The end of privacy in Europe ?

June 4th, 2002

European law enforcement agencies were given sweeping powers to monitor telephone, Internet and email traffic in a move denounced by critics as the biggest threat to data privacy in a generation.

The measure, which will be approved by the 15 EU member states, will allow governments to force phone and Internet companies to retain detailed logs of their customers' communications for an unspecified period. Currently, records are kept only for a couple of months for billing purposes before being destroyed.
...
From mobile phone records, police will also be able to map people's movements because the phones communicate with the nearest base station every few seconds. In urban areas, the information is accurate to within a few hundred meters, but when the next generation of mobiles comes on stream it will pinpoint users' locations to within a few metros.

While the American and North Europeans democracies will try to defend the the right to privacy by limiting the access to these records, the Adevarul newspaper asks what will happen with Eastern Europe democracies where abuses will certanly exists.

Will 2002 be known as the year when privacy ended ?

Entry Filed under: Noise


So, who is Remus?

Remus Pereni is a 32 years old free thinker, IT addict, who lives, works, and wonders about the meaning of life, relations, human nature, IT, technologies, clients, value and business from Satu Mare, Romania. More

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