"It puts all of our electronic communications in jeopardy —
voice mail, e-mail, you name it," said Jerry Berman, president
of the Center for Democracy and Technology. "I think it violates
the letter and spirit of the statute."
Another group, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said in a statement
that the court "dealt a grave blow to the privacy of Internet communications."
In a 2-1 decision, the Boston-based appeals court upheld a federal judge's
dismissal last year of a wiretapping charge against a former Interloc
vice president, Branford C. Councilman.
According to his 2001 indictment, Councilman directed employees to write
computer code to intercept and copy all incoming e-mails from Amazon.com
to Interloc's subscribers, who were dealers seeking buyers for rare
and out-of-print books. Amazon.com did not then offer used books, but
offered customers help in tracking down rare books.
The government alleged that Interloc tried to exploit the Amazon e-mails
"to develop a list of books, learn about competitors and attain
a commercial advantage."
But Councilman argued that no violation of the Wiretap Act had occurred
because the e-mails were copied while in "electronic storage"
— the messages were in the process of being routed through a network
of servers to recipients.
The wiretapping law broadly protects eavesdropping on messages that
are not stored — such as an unrecorded phone conversation —
but does not afford the same legal protections to stored messages. The
1968 law was amended in 1986 to address emerging computer technologies.
In a dissenting opinion on Tuesday's ruling, Appeals Court Judge Kermit
V. Lipez wrote that upholding Councilman's arguments "would undo
decades of practice and precedent regarding the scope of the Wiretap
Act and would essentially render the act irrelevant to the protection
of wire and electronic privacy."
Samantha Martin, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's office, said
prosecutors were reviewing options in light of the ruling. Amazon.com
spokeswoman Patty Smith declined to comment.
Although Councilman fought his indictment, prosecutors did win guilty
pleas from two other defendants, including Alibris Inc., an Emeryville,
Calif.-based online rare-book broker that acquired Interloc in 1998.
Alibris paid a $250,000 fine. A message left with an Alibris representative
was not immediately returned.
The other guilty plea came from Interloc's former computer systems administrator,
who was placed on probation.