Well, Australia is also looking at (and probably soon to pass) similarly draconian legislation. The EFA is Electronic Frontiers Australia -- see http://www.efa.org.au/Campaigns/cybercrime.html
EFA lodged a submission with the Inquiry into The Law Enforcement Implications of New Technology being conducted by the Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority. EFA is very concerned about proposals put forward by several law enforcement agencies for legislation to require Australian ISPs to retain transaction logs of all user activities. We consider the monitoring or data warehousing of Internet traffic or content on a mass scale to be highly privacy-invasive and an infringement of the human rights of Internet users. This proposal, if not strongly opposed by Internet users, is likely to foreshadow a move towards a Bill similar to the draconian Regulation of Investigatory Powers Bill (R.I.P.) recently passed in the U.K. The submission will be made available on EFA's website as soon as the Committee has granted permission for it to be made publicly available (this is normal prodecure in accord with Parliamentary inquiry rules/procedures). The Committee's report is likely to be tabled in the Winter sittings of Parliament.
Greg. At 04:35 PM 7/29/2001 -0700, Ray Dillinger wrote:
The DMCA and the Terrorism Act appear to provide exactly such laws. What has been passed recently by the other signatories to the UKUSA agreement that created Echelon?
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