On 3/9/19 10:07 am, Roger Clarke wrote:
Secret penetration tests, fines for banks under PayID security crackdown
NPP deploys ‘unilateral’ protections to harden network.
[]

[I wonder how this squares up with the computer offences provision in s.476 of 
the what we called (for over a century?) the Crimes Act, but is now the 
Schedule to the Criminal Code Act:
http://www8.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/cth/consol_act/cca1995115/sch1.html
(then search for 476)

[The mixture of incompetence and obstructiveness of the AGD's legislative 
draftsdonkeys is on full display in this area.  Critical law isn't in sections 
of a principal statute, but is buried deep down in a Schedule.  And of course 
it's expressed in the most excruciatingly messy structure and text imaginable.]

I have previously commented on the drafting of unauthorised access provisions.

[Does anyone know whether:
1.  s.476 has the effect of criminalising pen testing?

Penetration testing can result in unauthorised access to data. So, if you're 
going to do it, you should make sure you have authorisation to access all data 
on the network that you're testing.


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