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green73
07-10-2013, 07:48 AM
WASHINGTON (AP) -- How much are your private conversations worth to the government? Turns out, it can be a lot, depending on the technology.

In the era of intense government surveillance and secret court orders, a murky multimillion-dollar market has emerged. Paid for by U.S. tax dollars, but with little public scrutiny, surveillance fees charged in secret by technology and phone companies can vary wildly.

AT&T, for example, imposes a $325 "activation fee" for each wiretap and $10 a day to maintain it. Smaller carriers Cricket and U.S. Cellular charge only about $250 per wiretap. But snoop on a Verizon customer? That costs the government $775 for the first month and $500 each month after that, according to industry disclosures made last year to Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass.

Meanwhile, email records like those amassed by the National Security Agency through a program revealed by former NSA systems analyst Edward Snowden probably were collected for free or very cheaply. Facebook says it doesn't charge the government for access. And while Microsoft, Yahoo and Google won't say how much they charge, the American Civil Liberties Union found that email records can be turned over for as little as $25.

Industry says it doesn't profit from the hundreds of thousands of government eavesdropping requests it receives each year, and civil liberties groups want businesses to charge. They worry that government surveillance will become too cheap as companies automate their responses. And if companies gave away customer records for free, wouldn't that encourage uncalled-for surveillance?

But privacy advocates also want companies to be upfront about what they charge and alert customers after an investigation has concluded that their communications were monitored.

"What we don't want is surveillance to become a profit center," said Christopher Soghoian, the ACLU's principal technologist. But "it's always better to charge $1. It creates friction, and it creates transparency" because it generates a paper trail that can be tracked.

Regardless of price, the surveillance business is growing. The U.S. government long has enjoyed access to phone networks and high-speed Internet traffic under the U.S. Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act to catch suspected criminals and terrorists. More recently, the FBI has pushed technology companies like Google and Skype to guarantee access to real-time communications on their services. And, as shown by recent disclosures about the NSA's surveillance practices, the U.S. intelligence community has an intense interest in analyzing data and content that flow through American technology companies to gather foreign intelligence.

The FBI said it could not say how much it spends on industry reimbursements because payments are made through a variety of programs, field offices and case funds. In an emailed statement, the agency said when charges are questionable, it requests an explanation and tries to work with the carrier to understand its cost structure.

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http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_PRICE_OF_SURVEILLANCE?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2013-07-10-03-30-40

DamianTV
07-11-2013, 02:19 AM
People do not get Privacy.

If they can not get you to pay maximum price for the stuff they sell, YOU become the thing that is being bought and sold. When you have no privacy, your ideas are not your own. You are told what to think because you will meet a particular profile. And if that profile meets certain criteria, you will be shipped away to the nearest (or farthest, depending on Govt waste) Concentration Camp. Your crime will be something horrible. After all, what do you care about privacy? You do nothing wrong so you have nothing to hide, right? And applying for that new job certainly isnt illegal, but in the eyes of your current employer, it most certainly is wrong. And having been fired, you get no unemployment benefits, and most likely cant afford a lawyer to fight their decision. You are disposable. Everyone that demands that you should have no Right to Privacy will benefit from using that knowledge against you. You may be held accountable for each and every one of the Three Felonies Per Day that you commit (National Average). So you have a choice. You can buy their products and do as you are told. Or you can not buy their products, in which case, your Information is sold. And if you resist having your Information bought and sold as if it were not your property, you can still be made profitable by turning you over to the Prison Industrial Complex, where profits come from your incarceration. You are bought, sold, and thrown away in favor of someone that knows their place and accepts what they are told to accept without question, and they will always have a profitable place to put you.

Without Privacy, you become the Disposable Product.