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EU Governments Agree To Tougher Stance On E-evidence (reuters.com)

EU governments agreed on Friday to toughen up draft rules allowing law enforcement authorities to get electronic evidence directly from tech companies such as Facebook and Google stored in the cloud in another European country. From a report: The move underlines the growing trend in Europe to rein in tech giants whether on the regulatory front or the antitrust front. The e-evidence proposal also came in the wake of recent deadly terrorist attacks in Europe, pressure on tech companies to do more to cooperate with police investigations and people's growing tendency to store and share information on WhatsApp, Facebook, Viber, Skype, Instagram and Telegram.

The European Commission, the EU executive, came up with the draft legislation in April, which includes a 10-day deadline for companies to respond to police requests or 6 hours in emergency cases, and fines up to 2 percent of a company's global turnover for not complying with such orders. The proposal covers telecoms services providers, online marketplaces and internet infrastructure services providers and applies to subscriber data and other data on access, transactional and content.

3 of 19 comments (clear)

  1. NAZIS won... by quantic_oscillation7 · · Score: 2

    well looks like it....

    1. Re:NAZIS won... by gweihir · · Score: 2

      They did not win yet. The holy grail is forbidding any non-backdoored encryption.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  2. doesn't matter to me by olsmeister · · Score: 2

    Since I reside in the Apple ecosystem, all of the evidence of my wrongdoings are actually iEvidence.