http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2631389,00.html

Nations struggling to fight cybercrime 
 
High-tech industry groups and privacy advocates are considering an international 
treaty on cybercrime. But, can we all agree on one plan?

By Juliana Gruenwald, Inter@ctive Week 
September 25, 2000 3:49 AM PT 

European and U.S. officials are moving toward a final draft of the world's first 
international treaty on cybercrime, a broad effort that high-tech industry groups and 
privacy advocates fear could intrude on personal privacy and hamper e-commerce.

The proposal, which has been in the drafting stage for nearly three years, calls on 
countries to pass uniform laws that would, among other things, ban hacking devices and 
require countries to empower their law enforcement officers to conduct computer and 
network searches and seizures. 

Though slow to react to the proposal, some U.S. industry groups are now scrambling to 
voice their objections as the Council of Europe, working with the U.S. and other 
governments, last week held a new round of talks on the treaty. 

The convention is "in part trying to harmonize what may be more appropriately left to 
individual" countries, said Jeffrey Pryce, a Washington Internet and e-commerce 
lawyer. 

Some also expressed concern that the Department of Justice, which is playing a leading 
role for the U.S., may be seeking powers through the treaty that it could not get 
through Congress. 

"When the U.S. government cannot get a controversial policy adopted domestically, they 
pressure an international group to adopt it, and then bring it back to the U.S. as an 
international treaty - which obliges Congress to enact it," wrote David Banisar, a 
senior fellow at the Electronic Privacy Information Center, in a commentary on the 
draft treaty for Web site SecurityFocus.com. 

Officially, the convention is a product of the council, a 41-member organization that 
develops agreements to standardize social and legal practices across Eastern and 
Western Europe. 

But officials from Canada, Japan, South Africa and the U.S. have been participating in 
the negotiations. And the council said it will invite other countries to sign the 
final pact, which it hopes to complete in December. 

"As computer crimes are often international in their nature, national measures need to 
be supplemented by international cooperation," the council said in releasing its first 
public draft of the convention in April. The council may release a second public draft 
of the convention, perhaps as soon as this week. 

The devil is in the details
The council began its work on the convention in April 1997, after determining that a 
1995 paper recommending that countries adopt laws covering computer-related crime did 
not go far enough, and that a legally binding agreement was needed. 

The draft calls on signatories to pass legislation against illegally accessing a 
computer, intercepting computer data or interfering with computer systems. It also 
would ban the sale, purchase, import and distribution of devices used for hacking, and 
requires passage of laws against computer-related fraud or forgery and child 
pornography. Signatories also would be required to provide law enforcement authorities 
with the ability to conduct computer searches and seize computer data. 

In addition, the proposed treaty would require those with access to or knowledge of 
computer data sought by authorities to provide "all necessary information, as is 
reasonable," for authorities to obtain the data. 

"These computer-specific investigative measures will also imply cooperation by telecom 
operators and Internet service providers, whose assistance is vital to identify 
computer criminals and secure evidence of their misdeeds," the council said in 
releasing the public draft. 


One section deals with the interception of data through networks, but the details were 
not included in the April text. The section was one of the areas being discussed by 
the drafting committee last week, according to a U.S. official, who said the U.S. has 
been pushing for a more updated proposal to be released publicly. 

The final sections of the convention deal with improving cooperation. The draft 
requires signatories to "cooperate with each other . . . to the widest extent 
possible." It also calls for cooperation in the extradition of suspects, and outlines 
procedures for law enforcement authorities to assist one another. 

"What we're trying to do is establish expedited forms of communications . . . not get 
rid of the checks" and balances, said Jennifer Martin, a trial lawyer at the DOJ's 
computer crimes and intellectual property section, which is taking the lead for the 
Clinton administration on the issue. 

Concerns and questions
Most agree that cybercrime cannot be viewed as a national problem alone. But privacy 
advocates, information security professionals and others worry about the council's 
approach. 

Gus Hosein, deputy director at Privacy International in London, said one of his 
biggest concerns is that in harmonizing cybercrime laws, those laws that restrict law 
enforcement powers the least may prevail. 

For example, Hosein pointed to Britain's Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, a 
measure that grants law enforcement officials broad powers to demand access to 
electronic data. He questioned whether the treaty could be used by U.K. officials to 
obtain information about a British suspect outside Britain using powers granted by the 
U.K. law. 

Computer security professionals worry that the prohibitions on devices used for 
hacking could prevent the legitimate use of such technology and software to test 
computer security products. 

"Our biggest concern is that people don't understand the technology . . . [that] you 
have to use the same technology to do both legitimate and illegitimate acts," said 
Lisa Norton, a Washington lawyer who represents Internet Security Systems. 

Other concerns have been raised about the data storage requirements. Internet service 
providers worry that they may not have the capacity to store reams of data, and if 
forced to, they could open themselves up to liability from those who own the data. 

"The intentions behind the treaty are valid, but as the first draft came out, it 
seemed to raise more problems than it would cure," said Jason Mahler, vice president 
and general council at the Computer and Communications Industry Association. 

DOJ and council officials said much of the concern over the draft stems from a 
misunderstanding of the treaty's intent and a need for clarifications in the text. For 
example, they said, security testing would not be banned, because prosecutors must 
show there was intent to commit an illegal act. Peter Csonka, deputy head of the 
council's economic crime division, said there needs to be a better explanation of the 
language banning the use of such devices "without right." 

When asked about privacy concerns with the treaty, Csonka said: "These concerns may be 
legitimate, but they could be raised in relation to any international treaty. 
Harmonization of laws is necessary to avoid a legal jungle on the Net."  




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krys, you live on in our memories
your life's promise merged with our own dreams 
but when we heard you died we cried
no one could answer the question, "why?"
                       -- jeradonah, Oct 30 '99 




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