statute more than gasps Dolf's concern
- From: motion@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Lionel)
- Date: Wed, 15 Aug 2007 05:38:08 GMT
report, so...
When a team of people sent their resumes to a business, including that
of a Managing Director, some discreet calls were made to see if we were
losing a whole department. (No, it was for a joint business deal.)
----
* The Puzzle Palace, Author James Bamford, 1983 revision, p459
*
* When searching for derogatory references to President Richard M. Nixon
* [ "I had no prior knowledge of the Watergate break-in," said President
* Nixon looking straight at the camera on a national television address,
* "It's that simple." ], for example, technicians would have to program
* a variety of keywords, such as "Tricky Dicky." This, according to the
* former NSA G Group chief, would be converted to 'ky----ky."
*
* Should this selection process still produce a considerable amount of
* traffic, the data could then undergo 'secondary testing', such as the
* addition of the words "New York," to reduce the number.
You may wonder what keywords excel at picking up "resume condition" traffic.
You want the truth?
YOU CAN'T HANDLE THE TRUTH
Just kidding. That was Jack Nickelson speaking for the NSA.
Here is how it is done:
o Select all traffic.
o Exclude commonplace traffic, such as mailing lists.
example: FROM <firewalls@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
This is done by selecting keywords that match against the routing
information in the email header: who it came f
.
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