Australian Attorney General Pushes Ahead With Gov't Web Snooping
CuteSteveJobs writes "Australian Attorney-General Nicola Roxon now fully backs a controversial plan to capture the online data of all Australians, despite only six weeks ago saying 'the case had yet to be made.' The Tax Office, the Federal Police and the Opposition all support it, with Liberal National Party MP Ross Vasta declaring 'the highest degree of scrutiny and diligence is called for.' With all major parties on board, web monitoring of all Australians appears to be inevitable."
One country at a time, the governments are putting in place the function to collect all data so it can be freed by hackers.
Surely there is SOMEONE in Australia that objects to this? Surely there is at least ONE politician that sees how wrong it is to effectively wiretap a whole country.
I'm just shaking my head, and please don't call me Surely.
The fiance and I have been considering emigrating for a few years while we're still young enough to be of value to another nation (I'm 31 and she's 24). Looks like you made the decision that much easier. New Zealand is now ahead in the polls.
"Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
The US does it but says they aren't. Search for Project Echelon. Welcome to the supposedly-free world.
All your network traffic are belong to us.
-Says the Australian government.
sudo make me a sandwich
Apparently "the case has not yet been made" is Aussie for "my campaign fund appears to be underfunded".
This is a bill to force telcoms to not dispose of the data they've collected for at least two years. There's nothing in hear about "a plan to capture the online data...". Now the data is being retained to help in investigations but there's a HUGE difference between the telcom having it and the government having to subpoena it and the government collecting it all themselves.
With all major parties on board, web monitoring of all Australians appears to be inevitable.
If they're all in favour of something so draconian and so anti-freedom, are they really different parties at all? And do they really have any interest in the well being of their constituents?
'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
Doesn't a simple web proxy render this kind of data from the ISP useless?
in the name of The Children, I think it's about time we grab all of the activists and other paranoiacs who've created the hysteria about the dangers to children and throw them into a Soviet-style labor camp and surround it with two miles of landmines. As an American, I volunteer Death Valley or some place in northern Alaska. If you're going to gut civil liberties like that, you have no right to complain when someone does it to you.
Now there's Big Mate
So, hot on the heals of a Slashdot story about Australia moving to fibre so they can push VOIP, we now get a story that states that they want to:
force all Australian telcos and internet service providers to store the online data of all Australians for up to two years
Yeah, don't worry - they're not related though. Really, we just think VOIP will improve everyone's lives.
A recursive sig
Can impart wisdom and truth
Call proc signature()
Aussies are pretty smart and something will change if they get upset.
Solve it by a game of cricket ;-) Throw a full yorker at the attorney general and see how the law sticks when he is on the crease!
All cows eat grass!
I am doing almost all of my browsing using TOR. Now, what if we would all use TOR, publish our stuff as a hidden TOR service (it's quite easy) and encrypt each and every Email using GPG, encrypt harddisks routinely using TrueCrypt.
Yeah, I know all the bitch/whining about it "being sooo complicated", but reality is that We Are So Lazy. Let's get off our asses and do something about all the Surveillance-Industrial-Complex (SIC). And if you think TOR is not good enough, build a competitor and I will happily use it. Hint: The weak point is the directory system and the fixed hop count.
Seems like every day I hear about Australia further restricting and monitoring Internet usage. Does Australia have so few problems that they must create an evil to declare war on? Not saying my home country doesn't do the same thing, mind you...
Agree, if you don't want "advertisers" and RIAA snooping on you (that's beside law enforcement's) encryption is the way to go.
BTW, is there any equivalent to "secure-tunnel" outside of US? I'm using almost always for regular browsing.
My guess they are so impressed with China's performance that they are trying to simply copy it. If everything goes fine Another Great Firewall is coming. :-/
...3 things..
1) What's to stop most people from tossing back and forth some randomly generated files, thus causing these already massive "backups" of all of the "data" to become super-duper-massive?
2) What sort of data are they keeping? If I pay for a song from itunes (as if), does that mean that they keep a copy?
3) If I download illegal documents, or documents that are not meant for civilians, and they keep a copy, do they keep that too?
Fuck, if I could just get a job with an Australian ISP, I could use them to store my files, and look clean!
May I assume that the Greens are not a major party yet? Or have they aligned themselves with one of them? And are they speaking up? They received no mention the article. Oh well, it's up to the people to vote the 'major parties' out if they are interested in stopping this atrocity.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
if that includes snooping all of the govt's web traffic too....
As an Ozzie I love the idea that my government will provide me with a free back up of all my data.
I got to the chocolate box before you, that's why the hard ones have teeth marks.
Nicola Roxon seems to be a genuinely caring person, she has won international recognition for her campaigned against cigaret companies, she isnt one of these power seeking politicians looking for kickbacks or to earn favors from the intelligence community.
She seems to genuinely believe this is need to protect society, and doesn't seem to expect this information to abused.
I cant think of anyone more fitting for the "Nanny" tag from the nanny state.
Fair my arse.
Australia is turning into an Authoritarian state.
Cut out the middle man send Attorney-General Nicola Roxon every thing right now. CC him on every email and photo upload and send him your daily web browsing histories, if he has twitter the update him on what your are doing.
This is what they did in Canada and they crashed the Parliamentary mail and web servers. After a few days of this the bill was effectively withdrawn.
Undetectable Steganography? Yep, there's an app fo
If it's good enough for the government to collect our data, then the public should be able to see the data of the people collecting the data. I'd like Nicola Roxon to be the first to publicly make available all of her private emails, google search history, email addresses and all other data collected.
If Nicola Roxon wil do this, I'd be in favor of the government snooping and intruding into our lives.
The Labor party will be wiped out in the next federal election, similar to what happened to them in QLD, and anyone voting in favor of this is committing political suicide. Another day, another lie from a Labor politician. What's new.
Since reading about this I've been wondering just how long do Australian ISPs retain such data for currently, without these new laws in place? Given GSM phone towers supposedly retain 37 years worth of EMEI logs, I can't imagine many ISPs would totally roll their logs within two years anyway. Can someone here who actually works at an Aussie ISP clarify the current situation please?
I used to have a better sig than this, but I got tired of it
It is a bit disingenuous to state that "web monitoring of all Australians appears to be inevitable". I, for one, am tunneling my web traffic via SSH to a server overseas, so they won't be monitoring my URLs ;)
-"I still believe in revolution; I just don't capitalize it anymore." - srini!
Because that would be more fitting. :P
http:/pirateparty.org.au
Yes, all major parties are on board. The only dissenters are the public. When the people fear their government it is a tyranny, when the government fears the people it is liberty. Australia is becoming increasingly tyrannical, perhaps only so as to snuggle up to China just like they snuggled up to Suddam Hussein.
THIS is one variant of the "Mayan Grade" Apocalypse.
Forget Wikileaks, what if ALL DATA ANYWHERE got turbo-released because of a devastating flaw?
We'd have like 999*999 Terabytes of infringing data on EVERYONE, EVER.
Good luck with the lawsuits arising from THAT!
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
Please default to https
I deal with security of a payment gateway. Part of my job is to make sure we don't keep any credit card details floating around yet these new laws conflict with that. Years ago it seemed simple, just purge the field that has the card number in it. Too bad that is a naive solution for a far more complex problem and now I may be required to keep logs for years? Do you know how many card numbers show up in logs for stupid reasons?
Do you know how many people put their card number in the "name on card field"? What do you do about a email address of 5123456789012345@gmail.com when they used card xxx345? What do you do with the message "Did payment to card number 4123... go through?" How about encrypted files that use a credit card number as the file name? How about reference text of "ref_cardnumber" to deal with refunds? How about card numbers in https GET requests even though the data must be POSTed to even work?
I used cardrecon to scan my DNS personal server's DNS logs and it found people probing what appears to be cardnumber.abnormal.com. I have no idea what that is about. It finds all sorts of odd things that appears to have card numbers in it like deleted text from word or pdf documents.
It strikes me as odd that the Pirate Party would be against someone copying your data.
I know you're probably going for a Funny mod, but The Pirate Party does not condone piracy. It is about making sure people are not harassed by one-sided laws that go against the common good.
You're right, I'd conflated their position with the standard SlashDot take on abolishing copyright, which was a bit flip anyway as anti-copyright thought usually applies to public, not private, data.
Reading their site it's not clear exactly what they propose other than 'reform'. As best I can work out they want to reduce the length of copyright and patents to some unstated period, and possibly make it only apply to corporations. For the data-rentention issue you may be better off linking to the Greens who have similar policies on privacy and aren't tainted with the one-issue label (sort of).
With every Austrailian citizen that reads this info online logged as an Enemy of the State.
Anyone who thinks every single government on the planet isn't already collecting, trying to collect, or wishing they could collect, every shred of information about everyone they possibly can is a bleary-eyed dreamer. It is the nature of government to wield every available control mechanism. There are no exceptions, just variations of denial.
To Aussie's credit, at least they have the forthrightness to make no bones about it.
OTOH, neither did/does the KGB/FSB.
Want privacy? Unplug from the internet, pay cash, use pay phones, work under the table, and don't drive.
Only Luddites have a reasonable expectation of real privacy in today's world.
Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
Sounds like Tor network usage is about to go up in Australia...
Since the multi-nationals have gotten full human rights and bought all the elected offices in the U.S., I believe the question is "are they really different nationalities". It used to be "alignment", now it's all capitalism as the communist "threat" doesn't fly so well. "Sharia Menace", anyone?
They feared that it could be used to suppress protest or support unpopular rule.
That's just like, your opinion, man.