UK Looks To Make Denial Of Service Attacks Illegal -- But Does It Go Too Far?
from the about-time dept
Last year, we noted that denial of service attacks apparently were not illegal in the UK, based on current law. While some have tried to convince the courts that such attacks really were illegal, most seemed to realize that the current computer crimes law was inadequate to cover more modern-day threats. Along come politicians to the rescue, with a new bill designed to make all sorts of new computer crimes illegal. However, as with other times that politicians try to deal with new computer ills, it seems like the new law could go a bit too far. Among the provisions is that it would be illegal to "make or supply hacking tools" which seems a bit broad, as this would appear to include all sorts of legitimate tools that security researchers use to bypass security systems or crack passwords. It's great that updates are being made to the existing law, but politicians should be careful that they don't go too far in the other direction, outlawing plenty of perfectly reasonable activities.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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is disassembling also hacking?
hmmmm - hacking could also mean that you are disassembling something as simple as a genetic code so you could manipulate it into something better... only if it was a computer though.
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damn politicians
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No more laws, please
This is an area best left alone by the politicians. By the time they get a law through, the world has moved on enough to render it obselete. At best it gives us laws that are irrelevant. At worst, we end up having to jump through legal hoops to do legitimate stuff, whilst the bad guys are playing in whole new areas.
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Links
35 Making, supplying or obtaining articles for use in computer misuse offences
After section 3 of the 1990 Act insert--
"3A Making, supplying or obtaining articles for use in offence under section 1 or 3
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if he makes, adapts, supplies or offers to supply any article--
(a) knowing that it is designed or adapted for use in the course of or in connection with an offence under section 1 or 3; or
(b) intending it to be used to commit, or to assist in the commission of, an offence under section 1 or 3.
(2) A person is guilty of an offence if he obtains any article with a view to its being supplied for use to commit, or to assist in the commission of, an offence under section 1 or 3.
(3) In this section "article" includes any program or data held in electronic form.
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Re: Links
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Re - Giafly
A legitimate pen test isn't the same as committing an offense.
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Re: Re - Giafly
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Re: Re - Giafly
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Re: Re - Giafly
However, I'll still say that the item requires comission of a crime.
I am married to someone with legal training, but IANAL myself.
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Re: Re - Giafly
Therefore, as this bill appears to be worded, Fyodor is 'guilty' of knowing that some people will use his tool for ill and some for good.
New Labour insanity, like every half-baked piece of so-called legislation they introduce for the sake of a headline...
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List of hacking tools
Computer
Keyboard
Mouse
Calculator w/Hexidecimal conversion button
Books about Hacking
Internet Forums
Email clients with macro support
...
Pretty much anything could be used as a hacking tool. Lets ban the Earth.
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No Subject Given
Another question ... should telnet be outlawed because it can be used as a hacker tool?
It would be like making baseball bats illegal because they can be used to assault people.
I live in England at the moment, glad to be leaving soon, hoping that this way of thinking doesn't catch on in other parts of the world, especially the one that I am moving to... crazy world
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We are aware that people could use our tool for purposes that it was not intended for, stopping them would be impossible.
We have had no choice but to withdraw our product. Our product is aimed at making sure your children are safe on the internet by allowing you to monitor their activites. But in the wrong hands...
We cannot afford the possibility of a legal battle against the state, with the possiblilty of directors being imprisoned if we lose.
But the new law poses interesting questions as to what depth does the new law extend. For example if I wrote a tool to say, crack a password. Are the operating system routines (50% of the tool) also illegal? All a keylogger is a program that sends data from a keyboard hook to another location. 90% is OS software calls. Are Microsofts hooking calls now illegal?
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