First 'cybercrime' treaty advances in Senate

By Declan McCullagh
http://news.com.com/First+cybercrime+treaty+advances+in+Senate/2100-7348_3-5
805561.html

Story last modified Tue Jul 26 15:36:00 PDT 2005


A U.S. Senate panel on Tuesday approved the world's first treaty targeting
"cybercrime," clearing the way for a floor vote later this year.

All nine members of the Foreign Relations Committee who were present said by
voice vote that they broadly agreed with the Council of Europe Convention on
Cybercrime, handing a hard-won victory to software companies that are eager
for the U.S. to ratify it.

Because U.S. law already includes much of what the treaty requires, the
Senate's consent would be largely symbolic. The document requires nations to
adopt laws governing search and seizure of stored data, surreptitious
Internet wiretapping, cross-border assistance, and retention of Internet
provider records upon police demand.

But during a brief discussion on Tuesday, Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., stressed
that "there are some questions being raised" by civil libertarians that
deserve to be noted.

"They're not illegitimate issues," Dodd said. "I just bring that point up
and include those questions in the record."

The Electronic Privacy Information Center has sent a letter to the Foreign
Relations Committee saying the treaty should not be ratified because it
"would create invasive investigative techniques while failing to provide
meaningful privacy and civil liberties safeguards."

Software companies, on the other hand, had dispatched their lobbyists to
twist arms on Capitol Hill in favor of ratification. "We have been pushing
this treaty from the beginning of this year pretty hard," Robert Cresanti,
vice president for public policy at the Business Software Alliance, said
after the vote.

"What I've been saying is that it applies justice to a borderless world
where cybercriminals operate with little or no consequence," Cresanti said.

One reason why software companies are so interested is that the treaty
includes stiff copyright-related penalties. It says participating nations
must enact criminal laws targeting Internet piracy and circumvention
devices--that is, a measure akin to the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act--when acts "are committed willfully, on a commercial scale and by means
of a computer system."

Another section requires participating nations to outlaw the act of "making
available" on the Internet any type of hardware or software that is designed
for the purposes of committing a long list of computer crimes including
"illegal interception" or "data interference." In some cases, even the mere
possession of such hardware or software must be criminalized.

So far, the treaty has been ratified by nations including Hungary, Romania
and Croatia. President Bush has called on the Senate to follow suit.

An addition to the treaty would require nations to imprison anyone guilty of
"insulting publicly, through a computer system" certain groups of people
based on characteristics such as race or ethnic origin, a requirement that
could make it a crime to e-mail jokes about Polish people or question
whether the Holocaust occurred.

The U.S. Department of Justice has said that it would be unconstitutional
for the United States to sign that addition because of the First Amendment's
guarantee of freedom of expression. Because of that objection, the Senate is
not considering the addition, but other nations ratifying the treaty are
expected to adopt both documents.

CNET News.com's Anne Broache contributed to this report from Washington. 



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit 
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message 
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights 
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to