A group representing dozens of tech companies in Australia – including Telstra, 
Google and Apple – says the decryption bill puts firms and their employees in 
an impossible position

By James Elton-Pym  Updated 22 hours ago
https://www.sbs.com.au/news/tech-companies-could-leave-australia-over-dutton-s-encryption-bill-lobby



Tech companies may choose to leave the Australian market to avoid being forced 
to install spyware on their devices and networks at the request of intelligence 
agencies, a lobby group for the country’s biggest firms has warned.

Speaking exclusively with SBS News, the Communications Alliance warned that the 
Morrison government’s controversial encryption reforms would see its members 
confronted with “difficult choices”.

The Alliance represents many dozens of tech companies operating in Australia, 
from the largest telcos Telstra and Optus, to the National Broadband Network, 
to the local operations of tech giants Google and Apple.

http://www.commsalliance.com.au/about-us/membership

CEO John Stanton said the industry saw a “range of problems” with the 
legislation and said it would be a “threat to the cybersecurity of all 
Australians” if it was rushed through parliament this fortnight, as Prime 
Minister Scott Morrison has demanded.

Mr Stanton said the main concerns were with a perceived lack of oversight, and 
how the secrecy provisions within the 180-page bill could see companies left in 
the dark about government-ordered software running on their own devices.

“It's possible, for example, that an engineer in a telecommunications company 
could be ordered to alter the network or services to create vulnerabilities or 
backdoors and not be able to tell senior management about that,” Mr Stanton 
told SBS News.

“So the company wouldn’t know that they were operating a compromised service.

“Similarly, device manufacturers could be ordered to install spyware onto 
devices they're selling into Australia and not be allowed to tell the end 
users, or the companies selling those devices, that they had also been 
compromised.”

He said that could lead to security failures, because companies would not 
necessarily know about secret software exploits running on their services, and 
therefore not know how to defend them from malicious cyberattacks.

“It’s very hard to counter potential threats if you're prevented from knowing 
that they've even been installed to your services or products. It leaves the 
companies in quite an invidious situation,” he said.

The decryption bill is still before the powerful cross-party Intelligence 
committee, but, the government wants its consideration to be fast-tracked so 
the laws can be passed by Christmas.

Duncan Lewis, head of the domestic intelligence agency ASIO, confirmed this 
week his officers would “immediately” use the new powers to target suspects 
with terror links within their current caseload.

Attorney-General Christian Porter said the laws were needed to keep Australians 
safe, and urged their passage before parliament rises next week.

Labor's shadow Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus said the opposition would not wave 
through “bad laws”, and suggested Labor would insist on at least some 
amendments before passing the laws.

SBS News asked which parts were a sticking point for Labor, but would not 
“pre-empt" the Intelligence committee’s final report, which could be handed 
down imminently.

“Labor will not be supporting bad law,” Mr Dreyfus said.

“Labor will not respond to the government's demand that the intelligence 
committee accelerate its processes by just waving through something that's 
inadequate.

“There's a number of problems that have been identified in the committee's 
inquiry.”

The Intelligence committee will hold further hearings on Tuesday evening, and 
is still deciding whether to heed Mr Morrison’s request for a fast-track.

--

Cheers,
Stephen

Sent from Mail<https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows 10

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to