The document:
http://www.politechbot.com/docs/treaty.html


http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,36047,00.html

    Cyber-treaty Goes Too Far?
    by Declan McCullagh ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

    3:00 a.m. May. 3, 2000 PDT
    WASHINGTON -- U.S. and European police agencies will receive new
    powers to investigate and prosecute computer crimes, according to a
    preliminary draft of a treaty being circulated among over 40 nations.

    The Council of Europe's 65KB proposal is designed to aid police in
    investigations of online miscreants in cases where attacks or
    intrusions cross national borders.

    But the details of the "Draft Convention on Cybercrime" worry U.S.
    civil libertarians. They warn that the plan would violate longstanding
    privacy rights and grant the government far too much power.

    The proposal, which is expected to be finalized by December 2000 and
    appears to be the first computer crime treaty, would:

     * Make it a crime to create, download, or post on a website any
     computer program that is "designed or adapted" primarily to gain
     access to a computer system without permission. Also banned is
     software designed to interfere with the "functioning of a computer
     system" by deleting or altering data.

     * Allow authorities to order someone to reveal his or her passphrase
     for an encryption key. According to a recent survey, only Singapore
     and Malaysia have enacted such a requirement into law, and experts say
     that in the United States it could run afoul of constitutional
     protections against self-incrimination.

     * Internationalize a U.S. law that makes it a crime to possess even
     digital images that "appear" to represent children's genitals or
     children engaged in sexual conduct. Linking to such a site also would
     be a crime.

     * Require websites and Internet providers to collect information about
     their users, a rule that would potentially limit anonymous remailers.

    [...]

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