could
infringe on civil liberties. Lawmakers are taking a "boil the ocean"
approach, according to Robert Griffin, president of Knowledge Computing.
His company runs Coplink, a widely used system for linking law enforcement
databases. Despite being a supporter of increased information sharing,
Griffin criticized the proposal for trying too much too soon and relying
too heavily on commercial data.

"The next Mohammed Atta is not going to be found in commercial databases,"
Griffin said, referring to the tactical leader of the 9/11 attacks. "We
are going to stop him running a red light somewhere, and we are going to
run relationships associations with this guy and we are going to say, gee,
you have things in common with guys on watch lists. That's how you are
going to find the guy -- not because he has bad credit."

Civil liberties lawyer Lee Tien of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
accused Congress of "institutional laziness" for not holding hearings on
the proposal to hear the perspectives of advocates for consumers or
battered women. Tien also argued that a widespread lack of privacy and due
process protections would make data sharing dangerous.

"If someone transfers your credit report or medical history, you have no
way of knowing," Tien said. "The natural feedback we expect in the
physical world just doesn't work in the area of information. You have to
be careful."

Tien is not alone in his concern. On Monday, more than 40 organizations,
ranging from the American Association of Law Libraries to the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People, signed on to an open
letter (.pdf) to Congress asking members to include adequate civil
liberties safeguards in the pending legislation.

However, technology professor Dave Farber said that his work on the task
force convinced him the task force's model was a "critical" tool in the
fight against terrorists.

"A lot of (task force members) were very uncomfortable about data
sharing," Farber said. "But all of us at the end felt confident that if
the recommendations were followed, it was as good as it was going to get
relative to privacy protections."


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