>From Dave Farber's list.

The formatting is a bit mangled, but it seemed interesting.




Date: Mon, 28 Jun 1999 13:38:05 -0400
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Farber)
From: "Richard J. Solomon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



Hong Kong Police Calls For Stronger Encryption To Fight Hackers 
HONG KONG, CHINA, 1999 JUN 27 (Newsbytes) -- By Neil Taylor, IT Daily. The Hong Kong 
Police Force has called for an increase in encryption levels and key escrow policies 
to help battle rising levels of computer crime. 
The force is also pushing for an increase in fines levied on hackers. According to the 
Commercial Crimes Bureau, reports of computer-related offenses increased from just 25 
incidents in 1997 to 89 in the first five months of this year. 
Although acts of criminal damage and PABX fraud have fallen, other crimes, 
particularly hacking and publication of obscene articles online, have increased 
sharply. The number of Internet porn cases has risen from six cases in 1997 to 28 this 
year, while reported hacking incidents have shot up from seven to 51. 
However, Detective Chief Inspector Hilton Chan, who heads the bureau's Computer Crime 
Section, said most incidents of hacking were not reported, as companies feared the 
damage to their reputations that could result from a prosecution. 
"The reporting of those cases is very low," Chan said. "In general, this is a 
world-wide problem. Companies are reluctant to report the cases. They have to consider 
the consequential loss on the corporate image and public confidence." 
In cases of criminal damage, victims reported crimes in order to claim compensation 
from their insurers, but when a Web page could be restored from a back-up, or data was 
simply copied, financial losses could be very hard to gauge and the crime was rarely 
reported. 
Detective Senior Inspector Martin Purbrick said existing laws were not sufficient to 
deal with modern, hi-tech forms of crime. 
"If you're a group of hackers or if you're a very good hacker and you just take a copy 
of some files and there's no act of criminal damage, no act of destruction, no actual 
loss to the victim, then the only offense could be unauthorized access by the 
telecommunications line," he said. "Your benefit from that could be millions if you 
sold that data to their rivals, but the fine would be HK$20,000 (US$2,578)." 
Purbrick added that jurisdiction was another serious problem for the police. Although 
Singapore and the United Kingdom had written laws to cover international computer 
crime, Hong Kong, along with most other countries, had not. As a result, many 
cross-border crimes committed over the Internet cannot be prosecuted. 
Singapore police had the power to prosecute a Singaporean hacker who commited a crime 
in Hong Kong, but a Hong Kong hacker could operate with relative impunity unless an 
offense such as theft, fraud or obscene publication could be proved to have had taken 
place. 
Most cases the section has dealt with involve local hackers breaking into local 
systems, and until now there has been little evidence of professional hacking in Hong 
Kong. 
Up to 70 percent of cases involved teenagers and students in their early twenties - 
the most recent Internet related crimes to have been prosecuted involved music piracy 
and fraudulent use of credit cards online. 
Along with stronger fines, the Police are hoping for stronger encryption and the use 
of key recovery systems in the fight against hacking. Chan said the use of key escrow 
systems would enable companies to access their employee's e-mails and the police to 
access suspects' files. Meanwhile, stronger levels of encryption would make hacking 
more difficult and enhance public confidence in the network. 
"We definitely support strong encryption for e-commerce," he said. "The stronger the 
better; the greater the public confidence. We also support the individual's right to 
encrypt their data." 
Exchange Rate: $1 = HK$7.76 
Reported By Newsbytes.com, http://www.newsbytes.com 
Inc. 



nagers </blockquote></x-html> 




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