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              | Date: 1998-04-19 
 
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 q/depesche 98.4.19
 
 Desaster/Daten öffentlich
 
 Auf einen Schlag könnten die Anrainer von etwa 70.000 bestimmten
 Lagerplätzen in den USA wissen, dass Grund zur Unruhe ist. Die U.
 S. Umweltschutzbehörde erwägt, die Alarmpläne für alle
 Chemie/Müll/Sonder/Lager ins Netz zu setzen.
 Sogenannte security experts sind dagegen.
 
 
 Experts - Disaster Data On Net A Hazard 04/17/98
 USA TODAY, 1998 APR 17 -- By Traci Watson and Gary Fields, USA
 TODAY.
 The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has roiled the
 intelligence and
 security communities with a proposal to put disaster data about
 chemical
 storage sites on the Internet, USA TODAY has learned.
 
 Outraged security experts say the database would be a convenient
 tool for terrorists.
 
 EPA officials say that most of the information is publicly
 available anyway and the public has the right to know it.
 
 Congress in 1990 required that the "worst-case scenario" data be
 made
 public. The EPA chose the Internet as the best conduit.
 
 The EPA estimates that data on 70,000 sites would be submitted.
 The data
 would include sites where chemicals are stored, the most
 devastating
 potential accident and plans to respond to such an incident.
 
 The Justice Department and FBI, as well as the CIA and State
 Department are working closely with the EPA.
 
 Several members of Congress, including Senate Majority Leader
 Trent Lott, have written the EPA to protest the proposal.
 
 FBI agents say putting the data on the Net creates a blueprint for
 chemical mayhem.
 
 Some suggest keeping the information in libraries, where access
 could be
 limited.
 
 But the EPA will make the final decision, which is not expected
 for at least a month.
 
 "No action will be taken until we come to a resolution with the
 agencies
 involved," says spokeswoman Loretta Ucelli.
 
 The plan was first reported in Sources Investigative eJournal, an
 Internet newsletter.
 
 EPA officials point out that previous posting of chemical
 information on the Internet prompted companies to cut back use of
 hazardous materials and that it is important for people who live
 near sites to know the risks they face.
 
 Security experts say they are concerned.
 
 "I don't think we're in opposition to the public knowing these
 facilities are present," says Christopher Ronay, formerly with the
 FBI, now president
 of the Institute of Makers of Explosives. "But I don't think we
 want to post on the Internet . . . the facility's (locale) and
 exactly what's in it."
 
 (Copyright 1998, USA Today: <A
 HREF="http://www.usatoday.com">http://www.usatoday.com
 </A>
 /WIRES GOVT, ONLINE/)
 From www.newsbytes.com
 
 
 
 
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 edited by Harkank
 published on: 1998-04-19
 comments to office@quintessenz.at
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