actually the prices are the least of my worry regarding calea.

i am more worried about some untrusted device on my network.
assuming i would have to give root on the at least tap device 
to the trusted third party. i've been told by some TTPs i would 
need to provide credentials for every device on my network. imo 
this a recipe for disaster.

if that is the case what is keeping someone at the calea provider 
from using my subscriber's traffic for their own personal gain?
who guarantees the integrity of the TTP? what if they get caught 
doing the above, who is liable? i imagine we are.

at a national level it seems silly to entrust random entities 
with national security issues. is there any sort of certification 
for these companies?

on the international level, if there is no certification process
to test the ability to become a calea provider, what is stopping 
some rogue nation from creating a TTP infrastructure to spy with?

Ed 


On Sun, 29 Apr 2007 01:02:25 -0700
George Rogato <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Those prices don't make me happy either. I have not heard an official 
> anything yet from the wispa calea group. I don't believe they are done 
> with their activities.
> It would be good to hear what they have to say concerning methods of 
> compliance and costs.
> 
> 
> I read a doc that said a 15k isp could be 150k it also said it knew some 
> isps had meager budgets and they said they will deal with that. I would 
> assume they were not going to bankrupt a small isp.
> 
> -- 
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