[about the FBI supposedly wanting the ability to tap 1% of all phones in the US simultaneously] EPIC, CDT, and the original source confirm that they're talking about capacity, not total circuits. So what the FBI was asking for (not demanding, certainly not dicatating) by early 1999 (not Oct 1998, because the ticker starts at the end of the comment period) was between 0.25% and 1% of the 10-20% of lines that the phone system can handle at once, or between 0.025% and 0.2% of the lines. Of course the FBI doesn't have the staff to listen to all these lines, and they need an individual court order to authorize each individual interception, so this numbers game is a bit of a joke. There is no controversy about the number of wiretaps that have been authorized, except as manufactured by the Spotlight folks and other conspiracy loons. The EPIC FOIA request and lawsuit concerns the rationale for the FBI's capacity request. It all makes a little more sense now. I had been wondering what the hell the FBI had been smoking. Something not quite as strong as the stuff the Spotlight people are smoking, it turns out. The FBI proposal is still Not A Good Thing, and deserves your interest and opposition. See http://www.epic.org/privacy/wiretap/oppose_wiretap.html for facts and reasonable responses. The CDT's page, at http://www.cdt.org/digtel.html, is better. -rich