U.K. anti-terrorism law imperils hackers, privacy, property

keyser-soze at hushmail.com keyser-soze at hushmail.com
Sun Jul 29 00:57:02 PDT 2001


At 08:58 PM 7/28/2001 -0400, Declan McCullagh <declan at well.com>wrote:
   .
   .
   .
   Unfortunately, the reporter never mentioned some of the more
   disturbing aspects of the law.
   
   It allows police to randomly stop people on streets, who are then
   required to give their names (so much for anonymity) or go to prison.
   Cops can seize any cash that they believe "is intended to be used for
   the purposes of terrorism," with no court authorization required. Gone
   is the traditional burden of proof: Judges are required to assume that
   contraband in the same building as the accused is owned by the accused
   "unless he proves that he did not know of its presence on the premises
   or that he had no control over it."
   
   Perhaps the most fascinating section restricts even owning information
   that could be useful to "a person committing or preparing an act of
   terrorism." If hackers are terrorists, better delete your copy of Back
   Orifice and bugtraq archives now.

Looks like freedom loving people in the U.K. need to start considering just how acceptable the downsides an Initial Political Load of Parliment might be.  Same goes for those weasels in D.C.
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