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Sunday, July 22, 2012


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Since Microsoft bought Skype, has the chat client started working more with law enforcement?
Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images



Skype Won't Say Whether It Can Eavesdrop on Your Conversations




New surveillance laws being proposed in countries from the United States to Australiawould force makers of online chat software to build in backdoors for wiretapping. For years, the popular video chat service Skype has resisted taking part in online surveillance—but that may have changed. And if it has, Skype’s not telling.
Historically, Skype has been a major barrier to law enforcement agencies. Using strong encryption and complex peer-to-peer network connections, Skype was considered by most to be virtually impossible to intercept. Police forces in Germany complained in 2007 that they couldn’t spy on Skype calls and even hired a company to develop covert Trojans to record suspects’ chats. At around the same time, Skype happily went on record saying that it could not conduct wiretaps because of its “peer-to-peer architecture and encryption techniques.”
Recently, however, hackers alleged that Skype made a change to its architecture this spring that could possibly make it easier to enable “lawful interception” of calls. Skype rejected the charge in a comment issued to the website Extremetech, saying the restructure was an upgrade and had nothing to do with surveillance. But when I repeatedly questioned the company on Wednesday whether it could currently facilitate wiretap requests, a clear answer was not forthcoming. Citing “company policy,” Skype PR man Chaim Haas wouldn’t confirm or deny, telling me only that the chat service “co-operates with law enforcement agencies as much as is legally and technically possible.”




House guest charged with killing Michigan couple, whose dismembered bodies were found in river




Carlos Osorio/Associated Press - The house of a man and a woman whose decapitated bodies were pulled from the Detroit River and a creek in Detroit is shown in Allen Park, Mich., Friday, July 20, 2012.

ALLEN PARK, Mich. — A 39-year-old house guest has been charged with killing a suburban Detroit couple who’d been hosting him, dismembering their bodies and dumping them in a river.





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