間諜法律軌道移動電話
安全機關能通過他們的移動電話秘密地跟蹤人和監測他們的互聯網瀏覽三個月的,无需得到保證根據新的法律由於在參議院之前去這個星期。
力量能用於相對地較小邢事調查的範圍,不僅恐怖主義案件。
他們將允許ASIO和聯邦和狀態警察要求電話公司和網絡服務提供戶小河信息對他們在「在實時附近」 -幾分鐘,在電話打之後或網站被參觀。 The information would have to be provided for up to 90 days for ASIO investigations, and 45 days if state or federal police are involved.
Justified as a counter-terrorism measure, the legislation has already been passed by government and Labor members of the lower house. But it remains deeply unpopular with legal experts and privacy advocates.
As well as not requiring a warrant signed by a judicial officer, the powers could be used in any criminal investigation into a suspected offence that carries a jail term of three years or more.
The regime applies to all “telecommunications data”, including the time and destination of phone calls made and received, the duration of the calls and the location of the callers.
For computers, security agencies would be told what website addresses and chat rooms the user has visited and what files have been downloaded. The laws would also enable authorities to track internet conversations.
Security agencies would still need a judicial warrant to listen in on phone calls, or peruse emails.
The Greens senator Kerry Nettle said the powers would allow authorities to glean huge amounts of information. Every mobile phone could potentially become a tracking device for police and ASIO.
The bill “is more like something from East Germany than a party claiming to support liberal principles”, she said. “There is no judicial oversight. Police and ASIO should have to get a warrant to track and tap people’s mobile phones or web browsing.”
The Attorney-General, Philip Ruddock, was unavailable for comment yesterday. He has previously said the laws do not constitute new powers for security agencies, but a “more systematic and appropriate controls over the existing access framework”.
But the legislation’s own explanatory memorandum says the regime for “prospective” telecommunications data - the streaming of near real-time information for up to 90 days - is new.
The Law Council of Australia argues that technological advances mean the powers pose new dangers to privacy. Tracking someone with a mobile phone was far easier than secretly affixing a listening device without breaking and entering, it said. Therefore the proposed powers were “far more amenable to misuse or over-use by law enforcement agencies”.
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