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JasonATexan
http://americablog.blogspot.com/2006/01/de...rry-reid-d.html

Reid just sent the following letter, below, to the Federal Communications Commission chairman in Washington, DC demanding an immediate investigation into how online brokers are obtaining private phone records of Americans, whether phone companies are doing enough to protect our privacy, and what laws if any are needed to fix this problem.

http://americablog.blogspot.com/reidfccletter.pdf
JasonATexan
http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-cell13.html

Blogger buys presidential candidate's call list

One of the nation's top political bloggers purchased the cell phone records of former presidential candidate Gen. Wesley Clark on Thursday to demonstrate the growing privacy concerns highlighted in a Chicago Sun-Times story last week.

John Aravosis, publisher of AMERICAblog.com, said he bought Clark's records for $89.95 from celltolls.com. Aravosis said he obtained a list of 100 calls made on Clark's cell phone over three days in November -- no questions asked.

Aravosis, whose liberal blog is critical of the Bush administration, said he called Clark's cell phone Thursday to make sure the former NATO supreme commander was informed Aravosis bought his records. Aravosis did not publish the numbers on his blog.

"I am not doing this to be mean, I am doing this to help people," Aravosis said. "I supported [Clark's] campaign when he was running in the beginning.

"This shows nobody's records are untouchable. . . . Wouldn't it be interesting to know who [Sun-Times columnist] Bob Novak was calling in the month that [CIA agent] Valerie Plame's name came out? How about [U.S. Attorney] Patrick Fitzgerald's phone calls?"

Clark said legal remedies are needed to stop companies from selling telephone records.

"When I learned today that my phone records were purchased for less than a hundred dollars I joined millions of Americans who worry about the invasion of their privacy that seems to be the growing price of technology," Clark said. "People should be able to trust that their privacy is being respected and protected by everyone from the government to our internet and mobile phone service providers. Clearly, this is not the case."

Clark urged consumers to contact their senators to urge passage of a law to order the Federal Trade Commission to "restore integrity to the system and give people back a reasonable degree of privacy."

Lawmakers take notice

The newspaper reported last week that dozens of Internet services are selling records of calls made on cell phones and land-based phones. The Sun-Times paid $110 to one such service, locatecell.com, to test the service and obtained a list of 78 calls this reporter made to relatives, law enforcement sources and fellow Sun-Times staffers.

Gov. Blagojevich has responded to the story by proposing laws banning sale of such phone records and tighten phone companies' control of the sensitive information.

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan is widening the list of Web-based phone record brokers she is subpoenaing to determine if the phone numbers are being obtained illegally from phone companies, her spokeswoman, Melissa Merz, said Thursday.

Last week's story revealed concerns at the FBI and the Chicago Police Department that officers' cell phone records could be obtained by criminals.

Also Thursday, MoveOn.org Civic Action, the 3.3-million-member activist group, launched an Internet petition calling on Congress to prohibit unauthorized sales of lists of calls made on cell phones. The petition was sent to 110,000 MoveOn members at 1:22 p.m. Central Time, and in the first four hours, more than 16,600 people signed it.

In Illinois alone, more than 1,800 people signed it during that period.

'It has to stop'

"Even at a time when privacy rights are under attack on multiple fronts, the idea that someone can go online and buy your phone records seems unbelievable," said Adam Green, a spokesman for MoveOn.org Civic Action. "But it is happening and it has to stop."

Because of the Sun-Times story, California and New York are considering legislation to combat a possible loophole in privacy laws. Federal laws require phone firms to protect customers' personal information, but they do not specifically outlaw the unauthorized acquisition of such information, experts say.
JasonATexan
http://americablog.blogspot.com/2006/01/op...now-online.html

The NBC Nightly News piece about cell phone records being for sale is now online. You can view it here, but you need Internet Explorer to view it (I don't know why).

http://video.msn.com/v/us/msnbc.htm?g=d17b...9f5962c3&f=copy

And here's CBS News' piece as well from tonight, you can use any browser for this one I think.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/01/12/...in1206518.shtml
winston smith
QUOTE(JasonATexan @ Jan 13 2006, 01:15 PM)
http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-cell13.html

Blogger buys presidential candidate's call list

One of the nation's top political bloggers purchased the cell phone records of former presidential candidate Gen. Wesley Clark on Thursday to demonstrate the growing privacy concerns highlighted in a Chicago Sun-Times story last week.

John Aravosis, publisher of AMERICAblog.com, said he bought Clark's records for $89.95 from celltolls.com. Aravosis said he obtained a list of 100 calls made on Clark's cell phone over three days in November -- no questions asked.

Aravosis, whose liberal blog is critical of the Bush administration, said he called Clark's cell phone Thursday to make sure the former NATO supreme commander was informed Aravosis bought his records. Aravosis did not publish the numbers on his blog.

"I am not doing this to be mean, I am doing this to help people," Aravosis said. "I supported [Clark's] campaign when he was running in the beginning.

"This shows nobody's records are untouchable. . . . Wouldn't it be interesting to know who [Sun-Times columnist] Bob Novak was calling in the month that [CIA agent] Valerie Plame's name came out? How about [U.S. Attorney] Patrick Fitzgerald's phone calls?"

Clark said legal remedies are needed to stop companies from selling telephone records.

"When I learned today that my phone records were purchased for less than a hundred dollars I joined millions of Americans who worry about the invasion of their privacy that seems to be the growing price of technology," Clark said. "People should be able to trust that their privacy is being respected and protected by everyone from the government to our internet and mobile phone service providers. Clearly, this is not the case."

Clark urged consumers to contact their senators to urge passage of a law to order the Federal Trade Commission to "restore integrity to the system and give people back a reasonable degree of privacy."

Lawmakers take notice

The newspaper reported last week that dozens of Internet services are selling records of calls made on cell phones and land-based phones. The Sun-Times paid $110 to one such service, locatecell.com, to test the service and obtained a list of 78 calls this reporter made to relatives, law enforcement sources and fellow Sun-Times staffers.

Gov. Blagojevich has responded to the story by proposing laws banning sale of such phone records and tighten phone companies' control of the sensitive information.

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan is widening the list of Web-based phone record brokers she is subpoenaing to determine if the phone numbers are being obtained illegally from phone companies, her spokeswoman, Melissa Merz, said Thursday.

Last week's story revealed concerns at the FBI and the Chicago Police Department that officers' cell phone records could be obtained by criminals.

Also Thursday, MoveOn.org Civic Action, the 3.3-million-member activist group, launched an Internet petition calling on Congress to prohibit unauthorized sales of lists of calls made on cell phones. The petition was sent to 110,000 MoveOn members at 1:22 p.m. Central Time, and in the first four hours, more than 16,600 people signed it.

In Illinois alone, more than 1,800 people signed it during that period.

'It has to stop'

"Even at a time when privacy rights are under attack on multiple fronts, the idea that someone can go online and buy your phone records seems unbelievable," said Adam Green, a spokesman for MoveOn.org Civic Action. "But it is happening and it has to stop."

Because of the Sun-Times story, California and New York are considering legislation to combat a possible loophole in privacy laws. Federal laws require phone firms to protect customers' personal information, but they do not specifically outlaw the unauthorized acquisition of such information, experts say.
*

Another reason NSA and BushCo didn't need to spy- all they had to do was buy the info on-line!... whistling.gif
FormerCIA
QUOTE(winston smith @ Jan 13 2006, 04:20 PM)
Another reason NSA and BushCo didn't need to spy- all they had to do was buy the info on-line!... whistling.gif
*


If the information was obtained fraudulently, then any legal action based on that information would be in jeopardy, but I guess that hasn't stopped them before.
JasonATexan
http://markey.house.gov/index.php?option=c...=646&Itemid=125

November 14, 2005- Selling Private Cell Phone Records Must Stop

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Representative Edward J. Markey (D-MA) Ranking Democrat on the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet, responded to recent news reports of the commercial availability of consumer telephone records by companies like www.celltolls.com and other web-based companies that sell private cell phone records for as low as $89.95. A CBS – 4 Boston news report detailed that consumer phone records and billing information are now available for sale on several Internet websites.

“It is ILLEGAL to disclose this information without the approval of telephone subscribers,” said Rep. Markey. “The privacy of American citizens is priceless -- the phone records of consumers should not be commodities for sale in any cyberspace bazaar.

“I am requesting that the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission take immediate action – we must make it clear to these companies that they cannot profit off of the exploitation of consumer privacy,” Markey continued.

Rep. Markey reacted swiftly to this violation of private consumer information sending a letter to Chairmen Kevin Martin of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and Deborah P. Majoras of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), requesting that immediate action be taken by the FCC and the FTC in order to halt the sale of consumers’ private information on a secret black market.

The letter sent to the trade and consumer agencies stated: “we must send a signal to the public and these website companies that the abuse of private information will not be tolerated.” The letter also requested that the agencies provide information regarding the steps that carriers are currently obligated to take under FCC rules to secure and protect consumer information.

For more information on Rep. Markey’s work to protect consumer privacy and for a copy of the letter sent to the FTC and FCC check out: www.house.gov/markey

Rep. Markey Letter to FTC and FCC, November 14, 2005

http://markey.house.gov/docs/telecomm/iss_...y_ltr051107.pdf
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