Clueless Spanish Politicians Want To Join The Government Malware Club
from the dedicated-follower-of-fashion dept
As we've noted before, when it comes to the Internet, governments around the world have an unfortunate habit of copying each other's worst ideas. Thus the punitive three-strikes approach based on accusations, not proof, was pioneered by France, and then spread to the UK, South Korea, New Zealand and finally the US (where, naturally, it became the bigger and better "six strikes" scheme). France appears to be about to abandon this unworkable and ineffective approach, leaving other countries to deal with all the problems it has since discovered.
Now there seems to be a new craze amongst ill-informed policy-makers: the use of government-sanctioned malware to spy on citizens. We wrote about Germany's trojan software back in October last year. Australia's spies want the same capability, and New Europe is reporting that Spain too is planning to pass a law that will allow its police to install malware on the systems of citizens:
According to the article 350 of the proposed draft, prosecutors may ask the judge for "the installation of a software that allows the remote examination and without knowledge of the owner of the content in computers, electronical devices, computer systems, instruments of massive storage or databases."
The key concern raised for similar projects of other countries applies here too: intentionally placing malware on computers increases the risk that others will be able to take control of those systems thanks to vulnerabilities in the code. That's no theoretical issue, as evidenced by major flaws discovered in Germany's trojan software. But it turns out that Spain's proposed malware scheme has an additional bad idea:
Furthermore, the article 351 of the text explains that official agents may require cooperation from "anyone who knows the operation of the computer system or measures applied in order to protect data held there". This means that Spanish authorities might require services from experts, "hackers" or computer companies.
Clearly that could be applied to Google or Facebook, say, which might be forced to provide user passwords or maybe even actively cooperate in attempts to infect a user's system. Given the current revelations about Internet companies' complicity in spying on huge numbers of people around the world, there seems little reason to hope that they would refuse to do so, despite protestations to the contrary, even if they -- unlike the Spanish politicians proposing this law -- understood the extreme stupidity of this approach.
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Filed Under: malware, spain, surveillance
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Wow!
This is so mind-bendingly dumb you have to wonder if it's deliberate.
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process now for a pc desktop
take home
wipe it totally clean 7 times
then put a pirated operating system on it.
yup thanks for spying come again....
see all the old farts are getting scared of my kind
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Re: process now for a pc desktop
You have numerous options for nonpirated, safer, better operating systems that you can maintain control over.
Also, you should have a solid tripwire system on your computers to spot any unwanted tampering with your files, and the most restrictive firewall you can stand so if some malware does infect your system it will have problems phoning home.
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Re: leader of 3000 class A hackers says BOO
Multics today
So there you go.
Terrified. Absolutely terrified.
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Trigger for "Reasonable doubt" ?
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Open Source
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Re: process now for a pc desktop
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Broken chain of evidence
Any forensic technician can tell you, that with such malware on a computer, you've got a broken chain of evidence. You cannot prove anymore that the user of that computer was actually committing a crime. It could just as well been perpetrated by the agent controlling the malware.
So any government installed malware is completely, utterly, unusable for law enforcement purposes.
Of course, intelligence agencies give a damn about any chains of evidence; so they might like it.
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Message to the Dutch readers
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Re: Re: process now for a pc desktop
I'm not sure I've got one and think I probably need one.
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New Europe, I did not know about that place, it is near New York ?
Europe is a group of many countries, it cannot 'report' anything.
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Re:
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Re: Re: Re: process now for a pc desktop
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Re:
New Europe is the name of a website.
Sincerely,
Techdirt's Unofficial Clue Department
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