By Lori Enos E-Commerce Times
12/05/00 12:00 AM PT
At least one civil rights group will challenge the proposal to log all UK e-mail and phone calls.
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British law enforcement agencies are seeking the right to
log every e-mail and phone call within the United Kingdom,
according to a report by the deputy director general of
the National Criminal Intelligence Service (NCIS).
The agencies are proposing that as a "matter of urgency,"
communication service providers (CSPs)
should be required to maintain logs
of all calls, e-mails and Internet dial-up connections for a period of seven years.
Currently many CSPs maintain such logs for 24 hours or less.
Under the terms of the proposal, police would not have the
right to access the content of e-mails or phone calls,
but would have access to logs that detail the time
calls or e-mails were made, as
well as which numbers or e-mail addresses were connected.
The report was written in August but leaked
Sunday to the Cryptome Web site.
Long Arm of Law
The law is necessary, according to the proposal's
author, NCIS deputy director
general Roger Gaspar, because "short-term retention,
followed by deletion, will quickly render certain criminal
elements beyond reach of the law."
The proposal is backed by several organizations,
including the UK's security intelligence agency,
also known as MI5, the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6)
and the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ).
Reportedly, the proposal is being considered seriously
by the Home Office, the department responsible for
internal affairs in England and Wales.
Digital Witness
According to Gaspar, records which were once in the
category of eyewitness accounts, because they were
written down, are now in the hands of machines.
"With advances in digital communications technology,"
Gaspar added, "the only eyewitness account of crimes on
the Internet is provided by communications data. There is
no human involvement to witness the electronic activity,
only a victim to the outcome."
The report concludes that it is "in the interests of
justice to preserve and protect data for use as evidence
to establish proof of innocence or guilt."
Liberty Issues
Although the government contends that the early deletion of communications data
"will seriously compromise the interests of justice," civil
rights activists are calling for the government to reject the proposal, on the
grounds that it is a breach of civil liberties and a violation of the Human Rights Act.
"The security services and the police have a voracious
appetite for collecting up information about our
private lives, but this is an extraordinary idea,"
John Wadham, director of the civil rights group Liberty,
said in published reports.
"If it goes ahead we will challenge this in the courts
in this country and the European Court of Human Rights," Wadham added.
However, Gaspar wrote in the report that the NCSI
believes "the Home Office already accepts that such
activity is unquestionably lawful, necessary and
proportional, as well as being vital in the interests
of justice and the protection of a free society."
Private Warehouse
The proposal put forth by Gaspar recommends that data either be stored at government
warehouses, or to avoid conflict-of-interest issues, in warehouses
run by trusted third parties.
The report goes on to say that a government-controlled
agency could be "economically advantageous, but would
bring some political sensitivities."
The cost to build a government-run data warehouse would
be US$4.3 million, and the annual cost to warehouse data
would be $13 million, according to Gaspar.