Broad Scope Will Authorize Cross-Border Spying for Acts of Expression: Why You Should Oppose Draft UN Cybercrime Treaty

1 month 3 weeks ago

The draft UN Cybercrime Convention was supposed to help tackle serious online threats like ransomware attacks, which cost billions of dollars in damages every year.

But, after two and a half years of negotiations among UN Member States, the draft treaty’s broad rules for collecting evidence across borders may turn it into a tool for spying on people. In other words, an extensive surveillance pact.

It permits countries to collect evidence on individuals for actions classified as serious crimes—defined as offenses punishable by four years or more. This could include protected speech activities, like criticizing a government or posting a rainbow flag, if these actions are considered serious crimes under local laws.

Here’s an example illustrating why this is a problem:

If you’re an activist in Country A tweeting about human rights atrocities in Country B, and criticizing government officials or the king is considered a serious crime in both countries under vague cybercrime laws, the UN Cybercrime Treaty could allow Country A to spy on you for Country B. This means Country A could access your email or track your location without prior judicial authorization and keep this information secret, even when it no longer impacts the investigation.

Criticizing the government is a far cry from launching a phishing attack or causing a data breach. But since it involves using a computer and is a serious crime as defined by national law, it falls within the scope of the treaty’s cross-border spying powers, as currently written.

This isn’t hyperbole. In countries like Russia and China, serious “cybercrime” has become a catchall term for any activity the government disapproves of if it involves a computer. This broad and vague definition of serious crimes allows these governments to target political dissidents and suppress free speech under the guise of cybercrime enforcement.

Posting a rainbow flag on social media could be considered a serious cybercrime in countries outlawing LGBTQ+ rights. Journalists publishing articles based on leaked data about human rights atrocities and digital activists organizing protests through social media could be accused of committing cybercrimes under the draft convention.

The text’s broad scope could allow governments to misuse the convention’s cross border spying powers to gather “evidence” on political dissidents and suppress free speech and privacy under the pretext of enforcing cybercrime laws.

Canada said it best at a negotiating session earlier this year: “Criticizing a leader, innocently dancing on social media, being born a certain way, or simply saying a single word, all far exceed the definition of serious crime in some States. These acts will all come under the scope of this UN treaty in the current draft.”

The UN Cybercrime Treaty’s broad scope must be limited to core cybercrimes. Otherwise it risks authorizing cross-border spying and extensive surveillance, and enabling Russia, China, and other countries to collaborate in targeting and spying on activists, journalists, and marginalized communities for protected speech.

It is crucial to exclude such overreach from the scope of the treaty to genuinely protect human rights and ensure comprehensive mandatory safeguards to prevent abuse. Additionally, the definition of serious crimes must be revised to include those involving death, injury, or other grave harms to further limit the scope of the treaty.

For a more in-depth discussion about the flawed treaty, read here, here, and here.

Karen Gullo

国家という怪物相手に違憲訴訟に素手で挑む(上) 婚外子差別の根絶求める富澤由子の闘い 

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富澤由子、73歳。二つの違憲・国家賠償請求裁判を、弁護士を立てない本人訴訟で闘っている。事実婚で子どもの出生届を出すときに味わった根深い「婚外子」差別、そして相続裁判で生来の姓を使えなかった「私の苦痛」――自らの結婚、出 […]
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Texas Wins $1.4 Billion Biometric Settlement Against Meta. It Would Have Happened Sooner With Consumer Enforcement

1 month 3 weeks ago

In Texas’ first public enforcement of its biometric privacy law, Meta agreed to pay $1.4 billion to settle claims that its now-defunct face recognition system violated state law. The law was first passed in 2001.

As part of the Texas settlement, Meta (formerly Facebook) can seek pre-approval from the state for any future biometric projects. The settlement does not require Meta to destroy any models or algorithms trained on Texas biometric data, as the state urged in its original lawsuit. And the settlement appears designed to avoid that remedy in the future.

Facebook Previously Discontinued Its Face Recognition System

Meta announced in November 2021 that it would shut down its tool that scanned the face of every person in photos posted on the platform. The tool identified and tagged users who had purportedly opted in to the feature. At the time, Meta also announced that it would delete more than a billion face templates.

The company shut down this tool months after agreeing to a $650 million class action settlement brought by Illinois consumers under the state's strong biometric privacy law.

Texas’ Law Has Steep Penalties But Little Enforcement

The Texas settlement nearly three years later is welcome, but it also highlights the need to give consumers their own private right of action to enforce consumer data privacy laws.

The Texas Attorney General has sole authority to enforce the Texas Capture or Use of Biometric Identifier (CUBI) law, which prevents companies from capturing biometric identifiers for a commercial purpose, unless notice and consent is first given. The law has existed for decades, but this is the first time it has been enforced.

State regulators do not always have the resources or the will to aggressively enforce consumer privacy laws. And without strong enforcement, companies will not make compliance a priority. Most of the comprehensive consumer data privacy laws passed at the state level in the past few years lack a private right of action, and there have been few public enforcement actions.

That is why consumers should be empowered to bring lawsuits on their own behalf. That should be the priority in any new law passed. Hopefully, states like Texas will continue to enforce their privacy laws. Still, there is no substitute for consumer enforcement.

Mario Trujillo

【月刊マスコミ評・放送】テレ朝HD株主総会に行ってみた=岩崎 貞明

1 month 3 weeks ago
 6月27日、株式会社テレビ朝日ホールディングス(HD)の株主総会が開催された。今回は市民団体「テレビ輝け!市民ネットワーク」が①政治的な圧力により公正報道が難しい場合には第三者委員会設置・調査・公表する旨定款に定めること②社内の放送番組審議会で是正困難な報道につき第三者委員会調査を定款に定めること⓷放送番組審議会の委員の任期の是正(長期に及ぶ就任者があることに鑑み)④社外取締役として前川喜平氏を推薦する――の四項目を株主提案していた。 2015年1月、『報道ステーション』で..
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