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WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger could by banned by UK's newly proposed bill
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WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger could be banned by UK’s newly proposed bill

Newly proposed UK legislation will demand that messaging apps such as WhatsApp and Snapchat remove encryption from their apps altogether or see them banned.

Messenger app. Image courtesy of Shutterstock.Popular messaging apps like WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger and Snapchat could soon be a thing of the past in the UK if the government gets its way.

The highly controversial Draft Communications Data Bill – better known as the ‘Snooper’s Charter’ – may have been blocked (sort of) by the Conservative Party’s more liberal coalition partners in 2012 but it has never fully gone away.

Now, with a clear majority in the House of Commons, the Tories are planning to reintroduce a very similar law, possibly as early as this autumn.

The new legislation, designed to either prevent terrorists from communicating with each other in the first place, or force them to use means that can easily be read by the security services, will prevent people sending encrypted messages. It will also require internet service providers and mobile phone operators to keep logs of their users’ browsing habits, phone calls and text messages.

If passed, the Investigatory Powers Bill will require service providers to pass details of web searches, WhatsApp group messages, Facebook conversations, SnapChat videos and other communications data to the authorities whenever required. Not only that, service providers will be told to remove encryption from their apps altogether or see them banned.

Speaking earlier this year, Prime Minister David Cameron issued a stark but much derided warning over encryption, saying:

In our country, do we want to allow a means of communication between people which we cannot read?

My answer to that question is, 'No, we must not.'

If I am Prime Minister, I will make sure it is a comprehensive piece of legislation that makes sure we do not allow terrorist safe spaces to communicate with each other.

Home Secretary Theresa May, who has previously said that new laws were “necessary to maintain the capabilities for our law enforcement agencies such that they can continue to do the excellent job, day in and day out, of keeping us safe and secure,” cited recent terrorist attacks in Tunisia and France as key reasons for enacting the new legislation as quickly as possible.

Not everyone thinks the same way though – computer experts at MIT blasted the proposals, as well as similar ones put forward by the US government, as unworkable, saying the removal of encryption would:

Raise enormous legal and ethical questions, and would undo progress on security at a time when Internet vulnerabilities are causing extreme economic harm.

Rights groups have also questioned the bill – Liberty says it contains insufficient safeguards to ensure powers are used lawfully and proportionately and Privacy International’s deputy director, Eric King, has questioned whether politicians even understand encryption in the first place.

One politician who does seem to have a grasp of the issues is Nick Clegg, who, as Deputy Prime Minister, blocked the original Snooper’s Charter. He said:

We have every right to invade the privacy of terrorists and those we think want to do us harm, but we should not equate that with invading the privacy of every single person in the UK. They are not the same thing.

The so-called Snoopers' Charter is not targeted. It's not proportionate.

It's not harmless. It would be a new and dramatic shift in the relationship between the state and the individual.

Whatever we think of the UK government’s view of the internet, we can at least acknowledge that it hasn’t reached the extremes of China’s approach. Even though David Cameron has previously said he would ban social networks in time of national unrest, no specific legislation to restrict internet access has ever arisen.

The situation in China, however, is somewhat different – a new law has recently been drafted which will give the government the power to shut the whole internet off in the event of a major (but largely undefined) “social security incident”.

The proposed legislation is a formalisation of many powers China has used previously, including the restriction of internet access for months at a time.

Image of messaging app courtesy of Shutterstock.

11 Comments

TIme to start looking at private mesh networks again. Their bandwidth will likely be low and latency high, however they will work well enough for messaging apps and maybe Facebook. The trouble is they need to be developed before they are needed. Getting sufficient traction is likely to be difficult, however the threat might cause the government to think more carefully.

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“Whatever we think of the UK government’s view of the internet, we can at least acknowledge that it hasn’t reached the extremes of China’s approach.”

Not yet.

The way things are going, it’s only a matter of time.

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It seems to me that the best approach to this is to sit back and let it happen, assuming all the named apps refuse to strip encryption.

The public outcry at the removal of the apps will ensure Cameron suddenly DOES receive the message he needs to hear.

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I don’t know how he can enforce it. Using the age old terrorist scare tactic to try and gain traction is getting boring too. Don’t the makers of the apps have a say? The main developer here seems to be facebook. Surely they can tell the prime minister to shove it?
People saying well it doesn’t affect me because I have nothing to hide is wrong too. I would say to them, so you want the post office / Royal Maiol to deliver your personal mai already opened then?…

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It’s simples really, we all contact our ISP and say that when social media stops, we stop paying for that portion of services that are no longer provided. Threaten the Mobile Phone companies as well. eg, I use broadband for other things 50% of the time therefore, I will only be paying half in future. They will soon bring pressure to bear.
There are alternatives we can use to keep in touch that are a bit more tricky to set up – but let’s be honest; terrorists will already be using these, not Facebook, IM, SnapChat etc….
He is shooting for the Moon, but the reality is that he wants to keep tabs on everyone in Britain, so there will be a Camo-Lite that will allow access to who talked to who, sent a message (text, IM, FB whatever), but no content, except for Websites visited and Search Engine data. Other reasons will be for DWP so they can check how often claimants are actually looking through jobsites or porn, or both. Information IS power, and Cameron is Power Mad at the moment.

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I don’t understand how it works, will the apps in question not be available to download if you are in that country? How long does it take to pass a law for each app? Can someone just keep making a new app or changing the name? Is there any way to get around the ban on a mobile phone and download the app anyway?

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