Excerpt:

As a new Senate privacy panel considers the data collected by iPhones,
Androids and BlackBerrys, the Department of Justice is reminding lawmakers
that it needs Internet providers to store more data about their users to
help with federal investigations.

Current law doesn't require those Internet service providers to "retain any
data for any particular length of time," although some already do, said
Jason Weinstein, deputy assistant attorney general at the DOJ's Criminal
Division. And many wireless companies — which must collect some data — also
"do not retain records that would enable law enforcement to identify a
suspect's smartphone based on the IP address collected by websites the
suspect visited," he noted in prepared testimony.

That's why Weinstein urged the Senate Judiciary’s Privacy, Technology and
the Law subcommittee on Tuesday to consider data-retention legislation as it
weighs new privacy efforts in the digital age. The top DOJ official said
such a congressional fix would boost the agency's ability to investigate
privacy breaches, prosecute other digital crimes and ferret out abuses in
the offline world.

"Those records are an absolutely necessary link in the investigative chain,"
Weinstein told the panel.

Data retention has proven to be a particularly divisive issue in the privacy
community. Some top tech stakeholders believe it would allow companies and
law enforcement agencies too much access to consumers' personal information,
such as the websites they visit. The resulting caches of information could
further be subject to data breach, many argue.

But data-retention rules are particularly appealing to DOJ, which argued at
a hearing earlier this year that such legislation would assist greatly with
cyberstalking and other tough law enforcement investigations. Weinstein
stressed Tuesday the department seeks a law that would require providers to
keep records for a “reasonable period of time,” and seeks a “balance”
between the needs of law enforcement, private industry and consumers.

Read more here:  link <http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0511/54658.html>
J

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There are many who find a good alibi far more attractive than an
achievement. For an achievement does not settle anything permanently. We
still have to prove our worth anew each day: we have to prove that we are as
good today as we were yesterday. But when we have a valid alibi for not
achieving anything we are fixed, so to speak, for life. - Eric Hoffer

America is the worst place for alibis. Sooner or later the most solid alibi
begins to sound hollow. - Eric H

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