- Source: Telephone tapping in the Eastern Bloc
Telephone tapping in the Eastern Bloc was a widespread method of the mass surveillance of the population by the secret police.
History
In the past, telephone tapping was an open and legal practice in certain countries. During martial law in Poland, official censorship was introduced, which included open phone tapping. Despite the introduction of the new censorship division, the Polish secret police did not have resources to monitor all conversations.
In Romania, telephone tapping was conducted by the General Directorate for Technical Operations of the Securitate. Created with Soviet assistance in 1954, the outfit monitored all voice and electronic communications inside and outside of Romania. They bugged telephones and intercepted all telegraphs and telex messages, as well as placed microphones in both public and private buildings.
Fiction
The 1991 Polish comedy film Calls Controlled capitalizes on this fact. The title alludes to the pre-recorded message "Rozmowa kontrolowana" ("The call is being monitored") being sounded during phone calls while the martial law in Poland was in force during the 1980s.
The 2006 film The Lives of Others concerns a Stasi captain who is listening to the conversations of a suspected dissident writer in a bugged apartment with equipment including telephone-tapping.
See also
Covert listening device
Eastern Bloc politics
Echelon (signals intelligence)
Mass surveillance
Privacy of correspondence
Secure telephone
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Telephone tapping in the Eastern Bloc
- Wiretapping
- Eastern Bloc
- Emigration from the Eastern Bloc
- The Lives of Others
- Security Service (Poland)
- Iron Curtain
- Mass surveillance
- List of Soviet and Eastern Bloc defectors
- Martial law in Poland