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Aus considers e-mail spy law
14/04/2008 13:52  - (SA)  

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  • Sydney - Bosses will be able to spy on workers' e-mails without consent under new anti-terror laws being considered in Australia, Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard said on Monday.

    The proposal is being flagged by the government to prevent a cyber attack on critical national infrastructure such as the stock exchange, electricity grid or transport system.

    "We want to make sure that they are safe from terrorist attack," Gillard said. "Part of doing that is making sure we've got the right powers to ensure that we can tell if there's something unusual going on in the system."

    The suggestion has angered civil libertarians, who say the proposal was open to abuse.

    "Our concern is, that if given these powers, they're more likely to be used for eavesdropping and corporate witch hunts rather than protecting Australia from some kind of cyber attack," Dale Clapperton, chair of the independent internet rights watchdog Electronic Frontiers Australia, told ABC radio.

    Ensure companies were safe

    Gillard defended the proposal, saying it was designed to ensure Australian companies were safe from a terrorist attack.

    "So it's a national security move, not a move about an unseemly interest in people's private emails," she said.

    The Telecommunications (Interceptions) Act currently only allows for workers' e-mails to be monitored by security agencies.

    But Attorney-General Robert McClelland, in an interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, said this needed to be extended to include private companies to protect key infrastructure from the risk of a cyber attack.

    Such an attack could "reap far greater economic damage than would be the case of a physical (terrorist) attack," he said.

    "At least 90% of networks exist outside government, but there's no powers for corporate network supervisors to intercept such communications unless they have specific authority from the employee," he said.

    "There needs to be protocols and guidelines developed so companies can protect their own networks."

    McClelland said he would consult with privacy experts and workers' unions before introducing the laws, which the government hopes will be in place by mid-2009.

    - AFP



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