11 Jul 2007 08:27
DEA key logger used to eavesdrop in real time on alleged drug manufacturers [priv]
Declan McCullagh <declan <at> well.com>
2007-07-11 06:27:00 GMT
2007-07-11 06:27:00 GMT
I've posted excerpts from the DEA PDFs at the link below and could post the PDFs themselves if there's sufficient interest. Previous Politech message, from way back in December 2000: http://www.politechbot.com/p-01545.html -Declan ---- http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-9741357-7.html Feds use key logger to thwart PGP, Hushmail July 10, 2007 4:45 AM PDT A recent court case provides a rare glimpse into how some federal agents deal with encryption: by breaking into a suspect's home or office, implanting keystroke-logging software, and spying on what happens from afar. An agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration persuaded a federal judge to authorize him to sneak into an Escondido, Calif., office believed to be a front for manufacturing the drug MDMA, or Ecstasy. The DEA received permission to copy the hard drives' contents and inject a keystroke logger into the computers. That was necessary, according to DEA Agent Greg Coffey, because the suspects were using PGP and the encrypted Web e-mail service Hushmail.com. Coffey asserted that the DEA needed "real-time and meaningful access" to "monitor the keystrokes" for PGP and Hushmail passphrases.(Continue reading)
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