Afternoon Noggers,

Interesting article in today's IT News.

https://itwire.com/government-tech-policy/85894-greens-ask-morrison-to-justify-encryption-law-hurry.html

--

The Australian Greens have asked Prime Minister Scott Morrison to provide data 
on the potential security threats that were identified and foiled over the 
Christmas break as a result of rushing the government's encryption law through 
Parliament.

Greens Digital Rights spokesperson Senator Jordon Steele-John said the 
government should justify the passage of the unprecedented powers in the bill.

He made the statement after the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security, 
Margaret Stone, had called for more resources to monitor and scrutinise the use 
of the new powers by government agencies.

In November 2018, during hearings on what is officially known as the 
Telecommunications and Other Legislation Amendment (Assistance and Access) Bill 
2018, a number of law enforcement agencies - ASIO, the Australian Signals 
Directorate, the Australian Federal Police and Victoria Police - said the law 
needed to be 
passed<https://itwire.com/government-tech-policy/85400-encryption-bill-govt-bid-to-calm-fears-over-backdoors.html>
 as quickly as possible, and before Christmas, though no concrete justification 
was offered for this.

Later, Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton 
told the media that they would be asking the Parliamentary Joint Committee on 
Intelligence and Security, which was holding hearings into the bill, to speed 
up the 
process<https://itwire.com/government-tech-policy/85387-govt-to-push-for-encryption-bill-passage-in-next-fortnight.html>
 and send the bill back to Parliament as soon as possible.

Senator Steele-John said: "Scott Morrison said he wanted to keep us all safe. 
Well, I want to know just how dangerous Christmas was this year for the average 
Australian.

"Either we've seen an unprecedented spike in suspicious activity over Christmas 
and New Year - as the government claimed we would - or our own security 
agencies have already succumbed to the the dangerous misuse and mission creep 
of these anti-encryption powers that the rest of us predicted!

"If our own intelligence watchdog is already calling for greater resources to 
monitor the use of these new powers then there can be no other explanation."

The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation appeared before the 
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security and made its 
case<https://itwire.com/government-tech-policy/85400-encryption-bill-govt-bid-to-calm-fears-over-backdoors.html>
 in open committee on 26 November, with other government agencies, all of whom 
were pushing for the bill to become law before Parliament rose for the year on 
6 December.

At that time, Duncan Lewis, the head of ASIO, had to admit that there was no 
specific threat on the radar of his agency. All that he could offer was that 
Christmas is a time when the threat is generally high.

Asked why the country's threat level could not be raised, he again was forced 
to admit that to do that, ASIO would have to have knowledge of a specific 
threat.

"This anti-encryption legislation has been condemned by the UN, the Human 
Rights Commission, the Digital Rights community and Australia's tech sector at 
large. It is a threat to the online safety, security and privacy of every 
single Australian," Senator Steele-John said.

"Many technology and innovation companies have already deemed Australia 'too 
high risk' because these laws are incompatible with the European Union's 
General Data Protection Regulation.

"Furthermore, what was intended to be a national security measure will in fact 
become a national security threat, as hackers and third parties exploit the 
necessary weaknesses built into end-to-end encryption services.

"This is massive government overreach and I'm yet to see a skerrick of evidence 
to justify the need for these powers. They make a mockery of our right to 
privacy, leave us more vulnerable to cyber espionage and permanently weaken the 
existing protections we all rely on to stay safe and secure online."

The bill was 
passed<https://itwire.com/government-tech-policy/85537-politics-rules-as-encryption-bill-becomes-law-with-no-amendments.html>
 on 6 December but just 12 days later, the PJCIS said it would begin a fresh 
review<https://itwire.com/government-tech-policy/85648-parliament-panel-begins-another-review-of-encryption-law.html>.

The new review has asked for 
submissions<https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Joint/Intelligence_and_Security/ReviewofTOLAAct/Submissions>
 and will submit a report by 3 April.

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