VoIP is ready to cause another set of legal headaches when it comes to lawful intercept, says Eric Litchblau, New York Times reporter and author of a book on federal wiretapping. The NSA can't tap Americans' conversations without a warrant, but VoIP doesn't give clear distinctions on the location of either a caller or a call recipient, unlike POTS.
If you can't determine the physical location of a caller, does that make the call fair game for intercept? Nobody really knows where the NSA has drawn the lines because government electronic surveillance work is classified, but after 9/11, the agency may err on the side of caution and more data collected.
Surprisingly, Litchblau doesn't think much of publicly available encryption and efforts such as the Zfone [1] solution as a showstopper for government wiretapping. He suggests more money has been funneled into the intelligence community to close a supposed technology gap, but there hasn't been a widespread outcry by Congress and government agencies to place limits on encryption.
For more:
- Litchblau's interview on government
wiretapping [2] by Forbes
Related articles:
Hyping
VoIP encryption [3]
Links:
[1] http://zfoneproject.com/
[2] http://www.forbes.com/technology/2008/05/15/wiretapping-voip-lichtblau-tech-security08-cx_ag_0515wiretap.html
[3] http://www.fierceenterprisecommunications.com/story/hyping-voip-encryption/2008-05-05