A US Senate panel approved a bill to boost email
privacy protections in a vote Thursday that followed widespread uproar
over the FBI probe that toppled CIA director David Petraeus.
The measure, which if enacted would require
police to obtain a warrant in most cases to access email accounts, drew
immediate praise from privacy activists.
The proposal had been pending for some time
but garnered increased attention after the resignation of Petraeus
earlier this month due to an extramarital affair exposed by a search of
his email records.
Senate judiciary chairman Patrick Leahy, who
sponsored the measure, said it would update a 1986 privacy law as
"Americans face even greater threats to their digital privacy."
"After decades of the erosion of Americans'
privacy rights on many fronts, we finally have a rare opportunity for
progress on privacy protection," the Vermont senator said in a
statement.
Leahy's measure requires the government to
obtain a search warrant based on probable cause in order to obtain email
content from a third-party service provider, with some exceptions in
cases of national security or imminent threats.
It also calls for the government to notify an
individual whose electronic communication has been disclosed, and
provide that individual with a copy of the search warrant used.
Gregory Nojeim of the Center for Democracy and Technology said the bill offered a historic step forward for privacy rights.
"Our privacy laws are woefully outdated given the rapid advance of technology," he said.
Nojeim said the measure "keeps the government
from turning cloud providers into a one-stop convenience store for
government investigators and requires government investigators to do for
online communications what they already do in the offline world: Get a
warrant."
The American Civil Liberties Union also hailed the move.
"This is an important gain for privacy. We
are very happy that the committee voted that all electronic content like
emails, photos and other communications held by companies like Google
and Facebook should be protected with a search warrant," said Chris
Calabrese, ACLU legislative counsel.
"We believe law enforcement should use the same standard to search your inbox that they do to search your home."
The Electronic Frontier Foundation welcomed
the move, saying it would "close a dangerous loophole in the 1986
Electronic Communications Privacy Act," which authorities have argued
allows them to access private emails that are more than 180 days old
without a warrant.
Robert Holleyman, head of the Software
Alliance, also praised the panel for "an important step in building
trust and confidence in cloud computing and other digital services."
"Law enforcement access and civil protections
should be the same for online files and other digital records as they
are for papers stored in a file cabinet," Holleyman said.
Petraeus resigned when it became clear that
his affair with 40-year-old military reservist Paula Broadwell, his
biographer, would become public.
FBI agents stumbled on the liaison after a
complaint from Jill Kelley -- a friend of Petraeus -- who told a federal
agent that she had received threatening emails, which investigators
later traced to Broadwell.
The Leahy measure would need to pass the
Senate and the House of Representatives before going to President Barack
Obama's desk to be signed into law.
© 2012 AFP
Retweet this story
© 2012 AFP
No comments:
Post a Comment