GILC Alert, Volume 5, Issue 5



GILC Alert
Volume 5, Issue 5
July 26, 2001

Welcome to the Global Internet Liberty Campaign Newsletter.

Welcome to GILC Alert, the newsletter of the Global Internet Liberty
Campaign. We are an international organization of groups working for
cyber-liberties, who are determined to preserve civil liberties and human
rights on the Internet.
We hope you find this newsletter interesting, and we very much hope that you
will avail yourselves of the action items in future issues.
If you are a part of an organization that would be interested in joining
GILC, please contact us at <gilc@gilc.org>.
If you are aware of threats to cyber-liberties that we may not know about,
please contact the GILC members in your country, or contact GILC as a whole.
Please feel free to redistribute this newsletter to appropriate forums.

===============================================
Free expression
[1] EBook hacking case sparks speech worries
[2] Afghanistan's new Net ban
[3] Chinese net users face more speech hurdles
[4] Malaysia to restrict more Net speech
[5] Concerns rise over Australian Net censorship
[6] Cubans face further Net restraints
[7] Korean Net censorship scheme in effect
[8] Court sets new anonymous Net speech rules
[9] Mexican Net libel battle looms
[10] Hague treaty negotiations stalled again

Privacy
[11] Privacy complaint filed over Windows XP
[12] New Japanese ECHELON spy allegations
[13] New cybercrime plans in Australia, elsewhere
[14] Update: rental car Net trackers defiant
[15] US and Aussie workers face Net monitoring
[16] Interactive TV privacy concerns grow
[17] New tool forces ads into email
[18] Prozac email privacy breach
[19] UK online privacy concerns rise
[20] Click-through ruling has privacy impact
[21] LifeMinders.com deal sparks privacy worries

=================================================
[1] EBook hacking case sparks speech worries
=================================================
The arrest of a Russian computer programmer after he gave a lecture about
EBook encryption codes has outraged free speech advocates.

The programmer, Dmitriy Sklyarov, works for Elcomsoft, a Moscow-based
company that is developing software to allow readers of electronic books to
view such products on whatever computers they like. As part of this effort,
Sklyarov developed a program that circumvents the copy protection scheme
contained on Adobe Systems EBooks. He later wrote a paper on the subject and
presented it to the public at a Las Vegas computer convention. After Adobe
complained about Sklyarov's activities, officials from the United States
government arrested him on charges of violating the controversial Digital
Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which restricts the right of computer users
to circumvent any program that "effectively controls access" to copyrighted
works. Sklyarov faces up to 5 years in prison and a US $500 000 fine.

The case has caused considerable consternation from Internet user groups.
Shari Steele, Executive Director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
(EFF-a GILC member), charged that the DMCA "is proving itself to be as
harmful to civil liberties as we predicted it would be. Lest anyone be
confused, this case is not about copyright infringement. Mr. Sklyarov is not
accused of infringing anyone's copyrights. Mr. Sklyarov has entered the
strange Twilight Zone of the DMCA, where using a tool is legal, but building
it is a crime." EFF began preparations to defend Sklyarov as well as
protests in several cities around the globe. Other online activists launched
a massive boycott campaign against Adobe to protest the company's apparent
anti-speech stances.

Subsequently, Adobe officials sought to defuse the situation by holding
talks with EFF representatives. After the meeting, Adobe general counsel
Colleen Pouliot called for Sklyarov's release, saying the company had now
come to the conclusion that "the prosecution of this individual in this
particular case is not conducive to the best interests of any of the parties
involved or the industry." However, Pouliot still tried to claim the
incident as a victory of sorts for Adobe, since Sklyarov's software is no
longer available for sale in the U.S. Moreover, Adobe's about-face may have
no direct impact on the case; as one United States government attorney
pointed out, "[T]his is a criminal matter brought by the United States
against the defendant and Adobe is not a party to that action." A court
hearing is expected within two weeks.

To see Sklyarov's presentation (in PowerPoint format), click
http://www.download.ru/defcon.ppt

For the latest details, see "Russian developer's allies aim at Mueller,"
Reuters, July 25, 2001 at
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1003-200-6669833.html

Read Robert Lemos, "Adobe seeks release of Russian programmer," ZDNet News,
July 24, 2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5094588,00.html

See Declan McCullagh, "Release the Russian, Adobe Says," Wired News, July
23, 2001 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,45489,00.html

For information in German (Deutsch), read Hubert Erb, "Adobe lasst sich
erweichen," Heise Telepolis, July 25, 2001 at
http://www.heise.de/tp/deutsch/inhalt/te/9162/1.html

More of Ms. Steele's comments are available at
http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/US_v_Sklyarov/20010718_eff_sklyarov_statement.htm
l

For Russian language information, click
http://ezhe.ru/elcomsoft/

For more on the boycott campaign against Adobe, visit
http://www.boycottadobe.org

See also
http://www.freesklyarov.org

===============================================
[2] Afghanistan's new Net ban
===============================================
Here's one way to silence online critics-ban the Internet entirely.
  That's apparently what the rulers of Afghanistan have decided to do. The
Taliban government has made it illegal for anyone in the country to use the
Information Superhighway. This rule applies to government employees and
private citizens alike. According to Taliban Foreign Minister Maulvi Wakil
Ahmad Muttawakil, the measure is targeted at "all those things that are
wrong, obscene, immoral and against Islam." Reports suggest that the agents
from Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice will
enforce the ban, although it is not clear precisely what methods these
officials will use.

Indeed, only a handful of Afghanis have been able to go online even before
the new Taliban edict, due to severe problems with the nation's
infrastructure. Bobson Wong, Executive Director of the Digital Freedom
Network (DFN-a GILC member), pointed out that "[t]here aren't a lot of
people in Afghanistan who have access to electricity or a telephone, much
less the Internet." Moreover, the nation's telecommunications network has
been found so wanting that the few Afghanis who have connected to the
Internet have had to do so via cables in neighboring Pakistan.

For more information, visit the DFN website under
http://dfn.org/focus/afghanistan/internetban.htm

Read David McGuire, "Taliban Net Crackdown Highlights Global Trend,"
Newsbytes, July 17, 2001 at
http://newsbytes.com/news/01/168050.html

See also "Taleban 'outlaw internet,'" BBC News, July 13, 2001 at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/south_asia/newsid_1437000/1437852.stm

Read "Taliban bars Internet in Afghanistan," Reuters, July 13, 2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5094100,00.html

===============================================
[3] Chinese net users face more speech hurdles
===============================================
Many Chinese citizens continue to encounter serious difficulties when trying
to express themselves along the Information Superhighway.

For example, Chinese authorities have decided to hold online activist Huang
Qi indefinitely without a trial. Huang, who operated a "Tianwing Missing
Persons Website," was arrested over a year ago on subversion charges for
posting articles written by other people on several subjects that are
considered taboo by government censors, including the 1989 Tiananmen
massacre and the Falun Gong spiritual movements. So far, he has only
appeared once in court, where he collapsed, allegedly due to beatings he has
received in detention.

Mainland Chinese authorities have taken other steps to stifle possible
dissent online. They have shutdown thousands of cybercafes and have
instituted a ban on any such establishments within 200 meters of a school.
In addition, government pressure has reportedly led many Chinese language
websites to engage in self-censorship. One consultant explained that "the
way you encourage self-censorship is to have isolated crackdowns on
individuals or companies in the hope that this will then make people more
aware of the line in China which they should not cross."

Meanwhile, Chinese government agents routinely block many overseas webpages,
including the sites of prominent Western news sources (including the BBC,
the Washington Post, and the New York Times). In one case, an Australian
government webpage that mentioned Chinese human rights abuses was apparently
blocked for years, which ended after complaints from officials Down Under
(though Chinese authorities have denied charges that they deliberately
prevented access).

For the latest on the Huang Qi case, visit the Digital Freedom Network
(DFN-a GILC member) website via
http://dfn.org/focus/china/huangqi010627.htm

For more on the Chinese cybercafe crackdown (including audio coverage), see
Duncan Hewitt, "China acts on net 'addicts'," BBC News, July 20, 2001 at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_1448000/1448423.s
tm

For additional details on the pressure to self-censor, read Duncan Hewitt,
"China's net generation," BBC News Online, July 25, 2001 at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_1455000/1455943.s
tm

Read "China cracks down on Internet cafes," Reuters, July 20, 2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/filters/printerfriendly/0,6061,2792693-2,00.html

See also John Gittings, "Great leap forward," The Guardian, July 12, 2001 at
http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/internetnews/story/0,7369,520065,00.html

For more on Chinese attempts to blocking Australian government sites, see
"Blacked-out site returns online to China," Reuters, July 5, 2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5093716,00.html

===============================================
[4] Malaysia to restrict more Net speech
===============================================
Watch what you say online. You could be hit a barrage of "missiles"...at
least if you're in Malaysia.

The Malaysian government has announced plans to "unleash another set of
missiles" against various forms of Internet speech. A government
spokesperson, Dr. Rais Yatim, said that these strictures would target "hate
messages, seditious writings and e-mail advocating religious dissent and
others." He did not specifically explain what these "missiles" were, but did
say that new Internet content laws would be introduced. While details on
these proposals are still sketchy, some experts believe that they may
include a Code of Conduct for website creators. Curiously, when asked how
these measures could be compatible with Malaysian government's prior
promises not to censor Internet speech, Yatim gave a series of bizarre
comments such as: "Due to the government's no-censorship commitment, the
initial missiles do not seem to follow the enemy but has ricocheted towards
us. However, I assure you, the missile's inventor is not without imagination
or recourse."

The announcement was met with concern from several quarters, as the Internet
has become an important outlet for ordinary Malaysian citizens to voice
their feelings in spite of harsh censorship regimes for most communications
media (including newspapers and television). Mah Weng Kwai from the
Malaysian Bar Council warned that the government "should not over-legislate.
The prosecutor will want a whole array of laws behind him to make sure that
he will get the offender, but would that impinge fundamental liberties such
as the freedom of speech?"

Read Tong Yee Siong, "Gov't to launch upgrade 'missiles' on dangerous
websites," Malaysiakini, July 5, 2001 at
http://www.malaysiakini.com/News/2001/07/2001070502.php3
For background information, see "Malaysia Considers Cafe Rules," Reuters,
June 21, 2001 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,44716,00.html

=================================================
[5] Concerns rise over Australian Net censorship
=================================================
Want to know what websites your government has censored? If you're in
Australia, you might have to go to court to find out.

Electronic Frontiers Australia (EFA-a GILC member) has appealed a
decision of the Australian Broadcasting Authority to deny access under
Freedom of Information law to more details about controversial web content
rules that were created nearly two years ago. Under this complaint-based
regime, certain websites are supposed to be screened out based on film
guidelines. The list of affected webpages includes sites that contain
"verbal references to ... suicide, crime, corruption, marital problems,
emotional trauma, drug and alcohol dependency, death and serious illness,
racism, [or] religious issues."

After the standards took effect, EFA requested documents from the ABA
regarding what sites had been the subject of complaints. While the ABA did
provide various papers on this subject, many of them were heavily redacted.
EFA then appealed via the Broadcasting Authority's internal review processes
but were unable to retrieve the details they desired, including basic
information such as "page titles and URLs," according to EFA Executive
Director Irene Graham. The Administrative Appeals Tribunal's decision will
probably not be known for at least three months.

Meanwhile, experts are also voicing concern over a recent Australian
defamation lawsuit. The dispute revolves around the U.S. business magazine
Barron's, which published an article that accused an Australian citizen of
"a series of offences, stock manipulations, classic stock scams and frauds
and connection with money laundering." That citizen, Joseph Gutnick, sued
Barron's parent company Dow Jones, claiming that the online publication of
the article made the corporation liable under Australian laws, which are
less protective of free speech than United States standards. Some observers
fear that a decision in this case could chill Internet expression by
subjecting online speakers to liability under speech restrictions from a
multitude of nations.

More on EFA's Freedom of Information Application to the ABA is available at
http://www.efa.org.au/FOI/foi_aba_2000.htm

Read Caitlin Fitzsimmons, "Battle looms over net censorship," Australian IT,
July 18, 2001 at
http://australianit.news.com.au/common/storyPage/0,3811,2367582%5E442,00.htm
l

For further details and editorial comments on the Gutnick case, see Mark
Day, "Internet case has global impact," Australian IT, June 21, 2001 at
http://australianit.news.com.au/common/storyPage/0,3811,2140242%255E442,00.h
tml

Background information on the Gutnick case is available from Alison
Crosweller, "Case test internet freedom," Australian IT, June 6, 2001 at
http://australianit.news.com.au/common/storyPage/0,3811,2082612%5E442,00.htm
l

=================================================
[6] Cubans face further Net restraints
=================================================
Through extensive access controls and intimidation, the Fidel Castro regime
has prevented many Cubans from freely voicing their views online.

Many of these measures are documented in a new report commissioned by the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The study, which was released
this past month, describes how the Cuban government has severely limited
Internet access to communities and agencies that are deemed loyal. Home
Internet connections are extremely rare. There is only one publicly
accessible cybercafe in the country (in the capital, Havana); it charges
fees that are too expensive for most Cuban citizens. Institutions that do
have Internet access often block users from visiting many websites, while
the government forges ahead with plans for an national intranet that will be
devoid of content that criticizes the ruling elite.

These restrictions are not the only way the Castro regime has stifled
dissent. Cuban authorities also harass and imprison independent Cuban
journalists who publish articles on the Information Superhighway. A two-year
old law allows the government to put such writers in jail for up to 20
years, while their associates can be fired from their jobs or otherwise
shunned from Cuban society.

The full Carnegie Endowment report is available (in PDF format) via
http://www.ceip.org/files/pdf/21KalathilBoas.pdf

For information in German (Deutsch), see Florian Rotzer, "Lasst sich das
Internet wirksam von autoritaren Staaten kontrollieren?" Heise Telepolis,
July 22, 2001 at
http://www.heise.de/tp/deutsch/inhalt/te/9137/1.html

For further background information, see Julia Scheeres, "Faint Voices Rise
 >From Cuba," Wired News, May 29, 2001 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,44045,00.html

=================================================
[7] Korean Net censorship scheme in effect
=================================================
Protests continue to mount over a Korean government scheme that may inhibit
online speech.

A newly effective Internet ordinance created by the South Korean Ministry of
Information and Communication essentially requires blocking software to be
installed in cybercafes and other public computing facilities. A special
Information Communication Ethics Committee already had made a list of some
119 000 "anti social" sites to be targeted and screened out. This list,
which apparently includes many non-Korean webpages, is to be given to
software developers for incorporation within blocking packages. Authorities
will soon work with Internet service providers to prevent access to any such
webpages; criminal penalties will be levied on those who aid and abet access
to these sites. Moreover, the plan reportedly criminalizes online protests
and demonstrations, including mass email campaigns. The ordinance went into
effect despite the fact that many questions about this scheme have yet to be
answered, including what criteria will be used to determine which sites
should be blocked, or even the precise pages that have banned.

The measure, which went into effect a few weeks ago, has met with derision
from many Internet groups. JinboNet, a node of the Association for
Progressive Communications (APC-a GILC member), accused the government of
ignoring public demonstrations against the ordinance and pleaded for
worldwide support against the Korean government's restrictions. JinboNet
also urged citizens to call Korean government agencies by phone and make
their concerns about these Internet restrictions heard.

For further details, visit a special protest website created by JinboNet
under
http://www.freeonline.or.kr/english/

=================================================
[8] Court sets new anonymous Net speech rules
=================================================
A new ruling from the United States has provided the framework for stronger
protections for anonymous Internet speakers.

The ruling revolved around online comments that criticized pharmaceutical
giant Dendrite International, Inc. A pseudonymous user posted the remarks in
a digital bulletin board operated by Internet portal firm Yahoo.
Subsequently, Dendrite sued Yahoo to discover the identity of the user who
posted these comments, claiming that the user had given out company secrets.


In the case, a New Jersey state appellate court laid down several key
procedural rules to help ensure that personal information about Internet
users is not given out unnecessarily. "[T]he trial court should first
require the plaintiff ... to notify the anonymous posters that they are the
subject of a subpoena or application for an order of disclosure, and
withhold action to afford the fictitiously-named defendants a reasonable
opportunity to file and serve opposition to the application. These
notification efforts should include posting a message of notification of the
identity discovery request to the anonymous user on the ISP's pertinent
message board.  The court shall also require the plaintiff to identify and
set forth the exact statements purportedly made by each anonymous poster
that plaintiff alleges constitutes actionable speech." Furthermore, the
appellate judges mandated that the trial court should determine whether the
plaintiff truly has a substantial case, and to balance the defendant's
"right of anonymous free speech against the strength of the prima facie case
presented and the necessity for the disclosure of the anonymous defendant's
identity to allow the plaintiff to properly proceed."

Cyberlibertarians have cited the decision as perhaps the first comprehensive
set of ground rules to protect the personal information of Internet speakers
from needless exposure. Public Citizen attorney Paul Levy pointed out that
"[b]ecause it sets forth strict procedural and evidentiary standards for
compelled identification, and then shows that these standards can produce
real protection for anonymity, this decision is a tremendous victory for
free speech."

The text of the opinion is posted at
http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/opinions/A2774-00.htm

Read Jane Black, "A Victory, of Sorts, for Spouting Off," Business Week
Online, July 20, 2001 at
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/jul2001/nf20010720_543.htm

See also Ralph Siegel, "Court Sets Rules on Disclosing Internet Identities,"
Associated Press, July 11, 2001 at
http://www.washtech.com/news/regulation/11094-1.html

===============================================
[9] Mexican Net libel battle looms
===============================================
A defamation case has raised questions concerning Internet freedom of
expression across borders.

The battle centers on Mexican newspaper articles that were republished on
the World Wide Web by New York-based Narco News. The articles raised drug
trafficking allegations against Roberto Hernandez Ramirez, the executive
director of Mexican banking conglomerate Banamex. Banamex has now launched a
defamation action against Narco News in a US court. The move came despite
the fact that Mexican courts had thrown out 3 previous Banamex lawsuits
based on the same writings.

The case has alarmed a number of online free speech groups. Cindy Cohn,
legal director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF-a GILC member),
voiced concern that Banamex "resorted to New York courts to try to shut down
this website because it could not do so in Mexican courts. This kind of
forum shopping threatens to shut down one of the greatest benefits of the
Internet -- giving a voice to independent, Internet-based journalists. Faced
with having to defend themselves in far-flung jurisdictions, many
independent journalists will simply choose not to publish on the Internet."
A final decision may come in several months.

Cohn's comments and other information are available from the EFF website
under
http://www.eff.org/Censorship/SLAPP/Forum_shopping/BNM_v_Narco_News/20010712
_eff_narconews_pr.html

Read Mark K. Anderson, "Net Reporting at Stake," Wired News, July 23, 2001
at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,45231,00.html

See Mark Ward, "Drugs case tests net boundaries," BBC News Online, July 20,
2001 at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1448000/1448428.stm

===============================================
[10] Hague treaty negotiations stalled again
===============================================
A controversial treaty that could have serious implications for online free
speech has become bogged down in diplomatic quicksand.

The latest round of negotiations regarding the Hague Convention on
Jurisdiction and Foreign Judgments has recently ended. This convention,
which is meant to ease enforcement of court rulings across borders. The
document's terms are currently being worked out by representatives of many
countries, including the United States, mainland China, the United Kingdom,
Japan, Germany, Japan, Korea and Australia.

However, the different nations remain deeply divided on many key issues,
particularly speech-related subjects such as intellectual property and
defamation. These issues were highlighted by a recent court case where a
French court ordered Internet portal giant Yahoo (which is based in the US)
to block access to Nazi-related items, despite the fact that selling such
items is legal in the United States. While the next set of talks will occur
within a few months, many observers believe it could take two years or so
before a finalized agreement can be hammered out.

Read Peter Griffin, "Global web law a thorny issue," New Zealand Herald,
July 16, 2001 at
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?storyID=200279

See also Jean Eaglesham and Patti Waldmeir, "Laws unto themselves,"
Financial Times, July 8, 2001 at
http://news.ft.com/ft/gx.cgi/ftc?pagename=View&c=Article&cid=FT35YWU4XOC

===============================================
[11] Privacy complaint filed over Windows XP
===============================================
Several privacy groups have filed a formal complaint over perceived
deficiencies in the latest version of Microsoft Windows.

The complaint, dated July 26, 2001, alleges that Microsoft "has engaged ...
in unfair and deceptive trade practices intended to profile, track and
monitor millions of Internet users." The document charges that Microsoft's
release of Windows XP and related products such as Passport and Hailstorm
will shift control of sensitive information away from respective users to
the company. Thus, the Passport user authentication standard will make the
corporation "the central repository for routine information for commercial
transactions, as well as personal facts such as birthdates and
anniversaries." Hailstorm, in turn, "will enable the widespread exchange of
personal information among Microsoft business partners." In addition, the
filed papers suggest that Microsoft's statements regarding the privacy
implications of this scheme are misleading. Among other things, other
websites are allowed to join into this data collection and dissemination
system provided that those sites have their own "posted privacy policy,"
without defining "what level of protection that policy must provide."
Similarly, despite "broad representations, the control that users will
ultimately have over the extensive collection of their personal information
within the Hailstorm system will be subject to the vagaries of Microsoft's
business model." The document also notes how individuals trying to use
Windows XP and Office XP may be continuously prompted to register with
Passport (and thus divulge personal details about themselves) in order to
receive certain services. In short, computer users may be coerced into
providing sensitive details about themselves to the software giant and be
left without "meaningful or effective control over the use of that
information within Microsoft."

The complaint urges the United States Federal Trade Commission to launch a
formal investigation of these Microsoft activities and to order the company
to take several key steps to protect user privacy. These steps include
"blocking the sharing of personal information among Microsoft areas ...
absent explicit consent," incorporation of techniques to "allow users of
Windows XP to gain access to Microsoft web sites without disclosing their
actual identity," and providing better notice to users. The list of
signatories included several GILC member organizations, including the
Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), Computer Professionals for
Social Responsibility (CPSR) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).

A copy of the complaint (in PDF format) is available at
http://www.epic.org/privacy/consumer/MS_complaint.pdf

See Sandeep Junnarkar and Stefanie Olsen, "Win XP under fire from privacy
groups," ZDNet News, July 25, 2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5094734,00.html

===============================================
[12] New Japanese ECHELON spy allegations
===============================================
What is a super-secret surveillance network doing in the Land of the Rising
Sun?

The network in question is popularly known as ECHELON, and is supposedly
operated by the United States National Security Agency in conjunction with
government intelligence organizations in several other countries, including
Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Designed to intercept
communications from around the world, ECHELON is reportedly capable of
capturing e-mail messages, faxes, and telephone conversations.

Recently, Nicky Hager, a New Zealand intelligence expert, claimed that
ECHELON was used to conduct widescale surveillance on Japanese citizens. He
based these allegations on interviews with some 50 individuals, including
former intelligence operatives from New Zealand's Government Communications
Security Bureau (GCSB). ECHELON apparently targeted a variety of activities
and locations, ranging from Japanese fishing boats to diplomatic documents.

These charges have heightened concerns that ECHELON has severely undercut
the privacy rights of individuals worldwide-concerns that are currently
being investigated by a special European Parliament committee. Several weeks
ago, the panel drafted a resolution calling for stronger privacy measures to
be taken, including greater use of computer encryption, as a way to counter
possible ECHELON abuses. The resolution is expected to be tabled in a
plenary session during the fall of 2001.

The text of the resolution is available under
http://cryptome.org/echelon-epmr.htm

To read 2 minority reports that accompany the resolution, click
http://cryptome.org/echelon-turco.htm
http://cryptome.org/eu-priv-iset.htm

Read "Japanese diplomatic dispatches infiltrated by English-speaking spies,"
Mainichi Daily News, June 27, 2001 at
http://mdn.mainichi.co.jp/news/archive/200106/27/20010627p2a00m0fp002003c.ht
ml

For information in German (Deutsch), read Harald Neuber, "Alle Geheimdienste
sind undemokratisch," Heise Telepolis, July 9, 2001 at
http://www.heise.de/tp/deutsch/special/ech/9033/1.html

See also Steve Kettmann, "Louder Call for Echelon Probe," Wired News, June
27, 2001 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,44841,00.html

=====================================================
[13] New cybercrime plans in Australia, elsewhere
=====================================================
A firestorm has erupted over recently introduced cybercrime legislation Down
Under.

Among other things, the Australian Cybercrime Bill 2001 would greatly expand
the power of government agents to conduct surveillance along computer
networks. It also would impose absolute criminal liability for many Internet
activities, including "unauthorized impairment of electronic communication,"
with no exceptions for individuals who access computers by mistake of fact.
Violators could be sentenced to 10 years in prison. Proponents claim that
the Bill is necessary to conform with a proposed international cybercrime
Convention that is currently being considered by the Council of Europe--a
treaty that has already received intense criticism from privacy advocates as
well as telecommunications providers.

The proposal was savaged by cyberliberties experts. Electronic Frontiers
Australia (EFA-a GILC member) issued a statement charging that the plan was
"an overbroad knee-jerk reaction to recent well-publicised virus attacks,
and has the potential to criminalise innocent behaviour such as possession
of security software. It also introduces an alarming law enforcement
provision requiring release of encryption keys or decryption of data,
contrary to the common law privilege against self-incrimination." EFA also
noted the "resemblance of provisions in the Bill to the CoE Convention" and
called provisions that criminalized the "possession of data with intent" as
"ridiculous."

Similar views were aired by the Australian Computer Society. Philip Argy,
ACS vice president, warned that the Bill's "breadth of definitions leaves
everyday activity vulnerable to prosecution by misguided, if not
overzealous, enforcement authorities. We also have serious reservations
about the broad powers conferred upon statutory agencies." An Australian
Senate committee has already launched an inquiry into the Bill, and is
scheduled to issue a report by August 21, 2001. Meanwhile, despite mounting
criticism of both the Bill and the Council of Europe Convention,
similarly-styled cybercrime proposals are cropping up in other parts of the
globe, including New Zealand and Hong Kong.

For more on the Australian proposal, visit the EFA website under
http://www.efa.org.au/Campaigns/cybercrime.html

Read Karen Dearne, "Cybercrime Bill 'excessive'," Australian IT, July 24,
2001 at
http://australianit.news.com.au/common/storyPage/0,3811,2414351%5E442,00.htm
l

Read Adam Creed, "New Zealand Crimes Bill Raises Cybersnooping Concerns,"
Newsbytes, July 23, 2001 at
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/168208.html

See also Kim Griggs, "Kiwi Spy Bill Inches Forward," Wired News, July 25,
2001 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,45501,00.html

Read Adam Creed, "Hong Kong Mulls Measures To Fight Computer Crime,"
Newsbytes, July 18, 2001 at
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/168057.html

To read a press release on a CoE committee's approval of the Convention,
click
http://press.coe.int/cp/2001/456a(2001).htm

For further details on the European government support for more surveillance
measures, see Graeme Wearden, "EU Council backs Net snooping," ZDNet News,
June 28, 2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2780944,00.html

To read a GILC letter regarding a past version of the CoE treaty, click
http://www.gilc.org/privacy/coe-letter-1200.html

===============================================
[14] Update: rental car Net trackers defiant
===============================================
A rental car company plans to continue tracking its customers in spite of
mounting criticism.

Previously, US-based Acme Rent-a-Car installed special Global Positioning
System devices (made by AirIQ) on its automobiles, then tracked its
customers with these devices via the Internet. Acme charged at least one of
these customers, James Turner, an extra US $450 for driving at what it
deemed an excessively high speed, and even pointed out the exact location
where he had done so. The charges came despite the fact that Turner never
received a police citation for the alleged transgressions. Turner responded
by suing in small claims court, as well as filing a complaint with his state
Department of Consumer Protection. Subsequently, both the Department of
Consumer Protection and the state's attorney general lashed out at Acme,
calling its practice of doling out private speeding tickets as deceptive and
illegal.

Since the revelations, Acme Rent-a-Car said (through its attorney) that it
may refund some of the money it took from its customers, and it has altered
its contracts by raising the speed threshold at which it will levy its
private-speeding tickets. However, it remains adamant about its right to
follow consumers via the Information Superhighway. Further legal action is
expected.

For more about AirIQ tracking technology, visit AirIQ's homepage at
http://www.airiq.com

Read Michelle Delio, "Rent-a-Car Motto: Speed Bills," July 12, 2001 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,45163,00.html

See also Bob Jamieson, "Watching You: Rental Car Company Sued for Tracking
Customer's Speed," ABC World News Tonight (US), July 5, 2001 at
http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/wnt/dailynews/rentalcar_010705.html

===============================================
[15] Workers worldwide face Net monitoring
===============================================
Is someone watching you via the Internet while you work?

Increasingly, the answer is yes, according to a new report conducted by the
Privacy Foundation. The survey shows that some 27 million employees around
the world (including 14 million in the United States) "have their Internet
or e-mail use under continuous surveillance at work." The paper also
indicates that the "low cost" of spyware, "more than any other factor, is
driving the growth of e-mail and Internet surveillance in the workplace.
Employee monitoring, as measured by the sales of surveillance software, has
increased at least twice as fast as the number of U.S. employees with
Internet access in the past few years." Ironically, the paper also suggests
corporations that engage in such monitoring "may be putting themselves at
risk. By creating and storing a detailed audit trail of employee activities,
organizations may be inadvertently stockpiling large amounts of potential
evidence that could be used against them in future litigation."

The report also suggests that tougher privacy rules to protect workers may
be necessary. Andrew Schulman, the Privacy Foundation researcher who wrote
the study, worries that mere notice to workers that they are being watched
"might not go far enough. Companies and government agencies are basing
firing and suspension decisions on the employee-monitoring reports. Yet,
employees are generally not told beforehand what information will be
gathered and how it will be judged. Companies can use employee-monitoring
logs as a kind of 'wishing well' to justify actions against employees,
including dismissals and layoffs."

Indeed, experts Down Under are questioning whether a set of new privacy
standards (which are scheduled to take effect in a few months) are strong
enough to deter workplace surveillance abuses. The language contained within
extensions of the Australian Privacy Act is unclear on whether employers
have the right to spy on their workers' Internet activities. Malcolm
Crompton, the Australian Federal Privacy Commissioner, suggested that the
exemptions within the Privacy Act for employee records only covered
materials "that were part of the employer relationship." Thus, for private
emails, companies may have notify their workers of the surveillance and get
consent first.

The Privacy Foundation report is available under
http://www.privacyfoundation.org/resources/14million.asp

Read Carrie Kirby, "The boss may be spying: Net use easy to monitor," San
Francisco Chronicle, July 9, 2001, page D1, at
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2001/07/09/BU144746.DTL&;
type=printable

See Stephen Shankland, "Study: Someone is watching you," ZDNet News, July 9,
2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5093810,00.html

See also "Under Surveillance," Associated Press, July 9, 2001 at
http://cbsnews.com/now/story/0,1597,300508-412,00.shtml

For more on Australian workplace Net privacy woes, see Sue Lowe, "Emails at
work  a grey area under extended Privacy Act," Sydney Morning Herald, June
26, 2001 at
http://www.smh.com.au/news/0106/26/biztech/biztech5.html

For further details on Australian privacy plans, see Matthew Spencer,
"Follow NZ on privacy: expert," Australian IT, June 26, 2001 at
http://australianit.news.com.au/common/storyPage/0,3811,2189962%5E442,00.htm
l

===================================================
[16] Interactive TV privacy concerns grow
===================================================
New technologies may be allowing companies to watch you while you watch
television.

That's according to a report recently released by the Center for Digital
Democracy, in cooperation with Privacy International (a GILC member) and
White Dot. Entitled "TV That Watches You: The Prying Eyes of Interactive
Television," the study suggests that new interactive television systems are
being "deliberately being designed to record the viewing and spending habits
of the viewer." This data collection is done through the set-top boxes that
had previously been used for switching between different television
channels. Newer set-top boxes, which "are essentially computers, with
microprocessors, memory and storage capacity," have unique built-in
identifiers that allow companies to track users. Indeed, many of these
devices are connected to the Internet and can log information about users,
then send this information back to their manufacturers via the Information
Superhighway. These profiles can "include one's age, discretionary income,
parental status, along with psychographic and demographic data," and "be
collected, analysed and made available to marketers, advertisers, programmes
and others."

These findings have fueled efforts to enact tougher privacy laws. In the
U.S., California state senator Debra Bowen is fighting for new rules that
would require interactive TV companies to get their customers' permission
before collecting personal information. Moreover, these concerns are not
confined to the United States. In Britain, public anxiety over the privacy
of interactive television systems has also risen, as several major companies
plan to introduce a series of new generation of such devices within several
months.

The "TV That Watches You" report is available (in PDF format) at
http://www.democraticmedia.org/privacyreport.pdf

See Sean Dodson, "The spy in your living room," The Guardian, July 9, 2001
at
http://www.guardian.co.uk/internetnews/story/0,7369,518674,00.html

Read Robert O'Harrow Jr., "Interactive TV Puts Users' Privacy at Risk,
Report Says," Washington Post, June 27, 2001, page E3, at
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47809-2001Jun26.html

See also Jeffrey Benner, "Report: Beware the Eye in ITV," Wired News, June
26, 2001 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,44801,00.html

===================================================
[17] New tool forces ads into email
===================================================
Overwhelmed with email messages? Would you feel any better if every one of
those emails included advertisements?

An Australian-based company, Reva Networks, has created a new program that
apparently intercepts emails and inserts advertisements in messages before
they are sent. The advertisements themselves are tailored to users based on
personal information profiles. Reva CEO Robert Pickup explains that this
Admail system will make it harder for users to avoid online commercials:
"Because the advertising is embedded within a regular e-mail and not a
separate e-mail message from an advertiser, users are more likely to open
the message and hence be exposed to the advertising offer." Indeed, because
Admail works at the Internet service provider level, individual users may
have little choice on whether they want to receive ads in their own
messages, although Pickup claims that "an opt-out function is likely to be
provided in that case."

Consumers advocates have been less than receptive toward this apparently
invasive product. Charles Britton from the Australian Consumer Association
voiced support for standards that would force corporations to get customer
consent before using such systems. He also questioned Reva's suggestions
that private Internet users would welcome this device: "Without some
incentive why would you want advertising in your e-mail?"

See Andrew Colley, "Tool feeds ads to your e-mails," ZDNet Australia, June
22, 2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2779267,00.html

===================================================
[18] Prozac email privacy breach
===================================================
Privacy advocates are in arms after a major drug manufacturer released
sensitive medical information via the Internet.

Previously, Eli Lilly and Company provided a daily email service, called
Medi-Messenger, that reminded Prozac users to take their anti-depressant
medication. These messages were sent without identifying the recipients.
However, when Eli Lilly discontinued the service, it sent an email to its
customers that included a long, publicly visible list of over 700 recipients
under the previously blank "To:" header.

In the wake of this development, the American Civil Liberties Union (a GILC
member) sent a letter to the United States Federal Trade Commission,
charging that Eli Lilly's distribution of the email violated the company's
posted privacy policy and constituted an unfair trade practice in violation
of Federal laws. The ACLU called on the FTC to launch a full investigation
into this case. ACLU Associate Director Barry Steinhardt said that "[t]his
disclosure of personal data may subject hundreds of people to
discrimination. We hope that Federal regulators will do what is necessary to
protect these individuals from further harm, and prevent similar mishaps
from occurring in the future."

An ACLU press release on this subject is posted at
http://www.aclu.org/news/2001/n070501a.html

===================================================
[19] UK online privacy concerns rise
===================================================
Various reports suggest that more people in Britain want more protection for
their privacy online.

According to a study performed by the British Information Commissioner,
Elizabeth France, almost three out of every four people (73%) in the United
Kingdom are "very" or "quite concerned" about how much information about
them has been stored in databases. The same paper showed a whopping 96% of
respondents have termed their personal privacy rights as important or very
important. In addition, the number of inquiries on privacy matters made to
the Commissioner has reached a record high. Moreover, total yearly
complaints of data privacy violations had jumped by 700% between 1991/92 and
2000/2001.

Commissioner France held that these results indicate support for strong
online privacy rules, and argued that such standards should be an integral
part of any future e-government plans: "People are worried about the ways
their information might be being used without them being aware of it. The
most important thing is that people have some confidence about what is
happening to their information and understand that there are boundaries."
She also attacked European proposals that would require Internet service
providers to retain traffic data about their customers for 7 years. The
Commissioner said that such measures were unjustified and called instead for
measures that were more "proportionate ... to the problem law enforcement
agencies face."

See "E-privacy complaints soar," BBC News Online, July 11, 2001 at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/newsid_1433000/1433208.stm

Read Andy McCue, "Gateway raises privacy fears," Computing, July 23, 2001 at
http://www.vnunet.com/Print/1124148

See Sarah Left, "Complaints over data privacy soar," Guardian Unlimited,
July 12, 2001 at
http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/internetnews/story/0,7369,520513,00.html

See also Mark Ward, "The problems of protecting privacy," BBC News Online,
July 11, 2001 at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1434000/1434131.stm

===================================================
[20] Click-through ruling has privacy impact
===================================================
A decision from a US court regarding online agreements may have serious
repercussions for Internet privacy.

New York Federal Judge Alvin Hellerstein refused to enforce click-through
contracts from Internet browser company Netscape in connection with the
customer acquisition of special SmartDownload software. Hellerstein based
his decision in part on the fact that users could access Netscape software
but were not required to assent via computer or otherwise "click-through"
the licensing agreement first. "Before downloading the software, the user
need not view any license agreement terms or even any reference to a license
agreement. From the user's vantagepoint, SmartDownload could be analogized
to a free neighborhood newspaper, readily obtained from a sidewalk box or
supermarket counter without any exchange with a seller or vendor. It is
there for the taking."

The ruling was significant from a privacy perspective because the very same
contracts included language that required customers to submit to tracking
via the Internet. While Hellerstein's decision was primarily targeted at
other provisions requiring users to submit claims to arbitration (rather
than a court of law), the same logic could be applied to the tracking
arrangements. A spokesperson for AOL Time Warner (which owns Netscape) said
the company was still reviewing the decision and had not decided yet whether
to appeal.

Read Lisa M. Bowman, "Netscape ruling bolsters privacy efforts," CNet News,
July 9, 2001 at
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-6527744.html

==================================================
[21] LifeMinders.com deal sparks privacy worries
==================================================
How would you like to buy sensitive information concerning 20 million
people?

Cross Media Corp., a direct marketing company based in New York, has decided
to purchase online advertiser LifeMinders for a reported US $68.1 million.
LifeMinders had previously compiled a personal information database that
contained details about 20 million Internet users. The database, had
previously been used to send advertisement-laden messages about birthdays
and various special occasions. It is unclear, however, precisely what uses
Cross Media will make of this information, or whether the sale conflicts
with LifeMinders' privacy policy. That policy tells customers that the
company "will never share your information with third parties unless you
grant us consent," but includes an exception for disclosures "pursuant to a
sale, merger, assignment, joint venture or other transfer or disposition of
a portion or all of the assets or stock of LifeMinders or its affiliated
entities."

Not surprisingly, the deal has raised questions as to whether the privacy of
the individuals profiled in the database have been sufficiently protected.
Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information
Center (EPIC-a GILC member) pointed out that "[e]ven if a transaction
doesn't violate the original privacy policy, it's still appropriate to ask
whether this respects the privacy interest of members and lets them decide
whether to opt in to the new owner. There's always a risk of public backlash
when people feel they've been given the privacy bait-and-switch."

The move comes as US politicians are considering whether to enact new
Internet privacy rules. At a recent hearing before the US Senate Commerce
Committee, several privacy advocates, including Rotenberg, argued in favor
of legislation requiring companies to ask their customers consent before
collecting personal data. These feelings were shared by the Committee's
chairman, Ernest Hollings, who said: "Clearly we need legislation that
requires notice, affirmative consent, reasonable access and reasonable
security to protect individuals online. Poll after poll indicates that the
public wants this level of protection." US policymakers also have held
sessions to talk up privacy measures for the personal information contained
within domain name registrant Whois databases.

See Neil Irwin, "N.Y. Marketing Firm To Buy LifeMinders," Washington Post,
July 20, 2001, page E1 at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A23914-2001Jul19?language=printer

LifeMinders' current privacy policy is posted under
http://www.lifeminders.com/lifeminder30/lmsite/utilities/privacy.html

Read Jonathan Krim and Robert O'Harrow Jr., "Democrats Focus on Internet
Privacy," Washington Post, July 12, 2001, page E2 at
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A48700-2001Jul11.html

See also Lisa M. Bowman, "Congressional hearings focus on Whois," ZDNet
News, July 11, 2001 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5094032,00.html

=========================================================
	ABOUT THE GILC NEWS ALERT:
=========================================================
The GILC News Alert is the newsletter of the Global Internet Liberty
Campaign, an international coalition of organizations working to protect and
enhance online civil liberties and human rights.  Organizations are invited
to join GILC by contacting us at
gilc@gilc.org.

To alert members about threats to cyber liberties, please contact members
from your country or send a message to the general GILC address.

To submit information about upcoming events, new activist tools and news
stories, contact:

Christopher Chiu
GILC Coordinator
American Civil Liberties Union
125 Broad Street, 17th Floor
New York, New York 10004
USA

Or email:
cchiu@aclu.org

More information about GILC members and news is available at
http://www.gilc.org

You may re-print or redistribute the GILC NEWS ALERT freely.

To subscribe to the alert, please send e-mail to
gilc-announce@gilc.org

with the following message in the body:
subscribe gilc-announce

========================================================
PUBLICATION OF THIS NEWSLETTER IS MADE POSSIBLE BY A
GRANT FROM THE OPEN SOCIETY INSTITUTE (OSI)
========================================================


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