This is daft. 

Teaching Encryption Soon to Be Illegal in Australia
http://bitcoinist.net/teaching-encryption-soon-illegal-australia/
    Natalie Johnson
    May 23, 2015


Under the Defence Trade Control Act (DTCA), Australians could face up to ten 
years in prison for teaching encryption. Criminal charges will go into effect 
next year. The new legislation will make it illegal for Australians to  teach 
or provide information on encryption without having a permit.

Australia’s Department of Defence originally passed the Defence Trade Control 
Act on November 13, 2012. However, amendments were made to the DTCA and passed 
into law just last month in April. There is a 12-month implementation period, 
so Australians are safe for now.

The purpose of this law is to control the transfer of defense and strategic 
goods technologies. The Australian government says it wants “to strengthen 
Australia’s export controls, and to stop technology that can be used in 
conventional and weapons of mass destruction from getting into the wrong hands…”

The Defense and Strategic Goods List (DSGL) goes hand in hand with the Defense 
Trade Control Act. The DTCA prohibits anyone without a permit from supplying 
“DSGL technology” to anyone outside of Australia. Since encryption falls within 
these classifications, any citizen of Australia who shares information on 
encryption with a person outside the country Australian Government Dept of 
Defencecould face criminal charges.

Teachers at schools or universities will have to be approved to teach 
encryption if students are outside of Australia. This presents unique 
challenges in regards to online education and international students. 
Researchers and those who publish information on encryption will also be 
affected. The DTCA could also impact open source privacy software and the 
computer security industry.

It is also important to consider the implications of this law for digital 
currencies such as Bitcoin. Advanced encryption techniques are at the heart of 
Bitcoin and digital currency. In cryptography, encryption is one of the primary 
techniques that gives digital currency users anonymity.

The Defence Trade Control Act is not the only piece of legislation threatening 
change to Australia’s Bitcoin landscape. However, what does it mean for the 
future? The progress and development of digital currency and open source 
projects rely on a constant free flow of information, shared among people 
worldwide. Due to the nature of sharing information, anyone in the world could 
be affected by the restrictions of the DTCA, not just Australians.

Is this new Australian law an act of censorship or the government’s way of 
protecting “national defense”? Please give your comments!




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