Home ministry differ over data interception [ap2 irons]
Differences have emerged between the home and telecom ministries
over the role of mobile phone companies in monitoring and intercepting
communication services for security purposes.The interior ministry,
headed by P Chidambaram,The cheap anime wholesale
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shoe wants to discontinue about 14 communication services that
intelligence agencies cannot track currently, a view that is not shared
by the telecom department (DoT), as per its internal documents that
were viewed by ET.
Also, DoT does not support the interior ministry's stance that
mobile phone companies be made responsible to provide assistance to
decrypt all the services they provide. Besides,When TaylorMade's
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irons. DoT's internal documents also add that the information
technology ministry as well as the industry supported its stance on
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This can be either because of their leadership and commitmentDoT's take
on this issue will be welcomed by mobile phone companies, who have
repeatedly maintained they cannot be asked to ban services which cannot
be monitored.
These differences have emerged even as the home ministry has urged
DoT to act against BlackBerry-maker Research in Motion on the grounds
that the 'interception tools provided by the Canadian company for
monitoring its messenger and internet services were not satisfactory'
as security agencies have been unable to access these services in a
'readable format'.
DoT, in a separate note to communication minister Kapil Sibal
(which was viewed by ET) has said a decision on banning BlackBerry and
other communication services, which have high levels of encryption,
must only be taken after 'various aspects like international relations,
commercial issues, implica- tions of other industries, legal and
regulatory issues and views of other ministries' are studied. ET had
reported on March 16 that DoT had named Google's Gmail and email
services running on BlackBerry and Nokia among 15 communication
services that cannot be tracked, while accepting the only option was to
build capabilities of intelligence agencies to monitor and intercept
these technologies.
DoT had then pointed out that interception in most countries was
carried out by security agencies on their own and the role of mobile
operators is limited to providing feedback.RIM has been involved in a
threeyear battle with Indian security agencies, which are demanding
access to all BlackBerry communications, citing national security
threats. It has also been battling similar demands across several
countries.
The company has repeatedly maintained that it cannot provide access
to its enterprise services (BES) or corporate emails on its handsets as
its networks were designed in such a manner that neither it, nor mobile
operators, could access the information flowing through it.
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