Govt Net Snoopers Charter slammed.
Published:
14 September 1999 y., Tuesday
The IT industry has responded to Government proposals for increased Internet surveillance with a mixture of worry and irritation. The plans would mean a considerable extension of police powers in the UK, and as many as five times the current number of tapping warrants being issued. The plans, outlined in the government document "Interception of Communications In the UK", would require ISPs to be able to intercept one telephone line in every 500 that they operate, in essence providing a back door for the government to monitor private transmissions. Malcolm Hutty, director of civil liberty group Liberty describes the proposals as "Hideously expensive, technically unworkable, and a threat to civil liberties." Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, says in the introduction to the document that interception "..plays a crucial role in helping law enforcement agencies to combat criminal activity.." Most intercepted messages will be encrypted - at least it will be if the criminal has any sense. Decryption takes time, maybe weeks, rendering most intercepted information past its use by date. Demon Internet estimates that the infrastructure needed to fulfil the governments wishes would cost them more than one million pounds initially, and upgrades every year could be as much as 15 per cent of that again.
Šaltinis:
Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Polling stations have opened in the central Asian republic of Kazakhstan for the election of a new parliament
more »
Thousands of Ukrainians have rallied in Kiev in support of opposition presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko
more »
A Ukrainian opposition leader and presidential candidate is in a Vienna
more »
The government promotes this Baltic nation as E-stonia, and it has a point
more »
Lukashenka will face problems with getting support of majority in changing Constitution
more »
Just last month Islamist guerrillas kidnapped and murdered the Italian journalist Enzo Baldoni in Iraq, while security guard Fabrizio Quattrocchi met a similar fate in April
more »
The number of people looking for work in Germany rose in August
more »
Macedonia's parliament has ordered a referendum to be held in November on a law seen to favour ethnic Albanians
more »
Russia began counting the cost today at the end of siege of a school captured by Chechen gunmen
more »
The blast happened at the end of the evening rush hour
more »