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Tuesday, 16 July, 2002, 14:39 GMT 15:39 UK

Hackers could face life in jail

Malicious computer hackers could soon face life in prison for some computer crimes.

The US House of Representatives has approved a bill that inflicts harsh penalties for computer crimes that harm people or endanger America's critical infrastructure.

The same law rewrites the rules on surveillance and lets US police forces and law enforcers install wiretaps if there is an ongoing attack deemed to threaten national security.

Civil liberty groups criticised the legislation and said it trampled on rights to privacy, was hastily drawn up and punished people too severely.

Jail time

The Cyber Security Enhancement Act was endorsed by a huge majority in the US House of Representatives on Monday.

The Act was drawn up in response to a series of well-publicised attacks on high-profile websites.

Last year's attacks in New York contributed to its support by US politicians.

Earlier this year Lamar Smith, one of the Congressmen sponsoring the bill, said: "A mouse can be just as dangerous as a bullet or a bomb."

The CSEA asks for the revision of sentencing guidelines for crimes that are committed with, or by, a computer.

It calls for a maximum life sentence for those who put lives at risk by breaking into computer systems and changing them or by recklessly misusing a computer.

'Sweeping and harsh'

The Act also gives law enforcement organisations more powers to investigate hack attacks.

It lets police forces and federal investigators install wiretaps without prior approval of a court if the attack is thought to be a threat to national security or is "ongoing".

The bill also obliges net service providers to tip off the police if they notice any suspicious activity on their network.

Civil liberties groups such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said the legislation was too sweeping and the penalties it invoked were too harsh.

The Act still has to go before the Senate before it becomes law and some opponents are hoping that there will not be enough time to consider it before the current political sessions end in October.


Related to this story:
Hackers target web censorship (15 Jul 02 | Science/Nature) Alert as hackers meet (13 Jul 02 | Science/Nature) Hackers play with the Xbox (26 Jun 02 | Science/Nature) Pro-Islamic hackers join forces (19 Jun 02 | Science/Nature) Hackers take to the air (17 Oct 01 | Science/Nature) Hackers 'branded as terrorists' (28 Sep 01 | Science/Nature) Bush plan to plug security gaps (16 Jul 02 | Americas)


Internet links: Text of the Cyber Security Enhancement Act | Electronic Frontier Foundation
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