https://www.theregister.com/2021/01/11/equipment_interference_privacy_international_judgment/

A landmark High Court ruling has struck down Britain's ability to hack millions 
of people at a time through so-called "general warrants" in what privacy 
campaigners are hailing as a major victory.

The ruling, obtained by Privacy International, means that some bulk equipment 
interference (aka hacking) warrants are no longer usable by the British 
authorities, something the campaign group says enhances legal safeguards 
protecting innocent people from dragnet surveillance.

Speaking on Friday afternoon when the judicial review judgment was handed down, 
Caroline Wilson Palow, PI's legal director, said in a statement: "General 
warrants are no more permissible today than they were in the 18th century. The 
government had been getting away with using them for too long. We welcome the 
High Court's affirmation of these fundamental constitutional principles."

The judgment struck down a previous ruling from rubberstamping figleaf 
operation spy agency court the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT), which, true 
to [its 
principles](https://www.theregister.com/2018/07/23/investigatory_powers_tribunal_gchq_15_years_illegal_surveillance_no_penalty/),
 previously ruled there was [nothing wrong with the idea of one single 
warrant](https://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIPTrib/2016/14_85-CH.html) 
authorising mass surveillance by MI5, MI6, and GCHQ.

Summing up the case, Lord Justice Bean and Mrs Justice Farbey said in their 
judgment: "The question posed in the Statement of Facts and Grounds is: 'Does 
section 5 of [[the Intelligence Services Act 
1994](https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1994/13/section/5)] permit the issue 
of a 'thematic' computer hacking warrant authorising acts in respect of an 
entire class of people or an entire class of such acts?'"

Such "equipment interference" (EI) warrants are [startlingly 
broad](https://www.theregister.com/2016/02/09/intelligence_security_committee_report_on_investigatory_powers_bill/),
 as El Reg reported when the infamous Snoopers' Charter was making its way 
through Parliament in 2016, covering entire groups of people together with any 
hackable gadgets in use by the "class" being targeted.

Barrister Ben Jaffey QC, for PI, told the High Court that in its previous 
ruling OK'ing this kind of thing, the IPT had made a crucial legal mistake: 
instead of focusing on whether a warrant was lawful if it "adequately 
described" what items the spy agencies wanted to hack, the law said these 
things had to be "specified".

The difference is that when the items to be hacked are "specified" in a warrant 
that means drawing up a list, not giving carte blanche permission for hacking 
anything and everything.

Agreeing, the judges drew analogies with 18th century legal precedents that are 
still in force today. Those cases said that general warrants authorising agents 
of the state to pick out suspects at their own discretion for searches were 
unlawfully broad.

The modern court said last week:

In view of the importance of the constitutional principle that there can be no 
interference with property without clear and specific legal authorisation, the 
words of an enactment must be unambiguous before the court may interpret 
Parliament as intending to override rights. There are no such unambiguous words 
in section 5. The national security context makes no difference as otherwise 
the courts would sanction wide powers to override fundamental rights.

The judgment is a vindication of PI not only on the bulk hacking warrants but 
also on a previous case involving the IPT. That case, also a judicial review, 
[overturned anti-scrutiny laws that made the IPT a one-stop shop whose rulings 
could never be 
challenged](https://www.theregister.com/2019/05/15/supreme_court_ipt_judicial_reviews_green_light/)
 by higher courts.

Irritated by what it perceives as the persistent misuse of judicial review to 
conduct politics through the courts, Boris Johnson's Conservative government 
[started a formal 
review](https://publiclawforeveryone.com/2020/08/03/the-judicial-review-review-i-the-reform-agenda-and-its-potential-scope/)
 last year aimed at reducing the power of judicial reviews to change the law. ®

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