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Proposal of computers online searching in Germany

20 December, 2006
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(Dieser Artikel ist auch in deutscher Sprache verfügbar)

Earlier this year, Ingo Wolf, the Minister of the Interior of the German Federal State of North Rhine-Westphalia, and Wolfgang Schäuble, the German Federal Minister, proposed certain plans that would give the police and the Interior Federal Office of Criminal Investigation permission to access online computers of the German citizens of as a measure of internal security. The plans have been were recently criticized by Germany's Federal Data Protection Commissioner Peter Schaar.

In August, Mr. Wolf proposed a draft bill for a new Protection of the Constitution Act giving the Office for the Protection of the Constitution undercover access to "hard disks" and other "information technology systems" on the Internet.

Later, in November 2006, Mr. Schäuble's Program for Strengthening the Federal Republic’s Internal Security allowing authorities to monitor online forums was signed by the Budget Committee of the Bundestag and the lower chamber of Germany's Federal Parliament.

Recently a judge at the German Federal Supreme Court has ruled that there was no legal basis to allow authorities to make online searches of personal computers.

Talking to Berlin daily Berliner Zeitung, Mr. Schaar, Federal Data Protection Commissioner, expressed his reservations for this project stating that an online search cannot be compared to a physical search of a person's home. "In the case of a search via the Internet a police officer covertly, without the person knowing about it, accesses a person's computer." By searching through the Internet, an investigator would act as a "state hacker" accessing personal data thus being in contradiction with “the legal obligation to protect the core of individuals' privacy," said the Commissioner.

"Instead of applying these methods of investigation, the state should restrict its use of methods to those assigned to it by law," added Mr. Schaar.

The Security program of the Federal Ministry of the Interior is still being pursuit by Mr.Schäuble. The program focuses on searching computers without any physical access to them and on setting up an "Internet Monitoring and Analysis Unit " at the Joint Center for Defense against Terrorism where it will be possible to eavesdrop on Internet telephone calls and closed chat rooms.

The North-Rhine Westphalian bill for a new Protection of the Constitution Act was adopted on 20 December 2006 by the state parliament.

Privacy activist Twister from the German group Stop1984 has announced to challenge the law at the German constitutional court. "This is outrageous", she said to EDRi-Gram. "They try to tell us that if you go online, your computer is leaving your home and is out in the public. Have they ever heard of firewalls and cybercrime? In the information age, people have their most intimate and private information stored on their hard drives, and there is an absolute barrier for government's spying eyes here. And such a barrier has to be kept because privacy can not be sacrificed in total for an illusion of security."

Data Protection Commissioner criticizes search of private PCs online (14.12.2006)
http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/82529

NRW state parliament has adopted law for domestic intelligence agency (in German only, 20.12.2006)
http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/82814

Prosecuting and security authorities to be allowed to search PCs online (7.12.2006)
http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/82181

Schaar rejects government hacking. Data protection commissioner against online-searches (only in German, 14.12.2006)
http://www.berlinonline.de/berliner-zeitung/print/politik/612096.html

Federal Court of Justice prohibits online-searches of computer systems (only in German, 11.12.2006)
http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/82341

EDRI-gram: License to hack: domestic Internet intelligence powers growing in Germany (13.09.2006)
http://www.edri.org/edrigram/number4.17/hack

 

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