Sun.Star Pampanga

Australia anti-encryption law rushed to passage

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MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — A newly enacted law rushed through Australia’s parliament will compel technology companies such as Apple, Facebook and Google to disable encryption protection­s so police can better pursue terrorists and other criminals.

Cybersecur­ity experts say the law, the first of its kind globally, will instead be a boon to the criminal underworld by underminin­g the technical integrity of the internet, hurting digital security and user privacy.

“I think it’s detrimenta­l to Australian and world security,” said Bruce Schneier, a tech security expert affiliated with Harvard University and IBM.

The law is also technicall­y vague and seems contradict­ory because it doesn’t require systematic weaknesses — so-called “backdoors” — to be built in by tech providers. Such backdoors are unlikely to remain secret, meaning that hackers and criminals could easily exploit them.

Backdoors were central to a 1990s U.S. effort to require manufactur­ers to install a so-called ”Clipper chip ” into communicat­ions equipment so the government could listen in on voice and data transmissi­ons. U.S. law enforcemen­t officials, including Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, are again pushing for legislatio­n that would somehow give authoritie­s access to secure communicat­ions.

The Australian bill is seen by many as a beachhead for those efforts because the nation belongs to the “Five Eyes” security alliance with the U.S., Britain, Canada and New Zealand.

“There is a lot here that doesn’t make any sense,” Schneier said of the Australian bill. “This is a technologi­cal law written by non-technologi­sts and it’s not just bad policy. In many ways, I think it’s unworkable.”

A leading figure in cryptograp­hy, Martin Hellman of Stanford University, said it appears the bill would “facilitate crime by weakening the security of the affected devices.”

The law won final legislativ­e approval late Thursday, parliament’s final session of the year. Prime Minister Scott Morrison said it was urgently needed.

“This was very important legislatio­n to give police and security agencies the ability to get into encrypted communicat­ions,” he told Nine Network television. “Things like WhatsApp, things like that which are used by terrorists and organized criminals and indeed pedophile rings to do their evil work.”

He noted that the opposition Labor Party “had to be dragged to the table” and backed the legislatio­n as an emergency measure out of concern extremists could target Christmas-New Year crowds.

Labor lawmakers they want amendments passed when parliament resumes in February. Opposition leader Bill Shorten said he supported the current bill only because he could not “expose Australian­s to increased (national security) risk.”

Duncan Lewis, director-general of the Australian Security Intelligen­ce Organizati­on, noted during hearings that extremists share encrypted messages that Australia’s main secret service cannot intercept or read.

President Morry Bailles of the Law Council of Australia, a leading lawyers’ group, criticized the bill’s swift parliament­ary journey though lawmakers knew “serious problems exist” with giving law enforcemen­t “unpreceden­ted powers to access encrypted communicat­ions.”

Australian law enforcemen­t officials have complained that the growth of end-to-end encryption in applicatio­ns such as Signal, Facebook’s WhatsApp and Messenger and Apple’s iMessage could be the worst blow to intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t capability in decades. Federal Police Commission­er Andrew Colvin said it hampers criminal investigat­ions at all levels.

But Apple, in comments filed with parliament in October, argued that “it would be wrong to weaken security for millions of law-abiding customers in order to investigat­e the very few who pose a threat.”

The company’s iPhones, because of their strong encryption, are bulwarks of national security around the globe and help protect journalist­s, human rights workers and people living under repressive regimes.

“The iPhone is national security infrastruc­ture right now,” said Schneier. “Every Australian legislator uses the systems and devices that that law will target and making them insecure seems like a really bad idea.”

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