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Australian Email Service FastMail Says It is Losing Customers and Facing Calls To Move Operations Outside of the Country Over Local Anti-Encryption Laws (itnews.com.au)

An anonymous reader shares a report: Email provider FastMail says it has lost customers and faces "regular" requests to shift its operations outside Australia following the passage of anti-encryption laws. The Victorian company, which offers ad-free email services to users in 150 countries, told a senate committee that the now-passed laws were starting to bite.

"The way in which [the laws] were introduced, debated, and ultimately passed ... creates a perception that Australia has changed - that we are no longer a country which respects the right to privacy," FastMail CEO Bron Gondwana said. "We have already seen an impact on our business caused by this perception. Our particular service is not materially affected as we already respond to warrants under the Telecommunications Act." "Still, we have seen existing customers leave, and potential customers go elsewhere, citing this bill as the reason for their choice. We are [also] regularly being asked by customers if we plan to move."

4 of 65 comments (clear)

  1. We love and support anti-encryption laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dear Australia,

    We love and support anti-encryption laws.

    See you soon,

    -Hackers and Malicious State Actors Everywhere.

    1. Re: We love and support anti-encryption laws by MrKaos · · Score: 3, Informative

      The truth is, no one reads the bills anymore.

      I read it, twice. I wrote two forty page submissions to government about why this Bill was bad. The bill was actually called telecommunication assistance act, and does not ban encryption, and actually has a clause preventing government from ordering any weakness insecurity for anyone other than the one individual in question.

      What it does is order is a front door be constructed so that government can access everything.

      The encryption laws are totally misunderstood and said wrong in media.

      There is no back door or weakness.

      Inherently, the bill does not define what a "systemic weakness" is whilst relying on it as a primary concept in the bill.

      What the law does ask is that if the government gets a court order for a users information, the company needs to help by logging that particular users encryption key or password, next time they log in for instance.

      No it does not. The Bill delegates powers through the Attorney General to the heads of various police department. Except the ones investigating government corruption - they are excluded from accessing these powers in pursuit of a politician.

      It specifically criminalizes information technology professionals who do not want to have their skill set used to spy on fellow citizens through Technical Assistance Notices and other legal mechanisms to compel an innocent 3rd party to co-operate.

      There is no law banning encryption.

      Just by-passes it.

      It actually changes nothing because judges can already order you to capture a password or encryption key for you, it just sets up a commission that makes the process faster.

      10 years jail and $60,000 in fines for not co-operating hardly qualifies as no change. You need read these laws if you hope to understand why they are so bad.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  2. Bad Customer Service by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm sure their downfall has nothing to do with bad customer service... like closing down someone's account because they haven't used it in a few months- despite paying for a LIFETIME no ad membership over a decade ago.

    If I have a paid membership; whether I use the account on a regular basis or not is my business, I paid for it.

    --
    "That's the way to do it" - Punch
  3. Remember when "Aussie Rules" meant ballsy? by Miles_O'Toole · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not anymore, apparently. It looks like tough, independent Australians are being turned into an obedient little slaves to Big Brother.

    I would recommend Proton Mail, either the free or paid version. It's based in Switzerland and dedicated to protecting the privacy of its users.

    --
    Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.