Australia may give bosses right to spy on workers' emails
SYDNEY —
Bosses will be able to spy on workers’ emails without consent under new anti-terror laws being considered in Australia, Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard said Monday.
The proposal is being flagged by the government to prevent a cyberattack on critical national infrastructure such as the stock exchange, electricity grid or transport system.
“We want to make sure that they are safe from terrorist attack,” Gillard said. “Part of doing that is making sure we’ve got the right powers to ensure that we can tell if there’s something unusual going on in the system.”
The suggestion has angered civil libertarians, who say the proposal could be abused.
“Our concern is, that if given these powers, they’re more likely to be used for eavesdropping and corporate witch hunts rather than protecting Australia from some kind of cyberattack,” Dale Clapperton, chair of the independent Internet rights watchdog Electronic Frontiers Australia, told ABC radio.
Gillard defended the proposal, saying it was designed to ensure Australian companies were safe from a terrorist attack.
“So it’s a national security move, not a move about an unseemly interest in people’s private emails,” she said.
The Telecommunications (Interceptions) Act currently only allows for workers’ emails to be monitored by security agencies.
But Attorney-General Robert McClelland, in an interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, said this needed to be extended to include private companies to protect key infrastructure from the risk of a cyberattack.
Such an attack could “reap far greater economic damage than would be the case of a physical (terrorist) attack,” he said.
“At least 90% of networks exist outside government, but there are no powers for corporate network supervisors to intercept such communications unless they have specific authority from the employee,” he said. “There needs to be protocols and guidelines developed so companies can protect their own networks.”
McClelland said he would consult with privacy experts and workers’ unions before introducing the laws, which the government hopes will be in place by mid-2009.
The head of the Australian Council of Civil Liberties, Terry O’Gorman, told national radio that existing laws provided enough protection against terrorism.
“We have passed so many laws in the name of fighting terrorism that we’re at serious risk of losing the balance between giving the intelligence services sufficient powers to fight terrorism while at the same time keeping longstanding and cherished civil liberties,” he said.
Wire reports






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rjd_jr
Geez what's the big deal. Where I work, and many companies I'd say the majority of them, we sign paperwork acknowledging that our computer activities are being monitored to include usage of internet and all emails. This to enforce that we are not abusing our internet priviledges. And that's just the way it is. If people don't like it no one is forcing them to work, they can start their own company. And it makes sense, at work theoretically you shouldn't be using company time to browse the web or send emails to your mistress. You should be doing work.
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SimondB
Yes rjd jr, but the other side off it is if someone sent you a letter at your place of work and marked it 'private and personal' would you not be a bit pissed if your boss opened, read and checked it? In my view it boils down to the same thing. The boss buys your labour - they do not buy your life. Because it is not such a big step to checking the email you recieve at home to ensure that you are not doing anything detrimental to the company.
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Loki520
Simon,
Your right, they don't buy your life, but this is NOT about thier private life, or even their private email. This is about company provided email accounts. That are run on company provided email servers. That go thru company provided network lines. That the company pays for.
In other words, your using company equipment, on company time, supposedly doing company business. There should be no expectations of "private and personal" on the company dime using company technology. There is NO civil liberty infractions going on here.
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Nessie
It will drive people to write ambiguous mails, making it even harder to detect real threats.
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papasmurfinjapan
Or they can use skype or MSN messenger and chat instead.
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