Australian
PM Reveals Bill Requiring Tech Giants to Decrypt Messages Upon Order
A
new law that may be adopted by Australian parliament later this year
would force companies like Facebook, Apple and Google to provide
decrypted messages at the request of the police and spy agencies in
order to help solve crimes and prevent terrorist attacks, according
to the country's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
14
July, 2017
Australian
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Friday announced a new draft law
that would force companies like Facebook, Apple and Google to provide
decrypted messages at the request of the police and spy agencies to
prevent acts of terrorism and solve crimes.
"We
need to ensure that the Internet is not used as a dark place for bad
people to hide their criminal activities from the law. The Australian
Federal Police must have the powers as do all our other intelligence
and law enforcement agencies to enforce the law online as well as
offline," Turnbull was quoted as saying by SBS broadcaster while
announcing the bill.
The
measure may affect applications like Telegram, iMessage and WhatsApp,
among others. The latter is owned by Facebook.
"We
appreciate the important work law enforcement does, and we understand
their need to carry out investigations. At the same time, weakening
encrypted systems for them would mean weakening it for everyone,"
a Facebook spokeswoman told the media, reacting to the initiative.
The
bill will come to the parliament in August and can be approved within
a few months after.
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