- sep 26, 2010 • 12:41h
- 4 comentarios
El ministro para el Interior y Justicia, Tareck El Aissami, informó anoche que la cuenta en la red social twitter del presidente venezolano, Hugo Chávez, fue hackeada.
Aquí, la declaración pomposa del Ministro del Interior venezolano.




Que se preparen los apologistas del castrato. Yo se los he venido diciendo que tarde o temprano seran descubiertos como los agentes infiltrados que son:
US Could Make Internet Wiretaps Easier
FBI Says It Wouldn’t Broaden Scope Of Wiretaps
POSTED: Monday, September 27, 2010
UPDATED: 6:44 am EDT September 27, 2010
LOIC VENANCE/AFP/Getty Images
WASHINGTON — Broad new regulations being drafted by the Obama administration would make it easier for law enforcement and national security officials to eavesdrop on Internet and e-mail communications like social networking Web sites and BlackBerries, The New York Times reported Monday.
The newspaper said the White House plans to submit a bill next year that would require all online services that enable communications to be technically equipped to comply with a wiretap order. That would include providers of encrypted e-mail, such as BlackBerry, networking sites like Facebook and direct communication services like Skype.
Federal law enforcement and national security officials say new the regulations are needed because terrorists and criminals are increasingly giving up their phones to communicate online.
“We’re talking about lawfully authorized intercepts,” said FBI lawyer Valerie E. Caproni. “We’re not talking about expanding authority. We’re talking about preserving our ability to execute our existing authority in order to protect the public safety and national security.”
The White House plans to submit the proposed legislation to Congress next year.
The new regulations would raise new questions about protecting people’s privacy while balancing national security concerns.
James Dempsey, the vice president of the Center for Democracy and Technology, an Internet policy group, said the new regulations would have “huge implications.”
“They basically want to turn back the clock and make Internet services function the way that the telephone system used to function,” he told the Times.
The Times said the Obama proposal would likely include several requires:
Any service that provides encrypted messages must be capable of unscrambling them.
Any foreign communications providers that do business in the U.S. would have to have an office in the United States that’s capable of providing intercepts.
Softward developers of peer-to-peer communications services would be required to redesign their products to allow interception.
The Times said that some privacy and technology advocates say the regulations would create weaknesses in the technology that hackers could more easily exploit.
Que clase de ignorante. Eso le pasa a un monton de gente cada dia. Me imagino que quieren que Twitter le haga una cuenta especial al macaco?!
Y este mamalón es el ministro del interior de Venezuela? Caray, parece salido de los camilitos.
By the way, Chavez gana hoy por nocao. Y en tres años más la industria petrólera venezolana estará en ruinas. Vivir para ver.
Candanga