Endgame for Cybercrime treaty

Published: 5 June 2001 y., Tuesday
A few weeks ago, the Council of Europe's (COE) Committee of Experts on Cyber-crime working group met in a closed meeting in Rome to put the finishing touches on the ever-troubling "Draft Convention on Cyber-crime". The touches were light: little more than a feather dusting with a couple of feel-good changes thrown in for good measure. The working group has now been at this since 1997, so they probably feel a profound sense of boredom trying to find a few more words to move around without really changing anything. They made up their minds on what they wanted sometime around 1999, and have just been toying with us since then to ensure they could get the treaty approved. The draft retains all of the controversial provisions from before, including the requirement that users can be forced to cough up information about the "measures applied to protect the computer data" of a system (read 'crypto keys'); mandates on surveillance of traffic data and content and the bans on developing and using security auditing tools, except by those who are "legitimate". In an attached "Explanatory Memorandum" there are only two things that the COE treats as so deplorable that even linking to it will be a crime: child pornography, and hacking tools. A modest improvement in the draft convention is the inclusion of a requirement that countries that implement the treaty follow whatever human rights protections exist in their domestic law, and under human rights treaties that the country has already signed. The signing nations must also be "proportional" in implementing the treaty -- a vague cost-benefit analysis where citizens' civil rights will undoubtedly be weighed against calls to "Protect the children." Nations may also consider the impact on third parties, such as the ISPs which have to pay for all of this, and there's new language requiring "independent supervision" -- from a judge, for example -- of online governmental spying. What remains most striking in the treaty is the utter absence of concepts like 'privacy' and 'data protection.' They sound good, but these changes are little more than window dressing: the U.S., the UK, and many other countries, already don't follow the requirements of many human rights treaties. And as for "independent supervision," just remember how many wiretap requests have been turned down in the last ten years in the U.S. -- three out of over 10,000. What remains most striking in the treaty is the utter absence of concepts like "privacy" and "data protection" and any kind of meaningful limitations of surveillance in all the of very detailed sections that mandate them. It apparently was easy to tell law enforcement the procedures on how to invade privacy, but too difficult to tell them what their limits are.
Šaltinis: SecurityFocus.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

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

The Ransom Letter

Authorize.Net Battles Extortion Attempts more »

Sun Strikes Grid Computing Pact with Bank

One week after touting its grid computing and other technologies on Wall Street for financial services customers, Sun Microsystems agreed to provide a Paris-based bank with more than 100 servers to power its transactions more »

PalmSource unveils smartphone operating system

Palm Cobalt OS to ship with new devices next year more »

Highlighting New Projects

Microsoft Scientists Offer Glimpse of the Future at European Innovation Fair more »

EU chief seen as keen to push Oracle merger through

European Commission wants to reach a decision on hostile bid before the end of October more »

IT security culture must start from the top

Global survey warns senior execs against 'delegating' security awareness more »

Sasser author gets IT security job

Sven Jaschan, self-confessed creator of the destructive NetSky and Sasser worms, has been hired by German security company Securepoint more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

IBM embraces grid converts

IBM has signed on five corporate customers and the Environmental Protection Agency to its ongoing grid computing initiative more »