Interesting People mailing list archives

IP: A big story, I think: "Single-Number Plan Raises Privacy Fears"


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Sun, 02 Sep 2001 18:14:13 -0400



This is a real concern that will haunt us if we ignore it now.. djf

From: bdolan () usit net
To: "David Farber" <farber () linc cis upenn edu>

As I'm sure you know, the "Telcordia" referenced below used to be Bellcore.

bd

Single-Number Plan Raises Privacy
              Fears
                Technology: System would link
              telephones, faxes and Web addresses
              while creating giant databases.

              By JUBE SHIVER Jr.,
              Times Staff Writer

              WASHINGTON -- A
              controversial technology
              under development by the
              communications industry
              that links Internet
              addresses with phone
              numbers has quietly
              picked up key government
              support as concern
              mounts among critics
              that the technology will
              broadly undermine
              privacy.

              The technology, known as
              e-number, or ENUM, would
              link phone numbers to
              codes that computer
              servers use to route
              traffic on the Web.
              Proponents say the
              technology would improve
              communication for
              consumers and marketers
              alike.

              The industry envisions a
              sophisticated electronic
              address book that would
              be able to direct
              messages to virtually
              any fax machine,
              computer or telephone,
              using a new 11-digit
              e-number. As a result, a
              fax could be sent to
              someone who lacked a fax
              machine but had an
              e-mail address.
              Likewise, cell phone
              users would only have to key in
              11-digits to send e-mail, not a
              cumbersome alphanumeric address.

              But privacy advocates fear the
              system could undermine online
              privacy and erode the security of
              the public phone system as well.
              They worry that the system would
              destroy a pillar of Internet
              privacy: the assumption by users
              that they enjoy anonymity in
              cyberspace.

              The government's endorsement of the
              technology, disclosed in interviews
              and outlined in an Aug. 21 letter
              distributed to an industry group, is
              seen as critical in pushing it
              forward.

              "The United States does see merit in
              pursing discussions regarding
              implementation of a coordinated,
              global [system] . . . for ENUM,"
              Julian E. Minard, a State Department
              advisor to the International
              Telecommunication Advisory
              Committee, wrote to representatives
              of AT&T and other companies. But
              Minard cautioned in the letter that
              aspects of the technology advocated
              by industry "go beyond what is
              prudent or necessary."

              ENUM is likely to be voluntary,
              requiring users to sign up for the
              service. But privacy experts say it
              will not be worth the time and
              investment the industry is making in
              the technology unless it is widely
              used. So they expect ENUM will be
              aggressively promoted.

              "We believe that ENUM raises serious
              questions about privacy and security
              that need to be addressed before
              it's widely deployed," said Alan
              Davidson, associate director of the
              Center for Democracy and Technology,
              a privacy watchdog group based in
              Washington. "They are promoting this
              as a system that is going to make it
              really easy for people to find you
              in all kinds of ways. Well, we want
              to make sure that consumers can opt
              out if they don't want to be found."

              Today, vigilant Web surfers can
              maintain a high degree of anonymity
              because e-mail and other Web
              addresses contain little personal
              information. What's more, Web
              addresses under aliases can easily
              be created to cloak the identity of
              the sender. As a result, marketers
              have been forced to spend millions
              of dollars to get Web surfers to
              voluntarily give up personal
              information.

              By contrast, a phone number has a
              wealth of personal information
              associated with it, including a
              street address, billing records and
              dialing data. Marrying such
              information to Web addresses would
              represent a leap in private data
              warehousing in cyberspace and
              dramatically increase the risk of
              privacy invasions, experts say.

              "Someone could write a program to
              query the ENUM database and obtain
              every line of your contact
              information and send spam to every
              communications device you own," said
              Chris Hoofnagle, legislative
              director of the Electronic Privacy
              Information Center in Washington.

              Hoofnagle added that industry claims
              that consumers would be able to opt
              out of the system, or otherwise
              protect their private information,
              are hollow. "There could be coercion
              down the road [by marketers] to push
              consumers to use ENUM to store their
              contact information. Absent
              legislation, there is likely to be
              abuse."

              Since the Federal Communications
              Commission regulates the nation's
              telephone industry and the Commerce
              Department administers key contracts
              that allow private firms such as
              Mountain View, Calif.-based Verisign
              Inc. to register Internet domain
              names, the government is likely to
              play a powerful role in the outcome
              of ENUM.

              Its backing of further ENUM
              development is the most significant
              support yet for the technology. It
              comes as a newly created industry
              group, called the ENUM-Forum, agreed
              last week to an ambitious schedule
              to conclude work on ENUM by next
              May.

              "This is a big milestone," Gary W.
              Richenaker, of Telcordia
              Technologies Inc., said of the
              group's first meeting last Monday.
              Richenaker, who chaired the
              gathering, said that officials of
              the State Department, Federal Trade
              Commission and Commerce Department
              attended.

              ENUM would work by combining two
              massive electronic databases: North
              American telephone numbers now
              administered by a Washington company
              called NeuStar Inc. and the main
              database that routes Internet
              messages, which is largely
              controlled by Verisign.

              An ENUM address reverses a standard
              phone number and appends "e164.arpa"
              to it. For example, the toll-free
              directory assistance number would be
              converted to
              2.1.2.1.5.5.5.0.0.8.1.e164.arpa.
              ENUM would recognize both the
              e164.arpa address and the phone
              number as belonging to directory
              assistance.

              With some software tweaks to the
              current Internet system, computers
              could be made to route messages to
              such 11-digit ENUM addresses in much
              the same way they now use up to
              12-digits to send e-mail and display
              Web pages.

              Although industry engineers recently
              completed technical specifications
              for ENUM, AT&T, Cisco Systems Inc.,
              SBC Communications Inc. and more
              than 20 members of the ENUM-Forum
              agreed last week to work out
              additional critical details of the
              system.

              ENUM-Forum players also include AOL
              Time Warner Inc., British
              Telecommunications plc and
              NetNumber.com Inc.--a Web start-up
              that has been operating a private,
              volunteer ENUM system for nearly a
              year.

              The companies will tackle
              operational and security issues,
              such as who would be authorized to
              make service changes. Phones are
              ordinarily associated with street
              addresses, not individuals, so
              businesses and households with more
              than one person or phone would need
              to determine who has control over
              the ENUM associated with the phones.

              The State Department's Minard said
              his Aug. 21 letter reflected the
              input of several government agencies
              but termed the document a "draft"
              that could change as industry
              details about ENUM evolve.

              Minard declined to elaborate on the
              misgivings expressed about ENUM in
              the letter. Other sources say ENUM
              is most strongly supported by the
              Commerce Department, while the FCC
              and State Department remain wary of
              the potential political fallout from
              embracing the technology.

              The industry, too, is divided over
              how much the government should be
              involved. The heavily regulated
              telephone industry supports a
              broader government role than do
              Internet companies such as Verisign
              and AOL Time Warner.

              Stacy M. Cheney, an attorney for the
              Commerce Department, said the
              government has not decided whether
              to play any regulatory role. But he
              said officials support "continuing
              discussions" on ENUM and would send
              representatives to a Sept. 12
              meeting of an International
              Telecommunication Union panel to
              discuss the technology.

              Industry officials liken ENUM's
              potential effect to the introduction
              of touch-tone dialing in 1963. That
              advance paved the way for a host of
              modern phone features, including the
              ability to bank by phone and
              navigate voicemail menus.

              ENUM "could be a huge boon to
              Internet telephony and basic
              communications convergence," said
              Aristotle Balogh, vice president of
              technology at Verisign.

              ENUM, however, may never be embraced
              by businesses or consumers because
              of the privacy concerns. The
              technology will also require support
              from Internet service providers,
              software developers, phone carriers
              and others.

              Still, ENUM is expected to gain
              momentum with the government's
              support. It could also get a big
              boost from efforts by Microsoft
              Corp. and AOL Time Warner to make
              new versions of their software
              support ENUM technology.





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