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Electronic Surveillance bills to become law
by Monty Miller Thursday December 09, 2004 at 02:04 AM

Two bills which greatly expand powers of electronic surveillance of individuals, have passed both houses of Federal Parliamwnt on 8 December, with the support of the Labor Party.

Here is what the Electronic Frontiers Australia said:

Surveillance Devices Bills 2004

This Bill was passed, without amendment, by the Senate on 30 Nov 2004 and the House of Reps on 8 Dec 2004.

The Surveillance Devices Bill 2004 regulates the use of surveillance devices (data, optical, listening and tracking devices) by law enforcement agencies. However it also significantly widens the circumstances in which they can be used and the types that can be used.

For a full assessment by Electronic Frontiers Australia
http://www.efa.org.au/Issues/Privacy/sd_bill2004.html

Telecommunications (Interception) Amendment (Stored Communications) Bill 2004

This Bill was passed, without amendment, by the Senate on 29 Nov 2004 and the House of Reps on 8 Dec 2004. The ALP withdrew the amendments they had tabled before the election (which would have given effect to the Senate Committee recommendations) and voted with the Liberal/National Government to pass the Bill. The Greens and Democrats voted against the Bill.

The Bill was the Commonwealth Government's third attempt since early 2002 to amend the Telecommunications (Interception) Act 1979 ("the TI Act") in relation to email, SMS and voice mail messages. The stored communications provisions of this Bill are substantially the same as the proposed and rejected provisions of the TI Bill 2002.

Moreover, this Bill is even more objectionable than the 2002 proposal because it completely removes email, SMS and voice mail messages (stored communications) from the scope of the protection of the TI Act.

For a full assessment by Electronic Frontiers Australia
http://www.efa.org.au/Issues/Privacy/tia-bill2004-sc.html


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Brer rabbit says...
by BR Thursday December 09, 2004 at 06:48 AM

...oh my! This could turn the net into a big ol' nasty briar patch!

Please don' throw us in that nasty ol' briar patch massa fox!

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so much for freedom
by savehighered Thursday December 09, 2004 at 10:34 PM
savehighered@yahoo.com.au

Well so much for freedom!

Isn't it nice to know that our civil liberties and freedoms are being washed away under the weak and pathetic guise of protecting us from terrorists.

I hope we open our eyes to the treachery of the Government soon before we live in a police state and are forced to carry identification cards everywhere.

So much for freedom!

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