Cybercrime treaty a step closer to becoming law

Published: 26 April 2001 y., Thursday
The parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe issued its approval for the current draft of the treaty Tuesday, spokeswoman Sabine Zimmer said. It now goes back to a committee of experts for the creation of the final draft. The 43-nation Council of Europe, not affiliated with the European Union, has spearheaded the treaty, which will be open for non-European countries to join as well. Experts from Australia, Canada, Japan, and the United States are involved in the drafting process, Zimmer said. Signatory countries will be obliged to criminalize certain offenses and to cooperate internationally in prosecuting online crime. Industry and privacy groups have been harshly critical of the treaty process, which they say has been secretive and aims to drastically expand police powers without taking into account privacy or human rights considerations. ISPs are concerned with the cost and potential liability of implementing what they call vague rules requiring service providers to track data and cooperate with law enforcement, said Joe McNamee, a spokesman for EuroISPA, which represents European ISPs. The draft treaty can be read online at http://conventions.coe.int/treaty/EN/cadreprojets.htm.
Šaltinis: infoworld.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Wincor Nixdorf takes award for cash-recycling system

Wincor Nixdorf’s new cassette-based cash-recycling system, the ProCash 4000, received the "Best Product at CIFTEE 2005". more »

“Gemplus” Products Presentation

30 th November, 2005 – A presentation of world leader company in smart card solution “Gemplus” took place at the “Penki kontinentai” conference center (Business center “Europa”, Konstitucijos ave 7, Vilnius). more »