Book ID: CBB949296828

Redesigning Wiretapping: The Digitization of Communications Interception (2020)

unapi

This book tells the story of government-sponsored wiretapping in Britain and the United States from the rise of telephony in the 1870s until the terrorist attacks of 9/11.It pays particular attention to the 1990s, which marked one of the most dramatic turns in the history of telecommunications interception. During that time, fiber optic and satellite networks rapidly replaced the copper-based analogue telephone system that had remained virtually unchanged since the 1870s. That remarkable technological advance facilitated the rise of the networked home computer, cellular telephony, and the Internet, and users hailed the dawn of the digital information age. However, security agencies such as the FBI and MI5 were concerned. Since the emergence of telegraphy in the 1830s, security services could intercept private messages using wiretaps, and this was facilitated by some of the world's largest telecommunications monopolies such as AT&T in the US and British Telecom in the UK. The new, digital networks were incompatible with traditional wiretap technology. To make things more complicated for the security services, these monopolies had been privatized and broken up into smaller companies during the 1980s, and in the new deregulated landscape the agencies had to seek assistance from thousands of startup companies that were often unwilling to help. So for the first time in history, technological and institutional changes posed a threat to the security services’ wiretapping activities, and government officials in Washington and London acted quickly to protect their ability to spy, they sought to force the industry to change the very architecture of the digital telecommunications network.This book describes in detail the tense negotiations between governments, the telecommunications industry, and civil liberties groups during an unprecedented moment in history when the above security agencies were unable to wiretap. It reveals for the first time the thoughts of some of the protagonists in these crucial negotiations, and explains why their outcome may have forever altered the trajectory of our information society.

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Authors & Contributors
Sara Garcia Santamaria
Weiss, Linda
Brian Hochman
Kellison, Robert C.
Wallinger, R. Scott
Corrina Laughlin
Journals
Social Studies of Science
Public Understanding of Science
Business and Economic History On-Line
American Heritage of Invention and Technology
Publishers
Oxford University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
Harvard University Press
University Press of Florida
University of California Press
Society for the History of Technology and the American Historical Association
Concepts
Technology and government
Technological innovation
Communication technology
Technology and society
Technology
Communications, digital
Time Periods
20th century
21st century
19th century
18th century
Modern
20th century, late
Places
United States
Great Britain
Southern states (U.S.)
England
Cuba
Wales
Institutions
International Telecommunications Satellite Organization
Marconi Company
International Telephone and Telegraph Company
International Business Machines Corporation
National Health Service (Great Britain)
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