For McConnell, Security Trumps Privacy

Privacy and security has always been a tug-of-war issue: The argument is you have to give up some privacy to get some security. Mike McConnell, the director of national intelligence, is working on a cybersecurity plan that would ask Americans to give up a lot of privacy to get their security, according to a New Yorker article. (Subscription required.)

The proposal that is getting the most attention is giving the government the ability to search "the content of any email, file transfer or web search," according to an article on vnunet.com.

According to that article, the New Yorker author, Lawrence Wright:

suggested that this kind of monitoring is already going on. He spoke to an AT& T employee, Mark Klein, who claimed that he installed data switching systems in the company's exchange that copied all internet traffic to the National Security Agency.

"I know that whatever went across those cables was copied and the entire data stream was copied," said Klein. "We are talking about domestic as well as international traffic."

He added that previous claims by the Bush administration that only international communications were being intercepted are not accurate.

NEXT STORY: Web Headlines