Government surveillance and privacy violations
October 13th, 2007
Today the EFF confronted congress on the government’s surveillance of Americans and on the repercussions to those Americans’ privacy that could result. The government is collecting vast amounts of personal data and storing them in those oh so secure government databases:
We have all heard about security problems with government databases. A report from the Department of Homeland Security found 477 breaches in 2006 alone.
These databases are a black hat hacker’s dream come true. This is, of course, why OpenID is such a great idea. Sure it has its problems, but using OpenID means that login data doesn’t need to be distributed across the Internet at every website you visit. This decreases the black hats’ vector of attack tremendously. If I could have all of my login data being held at VeriSign, instead of having some of it at Yahoo, some at Tumblr, and some at Facebook… I’d be fine with that.
Anyway, while the distributed login data issue has a solution in sight, the government surveillance issue does not. The RESTORE Act will hopefully reinstate those checks and balances that were lost when the Protect America Act granted the telecoms immunity when helping the NSA spy on Americans. So I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: Support the EFF!




