...the Gestapo...
The Bush administration has accelerated its Internet surveillance push by proposing that Web sites must keep records of who uploads photographs or videos in case police determine the content is illegal and choose to investigate, CNET News.com has learned.That proposal surfaced Wednesday in a private meeting during which U.S. Department of Justice officials, including Assistant Attorney General Rachel Brand, tried to convince industry representatives such as AOL and Comcast that data retention would be valuable in investigating terrorism, child pornography and other crimes. The discussions were described to News.com by several people who attended the meeting.
Amazing how it all goes back to "keeping America safe from terrorists...". Give those bastards an inch and they take a mile. Read this little snippet:
Only universities and libraries would be excluded, one participant said. "There's a PR concern with including the libraries, so we're not going to include them," the participant quoted the Justice Department as saying. "We know we're going to get a pushback, so we're not going to do that."
Wow...thats mighty nice of them to give the libraries a break.
And of course we have our Republican friends (and Rep. Diana DeGette, a Colorado Democrat) to thank for this wonderful piece of legislation:
All Internet service providers would need to track their customers' online activities to aid police in future investigations under legislation introduced Tuesday as part of a Republican "law and order agenda."
Employees of any Internet provider who fail to store that information face fines and prison terms of up to one year, the bill says. The U.S. Justice Department could order the companies to store those records forever.
Where does it stop...?
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Stopped?
Justin: "Where does it stop...?"
I realize that your question was likely rhetorical, Justin, but may I offer my optimistic prediction?
From the time the initial version of the Patriot Act was introduced in 2001, support for this type of legislation was inextirpably related to support for first a hypothetical "war on terrorism, then a very real such war.
Although support for both the hypothetical and the real war have waned in recent years, the Patriot Act was nevertheless renewed in March, 2006 with much less support from legislators than at its introduction in 2001 (with only one dissenter in the Senate then, you may recall).
Since March, 2006, our November elections *should* have confirmed for Congress our growing disatisfaction with this "war on terrorism," and, to the extent that legislation of this sort is inextirpably related to that effort, our growing disatisfaction with the methods Congress has employed to fight it.
Where does it stop, then? Personally, I am guardedly optimistic that it stopped in November, 2006--and that this legislation will meet with failure.
Here may be another
Here may be another harbinger of Spring after a long, long Winter.
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