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by ewoodrich 4648 days ago
This bill died in committee quite a while ago, and the relevant section is available here:

http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/F?c102:1:./temp/~c102EXL...:

What is specifically objectionable to you? The quote you provided seems to be the only substantive reference to electronic communication and extremely toothless/redundant. (wouldn't telcos be assumed to be compelled to release "lawful" requests by default?)

1 comments

It's not about questioning the law, it's about uncovering the internal works of the law. My previous readings pointed to this bill as one of the earliest regulations that was used by everything in plain text. A nice way to describe backdoors without saying them explicitly, especially if the product claims to be secure from snooping. But what message does it send that the law orders you to screw your customers?

This specific bill might have died (I'm sure the patriot act superseded it), but every NSA-related revelation (and the FBI ones ~3 years ago) point in a direction that something similar is still in effect.

oops, something deleted the part: [that was used by] US government to access [everything in plain text.]