|
Neohapsis is currently accepting applications for employment. For more information, please visit our website www.neohapsis.com or email hr@neohapsis.com |
[ISN] FC: Law lets Australian police hack computers
From: mea culpa (jericho
DIMENSIONAL.COM)
Date: Mon Dec 06 1999 - 12:41:45 CST
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
From: "Jay D. Dyson" <jdyson
techreports.jpl.nasa.gov>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Courtesy of Politech List.
Let me see if I have this straight: the government can now legally do what
they prosecute scriptkiddies for doing?
This is one [bleeped] up world, I tell you.
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 29 Nov 1999 09:29:58 -0500
From: Declan McCullagh <declan
well.com>
To: politech
vorlon.mit.edu
Subject: FC: Law lets Australian police hack computers; MS and antitrust future
Thanks to Richard Payne and David Stern for forwarding this.
http://www.newswire.com.au/9911/asio.htm
Parliament passes ASIO bill
William Maher, Newswire
Parliament has passed laws that allow the Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation (ASIO) to tap into and alter data on private computer systems.
The ASIO Amendment Bill 1999 passed the Senate yesterday, giving
federal authorities the power to tap into private computer systems for
surveillance purposes. This is the first time in 13 years a major change has
been made to the ASIO Act 1979.
[...]
Background:
http://www.newswire.com.au/apcweb/news.nsf/def5c94fb1fc5ea6ca25647b00461aa4/
ace558bb8e62541e4a25677100258420?OpenDocument
The document detailed several important proposals allowing
ASIO to "hack" into private computers, proposals that were since
suppressed for reasons relating to "national security, law enforcement, and
public safety".
One of a number of future-of-MS articles we ran over the weekend:
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,32466,00.html
MS Focus Bound to Change
by Declan McCullagh (declan
wired.com)
3:00 a.m. 27.Nov.1999 PST
Like miniskirts, tube tops, and wide ties,
politics also has its fashions.
Economists didn't care much for the
Sherman Act -- the basis of US antitrust
law -- when it took effect over 100 years
ago, but the muckrakers soon changed all
that. In the late 1960s, government
antitrust cases became as popular as
hula hoops, and a White House task force
even suggested breaking up big firms --
whether they were monopolies or not.
After President Reagan took over, the
idea that big-is-bad faded from memory
as quickly as brown suits and reruns of
Welcome Back Kotter. The number of US
Justice Department antitrust lawsuits
soon dropped.
But today, antitrust bureaucrats are
enjoying fatter budgets, higher prestige,
and a renewed raison d'etre. The cause
for their celebration: The computer
industry, and especially Microsoft.
[...]
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
POLITECH -- the moderated mailing list of politics and technology
To subscribe: send a message to majordomo
vorlon.mit.edu with this text:
subscribe politech
More information is at http://www.well.com/~declan/politech/
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.2
iQCVAwUBOELYDIzYnY/37fGZAQG67AP/Tu/Z87jCwIQcJvznUHWUIyLkV0mIkH4D
au3ja3JtRMfMKjJEtFm0KZ5tixml3A59g0Ly0DD7yBQwHDHt5mbOnpc911/9T4TY
9yMCnHvDpXlfMNM0cId/r3x7py0loN/CprDeY2JUhn9PSJJY5EpC7aYUESWC6MOJ
33VIO4dpvP0=
=ogaq
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
ISN is sponsored by Security-Focus.COM
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]