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Britain: New cybercrime police force threatens civil liberties
By Mike Ingram
20 April 2001
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Labour Home Secretary Jack Straw launched a specialist police
unit designed to tackle computer-based crime on Wednesday.
Speaking to the BBC Straw said, Our overall approach
is that if something is criminal offline it is also criminal online.
But we have to ensure that police investigatory techniques keep
up with changes in technology.
Responding to widespread criticism, the unit's Detective Chief
Superintendent Len Hynds told BBC News, We have no inclination,
nor the desire, nor the ability to trawl peoples e-mails. We will
be targeting those people who use the Internet to commit fraud,
paedophilia and other offences.
But under the pretext of combating crime, the Labour government
has granted unprecedented powers to the state forces to intrude
into the private lives of every individual in Britain and anyone
from overseas who corresponds with the UK electronically.
The National Technical Assistance Centre (NTAC) will be based
at a £25 million unit and will draw its staff from individual
police forces, Customs, the National Crime Squad (NCS) and the
National Criminal Intelligence Service (NCIS). Plans to set up
the unit were first announced last year as part of the Regulation
of Investigatory Powers (RIP) bill.
The RIP designates Internet Service Providers (ISPs) as "public
telecommunications systems" and requires them to give access
to detailed information about Internet traffic upon the demand
of the Home Secretary, a judge or a senior police officer.
The job of the new force is to sift through the information
gathered through so-called black-box devices that
ISPs are to be compelled to install, allowing information to be
filtered to the new centre.
NTAC will have permanent links to Britain's Internet connection
companies, making it easy to intercept email, chat sessions or
any other data passing over the networks of these companies. To
thwart the use of encryption software to prevent monitoring, RIP
gives the police the power to demand the codes to read all encrypted
messages. This includes the codes used by business to protect
credit card numbers in electronic commerce transactions.
In what RIP opponents have correctly termed a violation of
the presumption of innocence, failure to comply with a decryption
notice will be a criminal office unless the person can prove they
did not have the ability to decrypt the message for any reason,
such as losing the password.
Concerns raised by civil liberty campaigners at the time of
RIP's introduction have now been voiced by MPs. A report written
by members of the Commons Intelligence and Security Committee
(ISC) expressed fears that the new force and the RIP legislation
could come into conflict with Britain's adoption of human rights
legislation.
The report also criticises the Investigatory Powers Tribunal
(IPT), created by the government to allay fears of widespread
breaches of Internet users' privacy rights. The IPT was supposed
to act as a court of appeal for anyone who believes that investigating
officers have unlawfully intercepted their communication when
collecting evidence. The ICS express concern that the IPT is ill
equipped to do its job.
During a debate on the report, ISC member Alan Beith described
as ludicrous the poor staffing levels of the Tribunal.
The several bodies involved are dependent on a tiny support
structure which is quite incapable of carrying out the job. We
are not providing a safeguard that should be there, he said.
The criticisms of the ISC will do nothing to curtail the threat
to democratic rights posed by the new force. The obvious question
remains how anyone will know if his or her rights have been violated
in the first place.
See Also:
New Internet spy agency
to be set up in Britain
[18 May 2000]
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