Inside Comcast’s Surveillance Policies
Monk writes “The Federation of American Scientists has obtained a recently disclosed Comcast Handbook for Law Enforcement which details its policies for divulging its customers’ personal information. (Here’s the handbook itself in PDF form.) All of Comcast’s policies seem to follow the letter of the law, and seem to weigh customer privacy with law enforcement’s requests. This is in apparent contrast to AT&T and a number of other telecommunication companies, which have been only too happy to give over subscriber records. According to the handbook, Comcast keeps logs for up to 180 days on IP address allocation, and they do not keep all of your e-mails forever (45 days at most). VoIP phone records are stored for 2 years, and cable records can only be retrieved upon a court order. The document even details how much it costs law enforcement to get access to personal data (data for child exploitation cases is free of charge).”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Inside Comcast’s Surveillance Policies
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