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Europe Hacker Laws Could Make Protest a Crime

  • 05-03-2003 11:05am
    #1
    Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 16,659 ✭✭✭✭


    Europe Hacker Laws Could Make Protest a Crime

    The justice ministers of the European Union have agreed on laws intended to deter computer hacking and the spreading of computer viruses. But legal experts say the new measures could pose problems because the language could also outlaw people who organize protests online, as happened recently, en masse, with protests against a war in Iraq.

    The agreement, reached last week, obliges all 15 member states to adopt a new criminal offense: illegal access to, and illegal interference with an information system. It calls on national courts to impose jail terms of at least two years in serious cases.

    Critics from the legal profession say the agreement makes no legal distinction between an online protester and terrorists, hackers and spreaders of computer viruses that the new laws are intended to trap.

    Last Wednesday, protesters against a possible war against Iraq barraged the White House and Senate offices with tens of thousands of messages by phone, fax and e-mail, as part of what was billed as the first-ever "virtual protest march."

    Under the new agreement, if European Union citizens undertook a similar electronic bombardment of the e-mail, fax and phone lines of the British prime minister, Tony Blair, they might be liable for prosecution, said Leon de Costa, chief executive of Judicium, a legal consultancy based in London. The new code "criminalizes behavior which, until now, has been seen as lawful civil disobedience," Mr. de Costa said.

    [...]


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 772 ✭✭✭Chaos-Engine


    Ever more reason to be unlawfully disobidenant
    Just becasue its illegal doesn't make it wrong..

    Something else that also sickens me is that fact that the average adult hacker will most probably get more time behind bars than a child abuser...


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