http://www.nandotimes.com/technology/story/0,1643,500171461-500220807- 
501048365-0,00.html

KGB successor said to penetrate Internet

Copyright  2000 Nando Media
Copyright  2000 Associated Press


By SERGEI SHARGORODSKY

MOSCOW (February 21, 2000 9:07 p.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) - 
The KGB's successor is now also spying on the Internet, raising fears 
that the information it collects could be used for blackmail and 
business espionage.

"The whole Federal Security Service will be crying tomorrow over your 
love letters," warns one of the banners angry Russian Web designers 
have posted on the Internet.

Russian human-rights and free-speech advocates say the security 
service has already forced many of the country's 350 Internet service 
providers to install surveillance equipment.

"Most Internet providers in Moscow, including all the large providers 
and many in the provinces, have opened a hole" for security agents to 
peep at traf�c, said Anatoly Levenchuk, a Russian Internet expert.

Like its counterparts in other countries, the Federal Security 
Service may argue it needs the monitoring system to catch spies, 
terrorists and bandits, and to combat black-market businesses and 
capital �ight.

<snip>

[Note from Matt:  Hmmm,  doesn't that last sentence have a familiar 
ring to it? During previous appearances on Capitol Hill, Freeh has 
warned of drug smugglers, child pornographers, spies, and terrorists 
cloaking their communications with impunity. ]


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