阳泉市某某投资咨询有限责任公司
    • 网站首页
    • 公司简介
      公司简介
      企业文化
    • 产品展示
      汽车电瓶
      汽车音响
      汽车配件
    • 新闻动态
      公司新闻
      行业新闻
    • 成功案例
      成功案例
    • 客户服务
      售后服务
      技术支持
    • 人才招聘
    • 联系我们
      联系我们
      在线留言

    新闻动态Site navigation

    公司新闻
    行业新闻

    联系方式Contact


    地 址:联系地址联系地址联系地址
    电 话:020-123456789
    网址:njpuji.com
    邮 箱:[email protected]

    网站首页 > 新闻动态
    新闻动态Welcome to visit our

    How the UK government can hack your personal data

    分享到:
      来源:阳泉市某某投资咨询有限责任公司  更新时间:2024-10-30 04:09:43  【打印此页】  【关闭】

    From the moment you set foot on British soil, your personal data could easily be accessed, or even hacked, by the government.

    New invasive legislation has been dubbed by critics as one of the most extreme surveillance laws ever passed in a democracy.

    SEE ALSO:Keep your texts private in Trump's America (and everywhere else, too)

    The Snoopers' Charter -- aka the Investigatory Powers Act -- was passed into law at the end of last year. It arguably removes your right to online privacy.

    In short, it forces internet companies to keep bulk records of all the websites you visit for up to a year and allows the UK government to coerce tech companies to hand over your web history with a retention notice and remove encryption, upon request.

    If you think all of this sounds rather alarming, it's because it is.

    So what happens if you're an unsuspecting visitor blissfully unaware of mass surveillance in the UK? Here's a provisional guide:

    At the airport

    Before you land, your data has already been sent to the UK's border agency for risk assessment. This is a routine check and shouldn't make you too worried.

    The problems start as soon as you've arrive on British soil and you turn your phone on. Under roaming, typically you'll get a message telling you who will be your phone provider while you are in the UK.

    From that moment, all communications data could be collected, kept for up to 12 months and obtained in bulk from the UK government without suspicion of criminal activity.

    Telecoms companies will be required by law to have a list of every phone call made, every website visited, along with a record of date, time and duration.

    Mashable ImageCredit: Shutterstock / alice-photo

    So what kind of data will the government keep?

    It includes the who, what, when, where and how? For example:

    • Visited websites

    • Email contacts

    • To whom, where and when an email is sent

    • Map searches

    • GPS location

    • Passwords

    • Home address

    • Username

    But the retained data also encompass so-called Internet Connection Records (IRCs), which basically includes the internet history of the phone services used in the last 12 months:

    • Mobile apps (WhatsApp, Signal, Google Maps, Twitter, Facebook)

    • Calendars

    • Notes

    • System updates

    Uber & Airbnb

    OK, you've passed passport control, collected your luggage and stepped out of the airport. Now you're ready to get an Uber to take you to the Airbnb you've booked.

    Under the Snooper's Charter, tech companies -- like Uber and Airbnb -- could be considered to have the same function as an Internet provider -- such as BT and Virgin -- and forced into handing over personal data to the government.

    Privacy campaigners believe the law is purposely vague about what could be considered a "telecommunications provider".

    "The legislation is relatively unclear whether Uber and Airbnb are included in the companies from which the government could require to retain communications data," says Camilla Graham Wood, legal officer at Privacy International, a human rights watchdog.

    Mashable ImageCredit: Shutterstock / Kaspars Grinvalds

    The human rights group Liberty says ‘telecommunications companies’ have been defined so broadly "as to include everyone from Facebook, Gmail and Twitter, to offices, businesses, law firms, Government departments and university networks."

    The definition of 'telecommunications service has been kept "intentionally broad so that it remains relevant for new technologies", according to the Code of Practice on communications data from March 2015.

    Mashable Top StoriesStay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletterBy signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

    The Snoopers' Charter seems to expand this definition, indicating that it could apply to a wide range of organisations. By dropping the word "public" from the draft, the law hints that various aspects of legislation could extend to private services, including private company networks and cloud services.

    "An online market place may be a telecommunications operator as it provides a connection to an application/website. It may also be a telecommunications operator if and in so far as it provides a messaging service," the law says.

    Travel

    After a short nap, you decide to go outside to explore London. Unbeknownst to you, your movements around the city could also be under scrutiny by the government

    "The UK intelligence agencies can access any public or private database using very broad warrants. For example if they choose to access all databases relating to 'travel', every ticket you buy that is recorded on a database could be accessed by the state," says Pam Cowburn, Communications Director at the campaign body Open Rights Group.

    Mashable ImageCredit: Shutterstock / alice-photo

    The government could request bulk personal datasets from companies or organisations which hold large sets of customer and user data.

    However, very little is known as to what constitutes these personal datasets.

    Privacy International says they are likely to include passport databases, hotel reservations and oyster card data (the travel card for the Tube).

    Warrants

    In order to obtain these datasets, the government has to get "thematic warrants" that affect millions of people and are issued from secret courts. Thematic warrants allow surveillance warrants to be issued without specifying who or what the warrant is targeting.

    They could cover "a wide geographical area or involve the acquisition of a significant volume of data," as stated by the government.

    "It's not your typical, American-style warrant that protects you and your property from a search without due suspicion," says Silkie Carlo, policy officer at Liberty. "The warrants are made by secret courts in the utmost secrecy and making the content public is a criminal offence."

    A warrant will also be needed for intelligence agencies to hack into computers, phone and networks, even outside the UK's borders.

    But it gets better.

    Under the Snoopers' Charter, up to 48 government agencies will be able to access your communications data, in some cases without a warrant.

    "There are no notification provisions, which means that you will not be told if your data and communications were obtained, misused, or abused," says Camilla Graham Wood, of Privacy International.

    WhatsApp and encryption

    Under the Snoopers' Charter, even encrypted services like WhatsApp, which offer end-to-end encryption, may not be safe from interception.

    The law gives the government the power to "force telecommunications companies to break away their own encryption," says Silkie Carlo of Liberty.

    That means that companies like WhatsApp could be lured into creating a backdoor for the government's interception.

    According to Liberty, these companies could be coaxed into "secretly delivering malware to users, e.g. through a ‘security update’, or to secretly compromise their own products, or to assist the state in hacking some other way".

    Obligations to remove encryption can be issued in a notice from the Home Secretary and the companies must comply with it but not disclose the existence of such notice.

    Mashable ImageCredit: Shutterstock / vchal

    U.S. tech giants have expressed their concerns about the law.

    In a written submission to the U.K. government, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Twitter said: “We reject any proposals that would require companies to deliberately weaken the security of their products via backdoors, forced decryption, or any other means. ”

    'A key left under the doormat would not just be there for the good guys. The bad guys would find it, too," Apple said.

    "Were an Apple v FBI scenario to occur in the UK, Apple would not be able to disclose even the fact that it had been served with a notice, let alone challenge it in court," says Silkie Carlo of Liberty.

    Most people have nothing to hide, but the level of intrusion the government will legally be able to achieve at the drop of a hat is clearly concerning.

    Are you worried?


    Featured Video For You
    How virtual reality is changing storytelling

    TopicsCybersecurityPrivacy

    上一篇:Minor 'natural' quake near North Korea's closed nuclear test site
    下一篇:N. Korea's youth mobilization project seems meant for tighter state control: ministry

    相关文章

    • UN chief to seek progress on NK denuclearization during leaders' gathering next month
    • North Korea cancels joint taekwondo demonstration with South Korea
    • Putin hopes for early summit with Kim: Pyongyang media
    • North Korea leader asks to protect forest in border region
    • UN chief to seek progress on NK denuclearization during leaders' gathering next month
    • South Korean delegation visits North to inspect venues for joint Olympic events
    • Moon seeks international support for inter
    • What's at stake? Trump may focus on N. Korea nuke complex, Kim on US rewards
    • Military closely watching North Korea for signs of submarine missile launch
    • North Korea's nuclear reactor shows signs of operation: 38 North

    友情链接:

    • https://wsopgg.com/archives/1703
    • https://wsopgg.com/archives/1657
    • https://wsopgg.com/archives/1678
    • https://wsopgg.com/archives/1674
    • https://wsopgg.com/archives/1667
    • https://wsopgg.com/archives/1688
    • https://wsopgg.com/archives/1635
    • https://wsopgg.com/archives/1647
    • GG扑克注册
    • GG扑克官网
    • GGPoker
    • GGpoker官网
    • GGpoker注册
    • GGpoker注册
    • GG扑克下载
    • GG扑克
    • GG扑克官网
    • GGpoker下载
    • GG扑克
    • GGPoker
    • GGpoker官网
    • GGpoker下载
    • GG扑克注册
    • GGpoker下载
    • GGpoker官网
    • GGpoker下载
    • GGpoker官网
    • GG扑克
    • GG扑克官网
    • GGpoker下载
    • GGpoker注册
    • GGPoker
    • GG扑克下载
    • GGPoker
    公司简介|产品展示|新闻动态|成功案例|客户服务|人才招聘|联系我们

    Copyright © 2024 Powered by 阳泉市某某投资咨询有限责任公司   sitemap

    1.1628s , 10312.0078125 kb