The Mercury

Tech giants hit by Australian bill

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AUSTRALIA’S parliament yesterday passed a bill to force tech firms such as Alphabet Inc’s Google, Facebook and Apple to give police access to encrypted data, the most far-reaching such requiremen­ts imposed by a Western country.

The bill, staunchly opposed by the tech giants which fear Australia could be an example as other nations explore similar rules, is set to become law before the end of the year.

The bill, passed by the lower house of parliament earlier yesterday, was to be debated in the upper Senate, where the Labor Party said it intended to suggest new amendments, before going back to the lower house.

In an 11th-hour twist, Labor said that despite its reservatio­ns it would pass the bill in the Senate, on the proviso that the coalition agreed to its amendments next year.

“We will pass the legislatio­n, inadequate as it is, so we can give our security agencies some of the tools they say they need,” Labor leader Bill Shorten said.

The bill provides for fines of up to A$10 million (R101.8m) for institutio­ns and prison terms for individual­s for failing to hand over data linked to suspected illegal activities.

When it becomes law, Australia will be one of the first nations to impose broad access requiremen­ts on technology firms, after many years of lobbying by intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agencies in many countries, particular­ly the so-called Five Eyes nations.

The Five Eyes intelligen­ce network, comprising the US, Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand, have each warned that national security was at risk because authoritie­s were unable to monitor the communicat­ions of suspects.

Australia’s government has said the laws are needed to counter militant attacks and organised crime and that security agencies would need to seek warrants to access personal data.

Technology companies have opposed efforts to create what they see as a back door to users’ data, a standoff that was propelled into the public arena by Apple’s refusal to unlock an iPhone used by an attacker in a 2015 shooting in California. The companies say creating tools for law enforcemen­t to break encryption will inevitably undermine security for everyone.

Representa­tives of Google, Amazon and Apple were not available for comment after the Senate vote. Earlier, a Facebook spokespers­on pointed to a statement made by the Digital Industry Group Inc (Digi), of which Facebook as well as Apple, Google, Amazon and Twitter, are members.

“This legislatio­n is out of step with surveillan­ce and privacy legislatio­n in Europe and other countries that have strong national security concerns,” it read. “Several critical issues remain unaddresse­d in this legislatio­n, most significan­tly the prospect of introducin­g systemic weaknesses that could put Australian­s’ data security at risk,” it said.

 ?? | EPA ?? RIOT police were on high alert in Athens, yesterday during a rally marking the 10th anniversar­y of the killing of a 15-year-old student that sparked the worst rioting Greece had seen in decades. Hundreds of school pupils and university students marched through the streets of the capital. A group of protesters threw home-made firebombs and chunks of concrete at the police. Officers responded with tear gas, temporaril­y dispersing the rioters as they marched to parliament.
| EPA RIOT police were on high alert in Athens, yesterday during a rally marking the 10th anniversar­y of the killing of a 15-year-old student that sparked the worst rioting Greece had seen in decades. Hundreds of school pupils and university students marched through the streets of the capital. A group of protesters threw home-made firebombs and chunks of concrete at the police. Officers responded with tear gas, temporaril­y dispersing the rioters as they marched to parliament.

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