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VoIP legislation runs into opposition

By Grant Gross , IDG News Service , 06/16/2004
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U.S. Senate legislation that would exempt VoIP service from most state and federal regulation ran into objections from several groups, including the U.S. Department of Justice, which says the bill could allow terrorists and criminals to circumvent wiretaps.

The VoIP Regulatory Freedom Act of 2004, sponsored by Senator John Sununu, would exempt VoIP service from a wire-tapping regulation called the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, or CALEA, commonly used to listen in on traditional telephone calls, said Laura Parsky, deputy assistant attorney general for the DOJ's criminal division.

"I am here to underscore how very important it is that this type of telephone service not become a haven for criminals, terrorists and spies," Parsky told the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee Wednesday. "If any particular technology is singled out for special exemption from these requirements, that technology will quickly attract criminals and create a hole in law enforcement's ability to protect the public and national security."

A bill defining VoIP as an unregulated information service instead of a heavily regulated telecommunications service is needed before dozens of state regulators begin to tax and regulate the promising technology, Sununu said. Heavy regulation would "stifle innovation and discourage investment" in VoIP services, Sununu added.

Sununu and other supporters of his bill said the DOJ and other law enforcement agencies have other methods of tracking communications over the Internet, including court orders requiring Internet companies to release communications to police. The DOJ's current CALEA petition to the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) doesn't ask for CALEA access to such technologies as instant messaging, e-mail and peer-to-peer services, Sununu noted.

"Do you think the terrorists are not smart enough to read the petition?" Sununu said to Parsky. "Do you think the terrorists are not smart enough to use e-mail?"

The DOJ has attempted to single out VoIP as an Internet technology that has to comply with the CALEA rules, Sununu told Parsky. Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), asked Parsky for examples of criminals now using VoIP to avoid wiretaps, but she couldn't provide one. "It seems to me you are looking for a remedy for a problem that has not yet been documented," Wyden said.

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