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Re: [OpenCALEA] standards compliance

  • From: Bob Ross
  • Date: Tue Mar 20 15:54:22 2007


Just broadband. They already know how to intercept dialup on their own. Their main concern was VoiP services because they could not intercept the calls.


----- Original Message ----- From: "Jesse Norell" <jesse@kci.net>
To: "Bob Ross" <calea@kingmanaz.net>
Cc: <opencalea@merit.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2007 9:53 AM
Subject: Re: [OpenCALEA] standards compliance


Hey,

 Maybe you or someone else would know the answer to a question I've
been wondering about, specifically if dialup (non-broadband)
communications are covered by CALEA.  From the verbage I see, I think if
you fall under CALEA requirements, then it would be (it says,
"communication generated or received by a subscriber by means of ANY
EQUIPMENT, facility, OR SERVICE of a telecommunications carrier").  I've
not (yet) found anything relating to broadband vs. non-broadband, but
I'm guessing if you get "sucked in" to CALEA requirements because you
offer broadband, then all your services become fair game for intercepts,
dialup included.  So if you only offer non-broadband communications, you
might be clear (if in fact there is a broadband clause in the
requirements).


On Tue, 2007-03-20 at 08:48 -0700, Bob Ross wrote:
You are correct, The CALEA tech told me the same thing. If you can't
send it
in the required
format, then it's up to opencalea to convince the law enforcement
agency to
accept the
opencalea format. If you can't you have 48 hours to do so. $10K/Day
fine if
you don't.

He did mention that if opencalea does everything according to the
standard
and set format there
should be no problem. It's getting the information of the format
that's
licensed. According to a couple dockets
the licensed format was accepted. I don't know if that is in stone
yet, but
could be.

Bob
--
Jesse Norell - jesse@kci.net
Kentec Communications, Inc.






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