Qwest Goes From Qworst To Qbest By Standing Up To NSA

from the doing-well-by-doing-good dept

One of the interesting items to emerge from the growing NSA data-monitoring scandal is that the telecoms weren’t compelled to go along with the government and that one company, Qwest, refused to participate. Now the company, which had been a laggard and on the receiving end of many customer complaints, is experiencing a surge in customer appreciation from those opposed to the NSA program. Some customers have already switched providers, while on the internet people have set up pro-Qwest websites and added the company’s logo to their own sites. Even if the boost is only temporary, it highlights the benefits from breaking from the pack. Imagine, for example, if one of the record labels decided to break from the RIAA cartel and adopt a more liberal attitude towards file sharing and online purchases. For that one company, it would instantly earn them a groundswell of support, and a sustainable way to differentiate itself — at least until the others followed suit (remember, we’re just imagining here). Business should constantly be on the lookout for areas where they can stand out from the pack; when competitors are engaging in customer-harming activities, there should be some compelling opportunities. In the meantime, the labels are still trying to differentiate themselves by adopting a more draconian approach to DRM, like in the case of the Sony BMG rootkit fiasco. That didn’t turn out so well.


Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Qwest Goes From Qworst To Qbest By Standing Up To NSA”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
30 Comments
Searcher619 (profile) says:

Ignorant Public

This is so ridiculous. The general public is upset that the NSA has access to a list of numbers they call but weren’t even bothered by Carnivore and Echelon. Those two programs are MUCH more invasive. They actually involve the copying of digital communications not just a bunch of identifying numbers. The Supreme Court ruled long ago that the data the NSA received does not belong to the people and there is no expectation of privacy. All the NSA got was the very same information the telcos provides it’s customers on their billing statements. They don’t have to provide the info to the customer but it’s the only way to show the customer how the bill breaks down. What we are seeing here is knee jerk reaction. One the politicians were obviously banking on. Talk about manipulative. Things like this make me embarrassed to be an American. These things make the American people look like complete idiots. One word describes the average American. Sheep.

Joe Smith says:

Re: Ignorant Public

This database is unlikely to be able to spot terrorist attacks in advance. The idea of data mining telephone records in exactly this way has obviously been floating around for quite a while and yet has not been successfully implemented. See for example, http://rationalinquiry.blogspot.com

The database is however likely to be very useful in identifying whether or not a given Congressman has a mistress or is using escort services.

If the database cannot realistically do the funtion the government puts forward as the justification for it, then we have every reason for asking what the real purpose and use of this database is.

James says:

Now it’s the NSA “Scandal?” Scandals usually involve money; the only thing I see involved here is security. And if my phone records are illegally thrown into a data mining operation to improve national security, I’ve got no qualms with that.

Are we going to lash out at the big airport security (they search you for bombs, and that’s not freedom) scandal next?

Anonymous of Course says:

Re: Re: Are you now, or have you ever been...

I can see why one might think that the NSA

did something illegal in collecting this

information.

People with an axe to grind with the current

administration have intentionally confused this

with wire tapping.

As they have confused the legality concerns for

surveillance of intra-national and international

telephone communications.

I value my privacy, but both of these issues are

so far down the list of concerns that it’s laughable

that people get worked up over them.

Remember national ID cards… you’re getting them.

Federal requirements for driver’s licenses were formulated

soon after the bad reaction to the ID card proposal.

I worked on an RFQ for a component used in the

card reader might have been, eh, ten years ago.

Facial recognition technology sucks but its still pushing

ahead, DNA snipers are picking though the trash,

cameras and microphones are being installed across many

cities, collection of financial data and the analysis of such

data is the most intrusive thing of all and it’s considered

ho-hum. But wait, there’s much more… what books

have you checked out of the library, what keywords

have you searched.

And you’re outraged about lists of phone numbers.

Sorry pal, while you were asleep the privacy yacht

has already sailed away.

John Bailey says:

Re: Re:

“And if my phone records are illegally thrown into a data mining operation to improve national security, I’ve got no qualms with that”

Ahh.. the old I have nothing to hide, so I have nothing to fear routine.

So can you prove that you are not a terrorist then? Because I don’t know of anybody who can. All it takes is one link through a third party or a wrong number to flag you up on the database, then you suddenly find yourself assisting those nice homeland security people with their enquiries. Or perhaps your phone gets lost or stolen, and is used to call someone who knows the second cousin of someone who knows someone on the suspected list. Can you prove byond unreasonable doubt that you lost that phone exactly when you said you did? Bear in mind that in the interests of national security, you don’t have access to a lawyer, and you may not be told what evidence is being used against you.

But hey.. don’t worry, its for national security. Just like that 80 year old nun and who knows how many others who got interrogated every time they tried to board a plane recently.

Just One Guy says:

No

Imagine, for example, if one of the record labels decided to break from the RIAA cartel and adopt a more liberal attitude towards file sharing and online purchases.

Joe, come on… customers do not choose record labels because of their policies wrt digital right management. Customers choose record labels simply because they really choose artists, and artists chose record labels.

This is the damning situation of the content industry, where artists (which is what people is really interested in) are signed to specific record labels, and I will not buy records from artists I don’t like, if they are signed up to labels whose policies I appreciate. Conversely, most people will keep on buying records from artists they like, even though they are signed to labels whose policies are abominable.

Though, but that is the way it works.

ehrichweiss says:

Re: No

“Joe, come on… customers do not choose record labels because of their policies wrt digital right management. Customers choose record labels simply because they really choose artists, and artists chose record labels.”

You don’t speak for all of us with that. *I* definitely do not buy from record labels who use DRM, nor do I download their music to avoid paying for it either. I also encourage bands to put their music online for free and to make their money at concerts.

Now back to the topic at hand, if I had Qwest as an option in my area, they’d have my business in the matter of minutes. Many people are service-oriented, not product/price oriented. This means you could give me a great deal on a decent product and I would still choose a product that gives me better and more flexible service despite a higher price.

Jay says:

Good News

You are very WRONG, Searcher619. The rest of the world likely sees this as the straw that broke the camel’s back and FINALLY got the ignorant American public to start caring about the crimes being committed against them. The other things you mention may very well be worse than this incident, but that’s no reason to ignore this incident like the rest of them. People are finally holding government to account, and if this program is what makes it happen then GREAT! Americans look a whole lot stupider to the rest of the world when they just sit back and let themselves be taken advantage of without doing anything about it.

Searcher619 (profile) says:

Crimes?

What crime has been commited? Give me a break. The Supreme Court ruled on this issue LONG ago. Nothing they did in this case is against the law. Get your facts right my friend. Now if we are talking about Echelon and Carnivore then maybe you have a leg to stand on. But as far as the NSA getting a list of phone numbers from the telcos… sorry. Nothing there. 100% legal.

LJ says:

Two questions that I’d suggest everyone ask themselves:

First, do the ends justisfy the means? Is it okay for the executive branch to do an end run around the other two branches to accomplish their stated goals?

Second, do you trust the government to always and only use this information for the stated purpose? Might they one day use this for identifying domestic criminal activity? How about for tracking down political dissidents?

Government officials have repeatedly lied about the extent of these surveillance activities, only acknowledging them when called on it, but repeatedly claiming to “fiercely protect” our privacy. This doesn’t exactly shout “trust” to me.

Qorrupt says:

Not your friend

Having worked at Qwest, but not knowing too many details about this NSA thing, I rest assured that if it had in any way profited the company or it’s management to sellout it’s customers to the government they would have jumped at the chance. Qwest is NOT a noble company by any stretch of the imagination. Strike up a conversation with a Qwest engineer for enough horror stories to fill an afternoon. Or two. More likely they are uncomfortable with big brother getting access to anything that has to do with their business practices at all. But like I say, I don’t know too much about this, only that Qwest is dirty as hell.

qwestTL says:

Re: Not your friend

Qorrupt is probably a little sore about being let go. I work for Qwest, my customer service reps receive approximately 3 customer submitted commendations per rep on desk per day. Our Technicians are rated #1 for the 2nd year in a row by J.D. Power. We are rated by OUR CUSTOMERS as the best choice for single provider of High Speed internet, Digital TV services and Digital voice..Comcast is rated over 20% lower. If we are this bad…I can’t imagine the competition. Qwest is a company that strives to love our customers and do the right thing. We are the company that WE employees want to buy our services from. The decision was based on what was fair and right. Argue this all day or ask the Qwest executives. One of the VPs will gladly accept an email and reply! I spoke to one about a customer impacting issue just last saturday… Call any Qwest Cust svc rep and request the info…

R Ahrens says:

lega or useful

Actually, I read an essay the other day that puts this in another legal framework. According to this lawyer, the telcos have language in the user agreement you sign to join up that allows them to provide information to the government in cases of national security. According to this analysis, the information provided under this agreement (phone numbers and what other phone numbers may have been called, NOT names or addresses) is perfectly legal, not even covered by privacy laws.

Of what use is this? Simple, its been described as a networking thing. If they know what phone numbers are being used by known or identified terrorists in or outside of the country, they can, with this database, determine what network of phone numbers are part of that terrorist’s contact list. So without even knowing what the conversations contain, they can further investigate who these contacts may be, essentially boiling the information needing to be scrutinized by the limited personnel resources available to a manageable amount. Some of that can even be used to obtain warrants for actual wiretaps or searches and eventually perhaps, arrest warrants.

What the news media won’t tell you is the massive amounts of information contained in mass data mining, which is what this is. And the NSA, much less the rest of the intelligence community, has VERY limited resources with the security classification necessary to work on these programs. So to expect that they have any interest in wading through gigabytes or terabytes of information looking for individual tax payers, is ludicrous – they’re looking for patterns, not tax dodgers.

Joe Smith says:

Re: lega or useful

So to expect that they have any interest in wading through gigabytes or terabytes of information looking for individual tax payers, is ludicrous – they’re looking for patterns, not tax dodgers.

Except that if you are targetting one person you don’t need to wade through terabytes of data (the database would actually approach a pentabyte pretty quickly if it was comprehensive and you include the indexes). All you need to do is look up what numbers that person is in communication with.

You may say that it is ridiculous to suggest that such a thing would happen. After Iran/Contra, Watergate and Valerie Plame I don’t think that any such suggestion is ridiculous. Particularly when you consider that NSA is already talking about cooperating with the FBI and the DEA on the use of the database.

Mischa says:

Re: lega or useful

I have a problem with the whole “for national security” thing. Our current government is doing a lot of things “for national security” that don’t, when you come right down to it, do anything to truly improve our security.

In fact, this type of data mining is more likely to generate so many false positives that it ends up being a huge waste of time. Just because someone with phone A called phone B who later called phone C who then called phone D doesn’t mean that the people at phone D have any knoweldge of or relationship to the people at phone A.

Joe Public says:

Nothing to worry about?

If what the NSA and the telco’s did was so “legal” and innocuous, then we have to ask why wouldn’t the NSA comply with Qwest’s request for authorization from the Atty Gen or the FISA court?

We also need to ask why such a database is necessary. What are the odds of detecting “terrorist” calling patterns?

Erosion of rights always begins with “just this ONE little thing.”

Let the lawsuits begin.

Anonymous Coward says:

artists dont choose their record labels…

the labels choose them.

and some ‘labels’ kind-of already tried the pro-filesharing approach…. not exactly a label, but cdnow (remember them?) supported napster because some surveys suggested that it was a 50/50 split whether or not filesharing caused people to buy more music or just to pirate it. So they figured if half would buy more CDs, let try it.

cdnow was eventually swallowed by Bertelsmann (BMG).

So in both cases… it doesn’t work.

-E

Anonymous Coward says:

Osama bin Laden really appreciates the work that Qwest does to help his efforts. I am sure that drug dealers, child molesters, rapists and other criminals will flock to Qwest.

Take off your fucking tin foil hats, and realize that there are people out there that want Americans dead (outside of liberal treehuggers) and that we are not in Kansas anymore. Course, in the event of another attack, I am sure everyone out there will bitch that GWB wasn’t doing enough.

Laughing says:

Osama bin Laden really appreciates the work that Qwest does to help his efforts. I am sure that drug dealers, child molesters, rapists and other criminals will flock to Qwest.

Take off your fucking tin foil hats, and realize that there are people out there that want Americans dead (outside of liberal treehuggers) and that we are not in Kansas anymore. Course, in the event of another attack, I am sure everyone out there will bitch that GWB wasn’t doing enough.

You forgot to add your ‘join the NRA’ advert there Billy-Bob…

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...