EU Still Looking at Mandatory Data Retention 102
An anonymous reader writes "Following up on a
previous Slashdot article,
European civil rights advocacy group
Statewatch
is detecting more rumbles of a possible
weakening of privacy rights in the EU. The
European council has been testing the waters
for a new policy mandating retention of
communications "traffic data" by all member states. The previous policy (adopted May 30) merely allowed an exception to EU privacy law for member states who wished to retain such data.
Under the leaked draft proposal, law enforcement is to be allowed access to "traffic data" (identifying source, destination, time, etc.), which is similar to current US law. However, much worse is the requirement that telco providers retain such data for 12-24 months.
Text of the
draft framework decision
is available.
Also
analysis
by Statewatch.
Backup link (in case of Slashdot effect)."
Sounds like... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sounds like... (Score:1)
Re:check it baby (Score:1)
How? (Score:2)
I see the need to ping eachother with random terrabytes of data. Who's going to pay for this expensive archiving?
Re:How? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:How? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or:
"Gee, officer, the warehouse where we hold our pile of DVD-Rs with traffic logs just caught fire!"
Or:
"What the...? Someone seems to have demagnetized our entire pile of backup HDs! I'm shocked, just shocked!"
What now? Mandatory data reliability? Or will you just have to hand your logs to the Gestapo every Tuesday?
Re:How? (Score:1)
What now? Mandatory data reliability?
I guess you are not familiar with the RIP bill in UK. Soon, it will be your responsibility to prove that you didn't destroy the logs on purpose.
Re:How? (Score:1)
on the other news, i thought they've had access to connection logs(connections from what to where,including time 'n stuff, but not what was in that connection) since ages, and i'd figure most/all isp's store those logs already, they sure had access for this kinda data couple of years ago(in finland. i know.).
"if all our data was encrypted" (Score:1, Troll)
If you went to a kiddie porn site they could find out from your network traffic and get a search warrant.
If you were frequently on a chat room the same time as xx who was later found dead they'd be round the next morning.
If you were connecting to predominantly Jewish sites then the secret police would be round and take you away.
Re:"if all our data was encrypted" (Score:1, Informative)
Troll? (Score:1)
"If you went to a kiddie porn site they could find out from your network traffic and get a search warrant."
and
"If you were frequently on a chat room the same time as xx who was later found dead they'd be round the next morning."
are the kind of arguments that government boddies would use to 'justify' holding and searching of logs.
which is not that different to:
"If you were connecting to predominantly Jewish sites then the secret police would be round and take you away."
Bad for the echonomy (Score:3, Insightful)
It will cost too much and with have an impact of inflation which no one in the EU wants to see at the moment. There will be bandwidth implications because of the storage and processing overheads and investment and development in new infrastructure and technologies will be hit.
And who gains, well if the police can actually filter the data and find out what you up to then maybe a few people who have had criminals take away there liberties will feel better.
Who looses, everyone else.
Re:Bad for the echonomy (Score:1)
The cost of basic services would go up, causing inflation.
Prices? (Score:1)
How would this effect the European ISP community? Would the governments subsidize it, or would the costs be dumped on the consumer, increasing the cost of net access in Europe even higher then it already is?
I suppose that in many regions where broadband has not been widely adopted (Britain?), this could work very well, but what about places where it has been?
Re:Prices? (Score:3, Insightful)
Where, pray tell, do you think governments get the money they then distribute for "subsidies"?
Re:Prices? (Score:1)
the ISP's will raise the price a bit, set up what they need in an efficient manner.
Seems you aren't familiar with high bandwidth prices here in europe.
The backbone providers must increase their prices to the ISPs and the ISPs themself face a double price increase to be charged to the users, which the users won't pay. All smaller ISPs will go out of business.
VoIP (Score:2)
One way it would affect the Europeans is to create a big incentive for individuals to adopt internet telephony. B-)
The spooks have access already... (Score:5, Interesting)
I suspect that the US and UK and other governments spy agencies already have access to whatever electronic communications they want to tap.
This is the case in the UK with regard to phones, however phone tap data is never used in court here because the state might then have to admit how they got it -- they would rather not convict people then admit their sources and the extent of the eve dropping that is going on.
I suspect that draft proposals like this are based on the old trick -- suggest something totally over the top and impossible to implement then let well meaning people water it down, claim that government cares and listens and at the end of the day still get away with yet another outrageous new law and yet more erosion of privacy and civil liberties.
But then again I'm probably not cynical enough, it's probably far worse than I can imagine already...
Re:The spooks have access already... (Score:1)
How much more cynical can you get? I hope that was intentional...
Re:use the force for good, Luke (Score:1)
One good thing... (Score:2, Informative)
Of course, whether or not that's so good a thing when you take into consideration the privacy concerns can be a rather complex debate.
At least we'll have more room for pr0n!
Re:Question: How Long Do US Telecos Retain "data" (Score:4, Funny)
Just a minute /.
Flips on atari 800xl
pick up microphone and speak into it
"Computer, find me information on Anonymous Coward"
1030 (300 baud) modem dials out
short wait
Faster than you can read, the following appears, often in higher resolution than the computer can drive)
you got a C in gym class in 4th grade
Video of your at the office christmas party
Your rejection letter from MIT
(censered) communication from your bed last night, taken from microphone in your light
copy of your bare butt on the office copier
complete shower videos from 9th grade gym
Complete history of your postings to
At least that is how it would be in the movies.
Re:Question: How Long Do US Telecos Retain "data" (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Question: How Long Do US Telecos Retain "data" (Score:1)
Please hold for a moment while I pull up your record. (...) Sir, your retention period is set at 36 months. Is there anything else I can do for you today?
Re:Question: How Long Do US Telecos Retain "data" (Score:2, Informative)
He's there to urge the EU to reverse its mandatory data destruction policy. In the EU, traffic data must be erased or made anonymous at end of communication or end of period in which invoice could be contested.
The metric for how long US ISPs/telco keep traffic data can probably be guessed from anecdotal data. Reading newspaper accounts about prosecutions of net child pornographers or adults soliciting minors suggests a year or two. I'll look for the case of a VA police chief who was after young boys & see how long prosecutors watched and the motions the Chief's counsel made to suppress traffic data evidence.
We have statutory protections against telco passing on traffic data--somewhere in Title 18, Section 2702 (?). US Patriot probably eases the exemptions: IOW, by default it is illegal for a data controller to let this or that party rifle through your data. OTOH, we are almost signing waivers--at the bank, credit apps, insurance apps, and personal finances in US would be near impossible if you didn't grant waivers.
Most important: Your employer can snoop all he wants if your are using his computers. The Administrative Office of the Courts--the management agency for the entire Federal judiciary--last year thought it should begin monitoring Judges' net use. Same logic.
I'm sure glad I don't live in Europe... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm sure glad I don't live in Europe... (Score:1)
What about global communcations? (Score:3, Interesting)
a) Data necessary to follow and identify the source of a communication;
b) Data necessary to identify the destination of a communication;
c) Data necessary to identify the time of a communication;
d) Data necessary to identify the subscriber;
e) Data necessary to identify the communication device.
And:
These types of data shall not concern the content of the exchanged correspondence or the consulted information, in any form...
So, they couldn't read my e-mail, but they could get a complete list of everyone I've exchanged e-mail with in the last 12-24 months?
What I really wanna know is how this will affect communications between parties outside the EU that just happen to pass through EU routers. I couldn't find any specific mention of this (granted, I didn't comb through the draft too carefully.)
Re:What about global communcations? (Score:2)
Re:What about global communcations? (Score:1)
My read is that unless the communication involves at least one EU telecom subscriber, nothing will be recorded. [Insert big handwave icon] The bits are just passing through the backbone from Quito to Tashkent.
From the draft...
The data that the draft framework seems to want to have retained looks, in principle at least, no more than the equivalent of telephone logs. In many police procedurals, the detectives "check the phone logs". ("Hey, Gordo called Magdeburg six times last week. Wasn't Icepick Johann rumoured to be hanging out there?") Investigators of all kinds track leads and pull threads. With this kind of data, they might be able to find different kinds of patterns. ("Wow! Gordo started hitting flycheap.com two minutes after he got that last call from Barcelona. Wonder what scared him?")
Re:What about global communcations? (Score:2)
US law??? (Score:1)
Re:US law??? (Score:3, Informative)
Information used by Drug Cartels.. (Score:4, Informative)
If the information is being kept, unauthorized access will occur.
SKG
Hacktivism (Score:2, Interesting)
Not that political action won't help too, but it's easier to get a law defeated or repealed if it doesn't work anyway.
All your data ... (Score:1, Funny)
Does it trump the Data Protection Act? (Score:1)
So, my question is: Would this European Directive (or whatever) override the Data Protection Act?
Re:Does it trump the Data Protection Act? (Score:3, Interesting)
More fundamentally, it is my understanding that (and I may well be wrong) that the 1998 Data Protection Act was revised from the original act to generally be updated where appropriate and become compliant with the relevant EU directive on Data Protection. So any new EU directive concerning data retention would not only be fudged at the UK level (kinda surpassable) but would also conflict with an earlier EU directive, which would be a bit messy.
Not that it really matters - this whole process is massively unfeasible. To put it in context, my flatmates and I have easily downloaded over a quarter of a terabyte of data over the last year over our ADSL line - the figure probably reaches much higher. Scale this up across the continent and the figures are going to get unrealistically enormous. Even just logging e-mail and dns activity is going to burn a heck of a lot of storage capacity.
What are the EU going to do? Spend many billions of euros on implementing the required software and (more fundamentally) hardward changes across the continent, money they could be spending on, for example flood relief? Or will they just tell the ISPs to get on with it, leaving them fundamentally crippled with the cost of internet access skyrocketing as ISPs drop like flies?
Re:Does it trump the Data Protection Act? (Score:1)
Re:Does it trump the Data Protection Act? (Score:1)
But like I said, even logging 'transactional' traffic, like what e-mails you've sent, what sites you've been to, what irc channels you lurk in, etc is *still* going to burn far too much storage space. Plus the overhead of archiving this information in any kind of usable fashion is going to require extra procesing burden and suchlike.
Anyway, if you didn't log all data, then the whole system could blow back in the faces of investigators. Imagine someone being in e-mail contact with a terrorist suspect, say, who just happens to be a friend from school. The police might accuse them of conspiracy, citing the e-mail transactions. But if the content of that e-mail isn't logged then the police can't prove squat - said person could claim that they were merely catching up on old times. If both parties were sensible enough to delete and shred their copies of the e-mails at the time, then two years later after constant abuse of the disk sectors those e-mails occupied will have (very likely) irretrievably destroyed that data, and the police are left asking the politicians why they didn't enforce a stricter achiving scheme :-)
Re:Does it trump the Data Protection Act? (Score:1, Informative)
I think the general problem is that there is no public debate over any issue of IP and data privacy. I personnaly believe that these are the two mot important topics that may affect citizens in this century, and that these discussion should become central at any level of democracy, which inludes the EU. Citizens should stop whining with their national governments since these are helpless anyway, and should concentrate on pressuring the EU, through European Parliement elections and by closely monitoring the stance of their national governments in the Council. That's what corporate lobbies, which know better, do.
and who's is going to pay my extra NAS? (Score:1)
Along with the UK "Give us your passwords .. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Noise Generators illegal? (Score:2)
Any halfway decent ISP should filter all outbound traffic from IPs outside of its assigned IP space, so you can't actually spoof random IPs.
Worried? Just ask for your file... (Score:4, Interesting)
Such a priori retention of data and access to this data constitutes an interference in the private life of the individual; however, such an interference does not violate the international rules applicable with regard to the right to privacy and the handling of personal data contained, in particular, in the European Convention on the Protection of Human Rights of 4 November 1950, the Convention of the Council of Europe no.108 on the protection of persons in respect of the automated handling of personal data of 28 January 1981, and the Directives 95/46/ce and 97/66/CE, where it is provided for by law and where it is necessary, in a democratic society, for the prosecution of criminal offences.
They admit it's a compromise of individual privacy rights, but say it's allowed under those conventions. I was just looking for the spots in those documents:
that allow mandatory storage of information in the absence of ongoing criminal investigation -- a priori.
The 1950 one includes a very general passage seeming to allow anything "preventive" if it might abridge the rights or freedoms of others. Doesn't make me feel safe. (Hey, someone might want to prevent me using my TiVo in naughty ways. That'd abridge Jack Valenti's right -- or is it a freedom? -- to rake in money.)
The 1981 thing's much more specific to the question, and opens up a world of hurt we could inflict on our various surveillance agencies:
Imagine the /. effect as we all demand access to the records being kept of all our packet traffic, all our phone calls... Hey, people ask for their credit reports. If the European agreement says it has to be "transparent" in this way, just start asking.
Peer to Peer email flooding? (Score:3, Interesting)
So, for a little civil disobedience:
1. Option 1. If you're using an external mail server, you're not using the ISP mail server, right? So that gives you a "junk" email box. Why not set up a peer to peer system along the lines of SETI@home, which uses idle cycles to exchange email at the rate of a few hundred a minute.
2. Option 2 - if they're sniffing all traffic, even better - write something similar, but do all the inter-client communication using SMTP. You should be able to simulate a few hundred messages per second. Get enough people on board (using SETI like marketing tactics - email chain letters encouraging people to "fight the spies" etc) and you could utterly dwarf "real" email under a storm of junk data. Even if they can somehow parse out the "real" data, the cost of storing the information has risen exponentially - and all you have to do after that is work out a way to embed real messages in the "fakes", and you've got unmonitored communications again!
PGP only helps hide content, which this legislation doesn't ask for. Remailers would work, of course, but would look "suspicious"....
NO NO NO NO NO! (Score:1, Interesting)
This is nothing to do with the 'war on terrorism' it is nothing less than control.
knowledge == power
and power corrupts.
QED
Re:NO NO NO NO NO! (Score:1)
For all the Europeans .. (Score:3, Funny)
I got karma to burn. Mod me down if you must.
Who is responsible for this logging? (Score:1, Insightful)
This really is a concern, because small co-location facilities, etc, really don't have the facilities to do this. It's OK for large ISPs, but a nightmare for smaller ones.
What if you encrypted and lost the key? (Score:1, Interesting)
Or what happens if someone transfers something illegal, can you prosecute the telecom company for having illegal documents/child pornography etc? What if they stole it/produced it in the first place, is it all of a sudden legal then, or what?
This is like making thoughts illegal because I might be thinking up a masterplan to steal the gold at fort knox and produce an elite army of terrorists...
Completely infeasable (Score:4, Informative)
I think this would definately tempt me to put any websites I run onto https and leave http with a simple redirector. Be nice if other people would do the same. I wonder how much they'd enjoy trawling through a few terrabytes of session encrypted traffic...
Seriously though, the sheer data management problem this would pose would be extraordinary. For every 1mbps, you're talking ~4TB of traffic per year! Consider how much traffic there actually is going across the wires:
Just for the hell of it, 9,776.16TB is 48,881 200GB drives. Now, you can buy one of those from Western Digital for ~$400US (retail). You'd be buying a lot of drives, so lets say you get a discount, and can get one for $300 (I don't know how big a discount you'd really get). That's almost $15 million dollars in hard drives per year for an OC48. That's about three times as much as the actual cost of an OC48 (even worse for peering arrangements).
Of course, scale that kind of hard drive usage up across Europe, and I don't think there is the manafacturing capacity to supply that kind of demand. Oh well, I guess we've found holographic storage's killer app, eh?
Also, who records what? Does every router have to record everythign that passes through it? Or only the ISPs that serve end users? What about businesses? What about co-located servers? If you don't want to miss anything, you'll have to cover all of those, and end up grabbing 2-3x as much data as you really have to. Otherwise it'd be trivial to setup a colocated server at a company or a hosting provider, and tunnel an encrypted connection through to that.
On top of that, there's the problem of how you sift through ~10,000TB of data for something useful. We're talking raw data on a totally unmanageable scale.
Why not just record all voice communications too? I'm sure that'd be invaluable in any police investigations. Ah well, nothing to worry about since neither's going to happen. Both are totally infeasable.
Re:Completely infeasable (Score:1)
There would be a positive side to this (Score:1)
If properly mounted in line with the Earth's axis, maybe we could make a teensy-tiny little adjustment to the revolution speed when they spin 'em all up and get us a 25 hour day to match our 25 hour biological clock. I tell you, I could use an extra hour per day, and I really wouldn't mind having 15.2 less days per year.
Offtopic ??? (Score:2)
What nutter voted this down as offtopic? It is totally relevant to subject at hand. I was thinking exactly the same thing and scanned down to see if someone had already covered it before posting the same comments myself.
The volume of data this would generate is enormous and just who do the egg heads in the EU think is going to foot the bill for all this extra hardware? The Telcos? They already have their backs against the wall cash flow wise and many are up their eyeballs in debt.
This proposal is sheer stupidity.
three-step solution to terrorism (Score:3, Funny)
2. ???
3. Security!
Seriously, what is needed is some civil disobedience. Set up weird accounts like yarafat@hamas-resistance.il, exchange suspicious e-mails with your friends (in case they don't retain the body, make sure they get to read the subject), get as many people as possible to do it. The more false positives, the more impossible the system will be to maintain.
Remember, they're trying to make you f33r. When only one person stands up, he has a damn good reason to be afraid. When 10,000 stand up, the opposition has a damn good reason to be afraid.
Oh, and in case it needs to be said.. use PGP as much as possible, and try to run your own mailserver.
Just for the record: Osama Project Iraq Desert Storm Hailstorm Bush GWB kill maim murder torture Mossad oil Kuwait Iraq Iran Saudi Arabia we have the assassination plans praise Allah one hundred virgins FBI CIA Hoover Dyson MI5 MI6 James Bond Dr Evil one million pounds safety deposit box Switzerland Nazi gold bank account launch code RSA DSA NSA BSA
The mad punster what puns at midnight! (Score:1)
Sounds like somebody's being "retentive" alright.
scary development (Score:1)
Re:scary development (Score:1)
to include the B-R tags
must be the haikus
This sounds like a good idea (Score:2)
This is not a story about rights or law enforcement. Do you seriously think that volume of data can actually be useful? Oh, such and such person sent an e-mail around the beginning of January, maybe after bouncing through a SSH tunnel. Oh, and the e-mail was encrypted with 2048-bit RSA encryption.
If you can't solve that problem, this "exploitation" of privacy is nothing more than writing some giants check to several government members and corporate bigwigs. Folks, this is why the stock market was invented!
Thank God they didn't do this earlier (Score:1)
I would be afraid to see some of the filenames of pictures that I downloaded from old BBS systems come back to haunt me. Oh the days of youthful curiosity and innocence. Goatse.gif?
I don't think I could ever recreate the shock or the look on my face the first time I saw it...but I enjoy the look on a coworkers face the first time they see it.
Wow I really have become a warped little bastard haven't I. Damn those addictive BBS systems!
Traffic data (Score:2)
Minimal set: