- cross-posted to:
- privacy@lemmy.ml
- privacy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
- cross-posted to:
- privacy@lemmy.ml
- privacy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
On 9 July, Austrian parliamentarians passed a highly controversial bill legalising the deployment of state-sponsored spyware, known as the Federal Trojan (Bundestrojaner), to enable the interception of encrypted communications.
It would do so by amending several laws, including:
- the State Security and Intelligence Service Act;
- the Security Police Act;
- the Telecommunications Act;
- the Federal Administrative Court Act; and
- the Judges’ and Public Prosecutors’ Service Act.
The interior minister Gerhard Karner, described it as a “special day for security.”
Stuff like this should be trialed on the politician’s own computers for two years with the results being public before being voted on.
They tried that in 2019 already until the Austrian Constitutional Court decided that the surveillance law that permits the use of spying software is unconstitutional.
Civil society groups already said to bring this to court again. (But I, yes, even if the High Court decides again it is unconstitutional, they will try it over and again, it is a constant fight to let Europe not becoming like China.)
I give it half a year before someone figures out how to breach-and-leak this shit…