Canadian voice recognition article

Prof. L. P. Levine levine at blatz.cs.uwm.edu
Wed Feb 9 13:22:25 PST 1994


May I post this in your name in my comuter privacy digest?  I got this
from a source here on campus.  Do I have your permission?

 ---------------------------------+-----------------------------------------
Leonard P. Levine                 | Moderator of Computer Privacy Digest and
Professor of Computer Science     | comp.society.privacy.
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee | Post:                comp-privacy at uwm.edu
Box 784, Milwaukee WI 53201       | Information: comp-privacy-request at uwm.edu
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Craig McKie muttered something about...
>From owner-cypherpunks at toad.com  Thu Feb  3 19:52:39 1994
From: cmckie at ccs.carleton.ca (Craig McKie)
Message-Id: <9402040124.AA03270 at superior.YP.nobel>
Subject: Canadian voice recognition article
To: cypherpunks at toad.com
Date: Thu, 3 Feb 94 20:24:59 EST
X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11]

Spy Agency works on eavesdropping device for phones, faxes
New snoop gadget would identify voices carried through air

The Canadian Press

Used on page 1, Ottawa Citizen, Monday January 31, 1994

   An elite wing of Canada's spy agency is secretly developing devices
that can monitor and identify voices carried through the air by phone,
fax and radio signals, according to a broadcast report citing
government documents.
   The Communications Security Establishment is a super-secret branch
of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service that specializes in
gathering signals intelligence - SIGINT to insiders.
   Since 1989, the CSE has awarded three contracts worth $1.1 million
to a Montreal firm to make machines that can quickly isolate key words
and phrases from the millions of signals the CSE monitors each day,
CTV reported Sunday.
   In May 1983, the CSE awarded the Centre de Recherche Informatique
de Montreal a contract to develop a "speaker identification system,"
which can pick voices from the electronic haze and identify them.
   "Its frightening," says Bill Robinson, a researcher with the peace
group, Project Ploughshares. "It has Orwellian potential to sweep
through everybody's conversations. As computers get faster and faster,
theoretically, one would be able to keep records of all
conversations."
   The CSE is supposed to provide the federal government with foreign
intelligence, but parliamentarians have often voiced concerns about
the agency's potential to violate the privacy of Canadians.
   Liberal MP Derek Lee, the head of a Commons committee that oversees
Canada's spy agency, said the CSE is overstepping its mandate.
   "Have they been asked, or have they decided for themselves to take
on a new role that requires them to analyse the human voice? And if
they have, they've gone beyond what I think they've told us."
   The CSE is accountable to Parliament through the defence minister.
   But Defense Minister David Colonette told CTV her was unaware of
the CSE's latest electronic snooping projects.
   "This is the first I've heard of this," Collenette said. "It is
certainly something I'll discuss with my officials."
   While in Opposition, the Liberals pledged to make the CSE more
accountable.
   With a budget of about $250 milliojn and more than 800 employees
the CSE operates out of a building on Heron Road in Confederation
Heights surrounded by a barbed-wire fence.
   Its work is considered so sensitive that employees are told not to
take commercial flights, in case the plane is hijacked and they are
held hostage.



-- 
e x  t  r   a   p   o  l  a  t e			       steve j. white
_____________________________________________________________________________

Gort, klatu barada nicto.			     aragorn at csd4.csd.uwm.edu






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