The Times is reporting that new EU measures to deter computer hacking could pose problems because the new laws could also outlaw people who organize protests online, like the MoveOn "Virtual March on Washington" (mentioned elsewhere on this site).
The agreement, reached last week, obliges all 15 member states to adopt a new criminal offense: illegal access to, and illegal interference with an information system. It calls on national courts to impose jail terms of at least two years in serious cases.
If European Union citizens undertook a similar electronic bombardment of the e-mail, fax and phone lines of the British prime minister, Tony Blair, they might be liable for prosecution, said Leon de Costa, chief executive of Judicium, a legal consultancy based in London. The new code "criminalizes behavior which, until now, has been seen as lawful civil disobedience," Mr. de Costa said.
Posted by Darren Wershler-Henry at March 05, 2003 12:00 PM