The new Police and Justice Act, published today, could criminalise legitimate IT security activity. There are fears amongst security experts that changes it makes to the Computer Misuse Act will make it illegal to distribute some vital tools.
The new law modifies the Computer Misuse Act of 1990, the cornerstone of Britain's anti-hacking law. The changes make clear for the first time that denial of service attacks are an offence; but they also address the distribution of hacking tools.
The new Act will make a person guilty of an offence "if he supplies or offers to supply any article believing that it is likely to be used to commit, or to assist in the commission of, [a hacking offence]." The word "article" is defined in the Act to include "any program or data held in electronic form".
Some software tools commonly used by IT security professionals can also be used for malicious purposes, making the new legislation a cause for concern.
i predicted this could happen at the onset of the publ;ic consultation on the Computer Misuse Act. Why don't politicians ever learn? There needed to be input from the IT industry before the Act was passed.
Anyhow, England lost the 1st test Match, but by 200+ runs, I think they did well considering the way things were on the 1st and 2nd days. I still think the lads will do us good.
Liverpool we are matching on, 1-0, good enough.
A great week ahead to yall.
The_Walrus
Pro
Once again, a law has been worded insuch a way that it cannot logically be applied. Why? Well, they have to show that the item was supplied "believing that it is likely to be used to commit, or to assist in the commission of, [a hacking offence]". Now, how are they going to prove what the supplier believed? Some kind of brain scan?