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In Finland, Nokia May Get Its Own Snooping Law

notany writes "Nokia may be too big a company for Finland (a country of 5 million people). It seems that Nokia's lobbyists can push an unconstitutional law through the legislature at will. After Nokia was caught red-handed, twice, snooping on its employees (first 2000-2001, second 2005), the company started a relentless lobbying and pressure campaign against politicians to push what the press has been calling 'Lex Nokia' or the 'snooping law.' This proposed law would allow employers to investigate the log data of employees' e-mails, legalizing the kind of snooping that Nokia had engaged in. Parliament's Constitutional Law Committee asked the opinions of eight legal experts, and all opined that the proposed law is unconstitutional. The committee ignored all the advice and declared the proposal constitutional." An anonymous reader adds a link to an AFP story reporting that Nokia has threatened to pull out of Finland unless the law passes.

4 of 284 comments (clear)

  1. The Lesson Is... by cc_pirate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Any corporation that is big enough and has enough money, can get the politicians they buy to do anything for them, regardless of the effects on the rest of us.

    The average person is nothing but a 21st century serf and the corporations are the royalty.

    The scenery and technology has changed since the 1700s, but not much else has.

    --

    "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

  2. A few more laws for Nokia to consider by syousef · · Score: 5, Insightful

    - Law to force phone manufacturers to make their keys on their phones large enough for an adult male to operate without using a thimble

    - Law to make phones water resistant. Currently all Nokia phones have a minature water detector linked to a self destruct mechanism

    - Law to ensure annoying bugs in firmware are dealt with in a timely manner. No, not by releasing an updated model that you have to buy at full price because you're still on contract with the buggy phone.

    - Law to ensure that the loudspeaker function doesn't change (and in particular isn't replaced with a cancel call button) between making a call and the call being connected.

    - Law to ensure the phone doesn't require speakerphone to be activated before a human being is able to actually hear what's said. Phones shouldn't be built for magical leprechauns that live inside them

    - Law to ensure that the duration of a call is logged in the call log, not just for the last call.

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  3. Promises by unlametheweak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    an AFP story reporting that Nokia has threatened to pull out of Finland unless the law passes.

    Let them go. Companies that hurt a country should not be tolerated. Only companies that are useful should be welcomed. A corrupt company leaving a country is not a "threat" ("a source of danger").

  4. Re:Holly Crap Fist Post by unlametheweak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Listen son, in the Real World people don't have a choice in whether they can work to feed themselves or not. Unfortunately work takes up a disproportionate amount of time in one's life (despite computers and robots which were supposed to eliminate the need to work). Companies need to start accommodating workers instead of spying on them, stressing them out, and treating them like shit. A company like Nokia that will go out of its way to break the law in order to harm its employees should be forced to nationalize its assets (or at least have a suitable and similar punishment), unfortunately the people who run companies tend to be hypocrites and untrustful. We need to start spying on the executives of large companies, and not the other way around.