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Tech leaders will be jailed for reporting UK spying

by on31 December 2015


Two years in prison

The UK government is threatening to jail leaders of tech companies who warn their customers that they have been victims of government spying.


Twitter, Facebook, Google Yahoo and Microsoft have promised to alert users who it suspected were being spied on by state-sponsored actors. But David Cameron is not having any of that. Apparently in the latest snooper’s charter that he is pushing through he will jail the bosses of any company that warns its members that British agencies are monitoring them for two years.

Specifically, UK ministers want to make it a criminal offence for tech firms to warn users of requests for access to their communication data made by security organizations such as MI5, MI6 and GCHQ (the Government Communications Headquarters).

David Anderson QC, the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, revealed that Twitter’s policy requires it to notify its users of requests to access their data “unless persuaded not to do so, typically by a court order.” But a note to the bill would make this illegal.

He said that it will “ensure that a communication service provider does not notify the subject of an investigation that a request has been made for their data unless expressly permitted to do so.”

The controversial Investigatory Powers Bill, nicknamed the snooper’s charter, was unveiled by home secretary Theresa May in November. Part of the proposed legislation would require tech firms to store users’ data for up to twelve months, including a record of every internet site visited, and allow government agencies unfettered access to the data. While the bill is being put forward as a deterrent against terrorism, online monitoring at this level has been banned in the US, Canada, and every other European nation.

The bill could also allow the UK government to demand that companies weaken the encryption on messaging services such as WhatsApp and iMessage to enable agencies to evesdrop on conversations.

Last modified on 31 December 2015
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