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Subject: <nettime> Netherlands to require wiretap access
From: Nettimers Anonymous <nowhere@loopback.org>
Date: 15 Apr 1998 06:43:38 +0200


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[Nettime provides this article as a courtesy to its subscribers who
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<http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/98/04/cyber/eurobytes/14euro.html>

New York Times "Eurobytes" April 14, 1998

By BRUNO GIUSSANI

Dutch Law Goes Beyond Enabling Wiretapping to Make It a
Requirement

The tapping of the Internet and other new forms of digital
communication by government agencies is likely to become one
of the hottest issues of the year.

With the liberalization of the European telecommunications
market continuing, hundreds of new companies from cable
operators to Internet service providers (ISPs) are offering
a large array of new services and networks.

However, accustomed to dealing with state-run companies that
used to operate all telephone lines within a country and
willingly complied with requests from the police and
intelligence agencies, governments now feel now they're
losing their grip on telecommunications.

And their response is: more and extended wiretapping.

Earlier this month, the Netherlands set a controversial
benchmark for official snooping on all forms of
communications--including, in specific cases, private
networks. Other countries, and namely those of the European
Union, may follow suit.

On April 2, the Second Chamber of the Dutch Parliament
approved a new Telecommunications Act that includes a
chapter intended, among other things, to force cable
operators (many of which are preparing to sell phone
services) and ISPs to make their networks tappable by the
police and intelligence services.

Mainly designed to implement recent decisions taken by the
European Union concerning market deregulation and
interconnection of telecommunication networks, the new Dutch
law includes a chapter 13 labeled "Authorized Wiretapping."

The first article reads as follows: "Providers of public
telecommunications networks and public telecommunications
services shall not make their telecommunications networks
and telecommunications services available to users unless
they can be wiretapped."

A further paragraph adds that the operator of the network or
the service must supply the necessary equipment and bear its
full cost, while later in the text it is stated that "one or
more articles of this chapter" may apply also to private
networks if they are "in fact open to third parties"--which
is, for example, the case of an extranet setup.

In monopoly times, telephone calls were routed by the phone
companies "to tapping rooms where police officers diligently
transcribed tape recordings," said Maurice Wessling, a
spokesman for XS4all (pronounced "access for all"), one of
the largest Dutch ISPS with nearly 30,000 customers.

"They are now trying to force every single operator in the
communications market to set up tapping facilities at its
own expense," he said.

XS4all and other ISPs have opposed the new provision because
"we don't want to become an extension of the judicial
authorities," Wessling said.

"We recognize that it is sometimes necessary for law
enforcement agencies to be able to intercept communications
in order to track criminal suspects," Fred Eisner, the
chairman of the Dutch association of ISPs, explained. "Yet
it should be sufficient to tap networks without extending
the law to services," he added.

ISPs and telecom operators are also very sensitive to the
financial consequences of setting up snooping facilities,
which the Council of Central Business Organizations--an
alliance of major Dutch employers--expects to be in the
hundreds of millions of guilders (1 million guilders is
approximately equal to $487,000).

Legal experts and privacy watchdogs have warned that the new
law provides insufficient guarantees for the protection of
privacy; they also point out the already generous use of
telephone taps in this country.

A study, carried out by the scientific research and
documentation center of the Dutch Ministry of Justice,
revealed in 1996 that police in the Netherlands intercept
more telephone calls than their counterparts in the United
States, Germany or Britain.

"In absolute figures, the Dutch tap three times more phone
lines than the U.S. agencies. Imagine if you correct this
figure for the population's size," Wessling said.

Henrik Kaspersen, a professor at the Institute for
Informatics and Law of the Free University in Amsterdam,
believes that the high rate of telephone tapping in the
country is mostly "a matter of tradition: our police forces
are small, therefore they tend to use means that are cheaper
and need less personnel," he said.

He questioned, however, whether just expanding the principle
of lawful interception to cover the new networks and
services without a careful evaluation is the right way to
go.

"Over the last few years the situation has become very
different," Kaspersen explained. "Where we had a unique
telecom company we have now a long list of private
organizations that should all cooperate smoothly with the
state. It will not be an easy thing."

"There are numerous differences between the old phone
networks and the information highways," said Guikje Roethof,
a liberal member of the Parliament. Indeed, digital
technology allows methods of investigation--such as
scanning communications for words or patterns--which could
not be carried out in traditional analog voice telephony.

"The authorities are oversimplifying the question when they
argue that since they've always tapped the phone, extending
this practice to the new networks and services is a
no-brainer," she said.

Roethof said that "this regulation is premature." The market
liberalization "has created a lot of new small players. They
may run into financial problems, and I'm not at all sure
that once the tapping facilities are in place, they will
open them only to the authorities."

"We may well end up with commercial companies or even
criminal organizations snooping on our communications," she
said.

Despite all these objections and criticism, the
Telecommunications Act has been approved by 121 of the 150
members of the Second Chamber. Only D-66 (Roethof's party)
and the Green Party opposed it. All the dissenting parties
could obtain is a separate resolution giving ISPs an
additional delay in setting up the technical facilities that
make the tapping of Internet protocol traffic possible.

The time frame for this delay has not been defined, but "it
will probably be two years," according to Henk Houtman, a
spokesman for the Dutch Ministry of Transportation, Public
Works and Water, whose jurisdiction includes
telecommunications.

A few weeks ago, the Ministry of the Interior sent a letter
to the leaders of the four largest political parties. The
letter, which strongly advocated unobstructed tapping as an
essential tool of criminal investigation, seems to have
played a key role in the approval of the new law.

Vincent Van Steen, a press officer for the Dutch internal
security agency, confirmed on the phone that "there has been
a letter sent to the parliamentary committee, which is
composed of the leaders of the four major parties." He
refused to comment further on the content of the writing.

The Lower House--the other chamber of the Dutch Parliament
--now has to discuss the Telecommunications Act, yet "it is
a formal body and has no authority to amend it," Kaspersen
explained.

<...>
--------------------------------------------------------
Related Sites <...>

* Dutch Parliament
<http://www.parlement.nl/>
* Dutch Telecommunications Act (in English)
<http://www.minvenw.nl/hdtp/wetsite/act.html>
* European Union
<http://europa.eu.int/>
* XS4all
<http://www.xs4all.nl/>
* NLIP (Dutch association of Internet service providers)
<http://www.nlip.nl/>
* Free University in Amsterdam
<http://www.vu.nl/>
* Dutch Ministry of Transportation, Public Works and Water
<http://www.minvenw.nl/>

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