Germany seeks expansion of computer spying

Found on LA Times on Tuesday, 30 October 2007
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To the unease of many in a country with a history of government spying through the era of the Gestapo and communist rule in East Germany, law enforcement authorities are using the suitcase bomb case to argue for measures that would significantly expand their ability to spy on the once-private realm of My Documents.

Now, along with several other European countries, Germany is seeking authority to plant secret Trojan viruses into the computers of suspects that could scan files, photos, diagrams and voice recordings, record every keystroke typed and possibly even turn on webcams and microphones in an attempt to gain knowledge of attacks before they happen.

There are no real details out about how this trojan will be planted. However, it should be safe to assume that the method won't be different from other trojans, meaning that possible options are browser exploits and email attachments. Now everybody should have learned not to click every random attachment. Keep your firewall, spyware and antivirus software up to date and chances should be pretty low. You can also switch to Linux, since I assume this piece of lovely software will have a "requires Windows XP or newer" label.