Thursday, 11 June 2015

Independent Reviewer Of Anti-Terrorism Laws Calls For Major Surveillance Law Overhaul

Daniel Anderson believes that the current legal framework that taps into emails, phone calls and online activity needs a major overhaul. But he called on the government to explain why the authorities need more powers.



Anderson said that agencies are the ones to carry out the bulk interception of information.

Meanwhile, the UK parliament is debating how to protect privacy while guaranteeing security agencies have the powers they need.

The issues have risen after former NSA contractor Edward Snowden put forward the abusive data collection activities of the organisation which jeopardises citizen privacy.

UK security chiefs point out they face a significant capability gap caused by technological advances and Edward Snowden’s revelation had furthered the gap for them.

UK’s GCHQ, the equivalent of the NSA, called on Twitter and Facebook to allow security services to work with them as their networks are highly important to militant groups.

Anderson pointed out that a “clean state” was important. There needed an easy to understand and comprehensive law that improves safeguards that judges instead of ministers will approve warrants to allow access to the content of emails and other private citizen information.


But he backed that organisations can collect data in bulk as it could help determine militant attacks without jeopardising the privacy of the public.

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