Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 4th Apr 2012 13:53 UTC
Legal "Cyber attacks on IT systems would become a criminal offence punishable by at least two years in prison throughout the EU under a draft law backed by the Civil Liberties Committee on Tuesday. Possessing or distributing hacking software and tools would also be an offence, and companies would be liable for cyber attacks committed for their benefit." Wait, what?
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RE: Comment by kaiwai
by Alfman on Wed 4th Apr 2012 16:17 UTC in reply to "Comment by kaiwai"
Alfman
Member since:
2011-01-28

"Question: How is a 'hacking tool' defined? it seems very much that one mans hacking tool is another mans tool used to test the security of their network."


Good question, tools can be used for many purposes, legitimate and nefarious. What troubles me is that if taken seriously, a law like this criminalizes honest people who are educating themselves while doing absolutely nothing to stop the real criminals.

Most likely the law won't be enforced very often, but it's disturbing to have laws on the books that innocent people will break so easily. It enables authorities to use it as a catch-all law to snag people who aren't doing anything wrong, but the authorities want to convict anyways. The real hackers are ALREADY breaking laws for real hacking offenses.

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