The federal government is
floating a trial balloon called the Lawful Access-Consultation Document,
which, if passed into law, could dramatically change the very nature of
the cyber-world.
Designed to fill in some of
the gaps in the existing criminal code and deal with infrastructure
modification, the law could require ISPs to "collect and retain" a wide
variety of data about online activity.
The basic idea is to amend
lawful access, a search and seizure tool used by law enforcement today, to
cover "the rapidly evolving technologies…(that) can make it more difficult
to gather information required to carry out effective investigations,"
according to the proposal.
One objective is to give
investigators the ability to quickly preserve data sitting on an ISP’s
servers. Today, ISPs can delete data as they see fit. For law enforcement
to gain access to stored data, they require a search warrant or
interception order. By the time they get it, the data could be
gone.
"The preservation order is
designed to be used very quickly," said Gareth Sansom, director of
technology and analysis in the criminal law policy section of the
Department of Justice in Ottawa. Though it would still require a judicial
authorization, the threshold could be lowered to expedite the
process.
But this does not mean
police would have access to the stored information. They would still have
to come back with a search warrant.
"It is an attempt to find a
quick way of preserving information so it is not deleted," Sansom
said.
Ray Albright, who, as a
forensic investigator for KPMG in Toronto often needs access to ISP log
files, likes the idea of the preservation model. But even though increased
data preservation and retention could help him with his investigations, he
says it is hardly a panacea.
"That only helps us in one
aspect, you are still going to have to be able to put the guy at the
keyboard at the end of the day," he explained. And in his experience, ISPs
today, without federally forced compliance, are "more than co-operative"
when asked for data.
But for many the bigger
fear, and one which has got many of Canada’s privacy commissioners up in
arms, is the slippery slope that is created if Canadians allow the
government to increasingly monitor their cyber-activities in the name of
crime prevention and national security. Some envision e-mail messages and
online chats being copied and stored in case they are needed at a later
date.
In the Lawful Access
Proposal, this is referred to as data retention. Though Sansom is adamant
that it is not on the table at the moment, the thought is enough to set
off alarm bells. "I have heard those fears," he said.
But "nobody envisions the
terabytes that would be required to…actually [copy and store] content," he
said.
Ann Cavoukian, Ontario’s
privacy commissioner, is not so sure.
"I really think that if
these types of measures pass, what is going to be the difference between
our society and a totalitarian state?" she said. "You have, bit by bit, an
erosion of our privacy and our freedoms," she said. "It is so short
sighted."
"What the hell are they
going to do with all this information?" was Franks Work’s simple question.
As the information privacy commissioner for Alberta he has some concerns,
but his issues with the proposal are not just limited to
privacy.
"I think it will destroy the
Internet as we know it now, and I think the Internet offers us a huge
amount of potential as a vehicle for creativity and change," he
said.
"I don’t even think it will
come close to solving what it is supposed to do and the cost (will) be
huge," he said.
Cost is another big issue,
and one which has the ISPs a bit worried.
ISPs would be required to
provide "basic intercept capability before providing new services or a
significantly upgraded service to the public." Though there is no "retro
fit" for older equipment, Sansom said, there is the question of who will
pay for the new technology.
"I know a lot of ISPs have
said flat out that they will add a line item on customers’ bills so they
know it’s the government’s fault," said Bob Carrick, president of
CanadianISP.com, an ISP directory.
John Boufford, president of
e-Privacy Management Systems, a consulting firm specializing in privacy
and information technology in Lakefield, Ont., says ISPs should pay for
the upgrades.
"Co-operating in law
enforcement investigations is a social responsibility and shouldn’t be
reimbursed," he said. His sense is that government funding would be money
poured down the drain. But even he admits the buck would be passed.
"Ultimately, I think the customer does pay."
Peter
Hope-Tindall, chief privacy architect for Oakville, Ont.-based dataPrivacy
Partners Ltd., says it doesn’t really matter whether the government or the
ISP pays for the upgrade. "It is the citizen who is going to be paying
either through taxes or increased service costs," he said.
Work has another worry. He
sees increased costs being enough to force some ISPs out of business,
leading to a few ISP juggernauts.
"That’ll be a treat," he
said.
— With files from Network
World Canada