CNET News.com -- Tech News First CNET tech sites: Price comparisons | Product reviews | Tech news | Downloads | Site map
Front PageEnterpriseE-BusinessCommunicationsMediaPersonal TechnologyInvestor
Senate votes to ax computer dragnet funds

By Reuters
July 17, 2003, 8:15 PM PT

WASHINGTON--The U.S. Senate voted Thursday to cut off funding for a widely criticized computer-surveillance program that would comb travel records, credit-card bills and other private records to sniff out suspected terrorists.

In a military spending bill it passed unanimously, the Senate forbade the Defense Department to spend any portion of its $369 billion budget on the Terrorism Information Awareness program, brushing aside a request by the Bush administration to keep development efforts intact.

"No funds appropriated or otherwise made available to the Department of Defense...may be obligated or expended on research and development on the Terrorism Information Awareness program," the bill said.


The fate of the $54 million program will likely be determined in negotiations with the House of Representatives, which forbade the Pentagon from using the program on U.S. citizens without permission but did not cut off funding when it approved its version of the Pentagon's budget earlier this month.

Known until recently as Total Information Awareness, the surveillance effort would use cutting-edge "data mining" technology to unearth suspicious patterns from a wide array of public and private records.

Civil-liberties advocates have criticized TIA since it was made public last fall, saying it could lead to an Orwellian surveillance state in which citizens have no privacy.

The Pentagon said in a report to Congress in May that TIA would be set up in a way to prevent investigators from indiscriminately rummaging through personal records, but said it had not yet established specific safeguards.

The Bush administration urged the Senate to preserve funding for the program in a statement released Monday.

"This provision would deny an important tool in the war on terrorism," the administration said.

Story Copyright  © 2003 Reuters Limited.  All rights reserved.



Print story E-mail story News.com feeds Send us news tips



     Search News.com
       
     Advanced search

    Latest Headlines
    display on desktop
    SEC launches probe of video game industry
    The truth about XML
    Judge OKs $1.1 billion Microsoft deal
    Business Objects to acquire rival
    Week ahead: Sun shows its hand
    Eye on the UK
    P2P caching: Unsafe at any speed?
    Accenture lands Infineon outsourcing deal
    Siebel, IBM preparing online CRM service
    Nonprofit takes hold of blog tool
    Code to exploit Cisco flaw may pose risk
    New mantra for PC makers: Diversify
    T-Mobile to pay up for E911 delay
    Patent company sues Amazon
    E-mail? The French beg to differ
    Sony adds wireless to new handhelds
    Nokia primes pump for N-Gage
    Amazon: Shop elsewhere, pay at our site
    Week in review: In the money?
    Semicon: Bring a chemist and your wallet
    This week's headlines

    News Tools
    Get news by mobile
    XML What is this?
    Content licensing
    Display news on desktop

    CNET newsletters

    Enterprise Hardware
    Senior editor Michael Kanellos covers chips, servers, and all the hardware that runs your business. (weekly) Sample
     
    Dispatches
    Every morning and afternoon, get breaking tech news via e-mail, plus a different focus each day: Monday, Security; Tuesday, Wireless; Wednesday, Web services; Thursday, Utility computing; Friday, Open source. (weekdays)

    Morning Dispatch
    Sample

    Afternoon Dispatch
    Sample





    All News.com newsletters


    Send us news tips | Contact Us | Corrections | Privacy Policy

       Featured services: IT Jobs | Free IT Downloads | Troubleshooting Tips | Digital Cameras | Hardware Clearance   
      CNET Networks: Builder.com | CNET | GameSpot | mySimon | TechRepublic | ZDNet About CNET   

    Copyright ©1995-2003 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. | Terms of Use | Privacy policy CNET Jobs