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View Full Version : Bill to allow spy access to emails



Monty Cantsin
20th February 2004, 03:48
(this is an austrialian thing)

Bill to allow spy access to emails


The federal government has moved to give greater powers to spy agencies to intercept people's emails.

The Telecommunications (Interception) Amendment Bill 2004 also allows warrants to be sought in connection with the investigation of a wider range of serious offences, including terrorism.

The bill, if passed by parliament, will allow recording of calls to ASIO public lines.

It will also amend the definition of interception to ensure that the protections conferred by the Interception Act keep up with technological developments.

Attorney-General Philip Ruddock said as a result of recent advances in technology many communications passing over the telecommunications system now take the form of written words or images, not covered by current legislation.

"The bill will allow the definition of interception to include reading and viewing, as well as listening to and recording, a communication in its passage over the telecommunications system," he told parliament.

"The amendment will ensure that the protections afforded by the Act extend to all forms of communication passing over the Australian telecommunications system."

Other amendments allow for agencies to obtain warrants to assist in investigating terrorism offences involving firearms and state and territory cybercrime.

Debate on the bill was adjourned to a later time.

hazard
20th February 2004, 04:01
this one' s almost as funny as always questions poll to have me banned

I have written an email, EVER, that hasn't been leaked across the world

pass a bill in one country when the internet is multinational is useless anyway

MysticArcher
20th February 2004, 05:17
I was just reading a book called Steal This Computer Book, it had the perfect solution to this situation, a technique called steganography, basically you can ontain programs that encode information into a picture, the only way to view the encoded message is with a password that you can give to whoever you're sending to in various ingenious ways

BOZG
20th February 2004, 16:28
If you think that this law means anything, you're a fool. No capitalist government has needed a law to intercept e-mails. If any government wanted to read your e-mail, they would do so with or without a law.



the only way to view the encoded message is with a password that you can give to whoever you're sending to in various ingenious ways

Any half-decent hacker would decode that easily.