Normalization Of Mass Surveillance Continues: Ireland And Georgia Join The Snoopers Club
from the in-camera dept
One of the consequences of the Snowden leaks of mass surveillance around the world is that a number of governments have been bringing in new laws in order to provide a legal framework for the snooping they have previously been carrying out illegally, when they obviously thought that no one would ever find out. Here's a story in The Irish Times about recent moves in Ireland:Foreign law enforcement agencies will be allowed to tap Irish phone calls and intercept emails under a statutory instrument signed into law by Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald.As that reports, there's also a troubling new secret court for enforcing such intercept orders -- something that is extremely unusual in Ireland:
Companies that object or refuse to comply with an intercept order could be brought before a private "in camera" court.
The legislation, which took effect on Monday, was signed into law without fanfare on November 26th, the day after documents emerged in a German newspaper indicating the British spy agency General Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) had directly tapped undersea communications cables between Ireland and Britain for years.
"Even with very sensitive cases in Ireland they’re not prosecuted in camera," said TJ McIntyre, lecturer at University College Dublin’s school of law and chairman of advocacy group Digital Rights Ireland. "It's worrying because it means telecommunications companies might be pressured into doing things that aren’t entirely legal."Ireland's move is a further example of how enshrining the ability to spy at home and abroad is taking precedence over basic rights -- in this case, to an open trial. Another country making worrying moves to normalize snooping on its citizens is Georgia, whose Parliament gave a first reading to new laws covering this area, as reported by Civil.ge:
The companies would be prosecuted in secret, and would be unable to disclose their objections publicly – or even the fact that they were being prosecuted.
The government-backed package of bills allows the Interior Ministry to retain its direct access to telecom operators' networks, but also empowers the office of personal data protection inspector to electronically monitor if the security agencies are carrying out surveillance lawfully, based on court warrant.Unfortunately, the more these laws are passed, the more other countries are likely to follow suit, until legalized mass snooping becomes the norm. That's all the more reason to challenge these early examples in any way possible, as is happening in the UK, for example, before the idea spreads everywhere.
But the opponents, which also include civil society groups who have long been campaigning for reining in security agencies' unrestricted direct access to telecom operators’ networks, argue that actual wording of the bill, full of complex technical terms about lawful interception management system, hash codes and log files, is far from what its sponsors are trying to portray and leaves room for the Interior Ministry to bypass personal data protection inspector for carrying out illegal monitoring of mobile phone and internet communication.
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Filed Under: bulk surveillance, georgia, ireland, mass surveillance, surveillance
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Civic Duty
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Re: Civic Duty
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Re:
It might be possible to bypass MS and for the UK to co-operate with the US with the usual info-swap back-scratching. From the linked article:
"Interceptions can only be used in cases with reason, where an investigation is under way, and cannot be used to tap calls indiscriminately.
Requests
The newly enacted section also ... sets out how requests from other countries to Ireland for such interceptions should be handled.
These are separated into requests for technical co-operation, when the assistance of an Irish-based company is needed to set up an interception, and a requirement that the Irish State be notified when a foreign state intends to tap lines but can legally do so without direct Irish assistance."
So if the GCHQ notified Ireland that it was 'tapping' communications and some 'accident' caused a need for transmission (via some external-to-Microsoft routing) of the sought data from one server to another, then it could be intercepted again on the fly and the Irish government need not participate.
It isn't mentioned in this article but the linked article does show Ireland's excuse
"The Department of Justice said: “The decision to commence part 3 of the Act arises from an obligation under the Treaty of Lisbon whereby the State would otherwise be in breach of its obligation to fully implement the provisions of the EU Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters by December 1st, 2014.”"
I think this convention applies to EU states plus others ratifying it but so far there are only 3 non-EU countries that have done this and entered into enforcing it, so far as I know (Chile, Israel, S Korea)
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Jesus watches me, this I know, because Snowden told me so.
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Update your dictionaries.
"Yeah, yeah, you caught us. We've been snooping on everyone and everything for years, but it's okay. We're passing a law to make it legal." When the Russian FSB or PRC wants to tap in too, will that be an amendment to this bill, or will they need a new one entirely?
Child porn, drug dealers, terrorists; the keys to the kingdom for the surveillance state. We need to send all politicians like this packing.
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