The Internet Reacts To Australia’s Anti-Encryption Bill [Updated]

The Internet Reacts To Australia’s Anti-Encryption Bill [Updated]

Earlier today Australia’s House of Representatives passed the Assistance and Access Bill, which is also known as the Anti-Encryption Bill.

Concerns over the rushed Bill are high – especially as the parliamentary year draws to a close. Today’s amendments have done little to clarify specifics around the potential power that the Bill could give government and law enforcement over digital privacy.

And they certainly don’t address the impact that adding backdoor security access could have on the Australian tech economy on a global scale – especially if you take The European Union’s strict General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) laws into consideration.

While the Bill can still be blocked by the Senate – Australian Twitter has been quite vocal over today’s proceedings, especially in regards to the ALP’s involvement.

[referenced url=”https://gizmodo.com.au/2018/12/4-encrypted-email-providers-for-people-who-like-privacy-australia/” thumb=”https://gizmodo.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/cyber-security-410×231.jpg” title=”4 Encrypted Email Providers For People Who Like Privacy” excerpt=”Are you looking for some privacy when it comes to emails? Perhaps you want a little more security and anonymity than the likes of Gmail, Outlook and potentially Australia in general can offer. If secure servers and end-to-end encryption are on your email wish list, we have you covered.

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Concern over today’s vote was already ramping up yesterday

It all came to a head in today’s debate, which resulted in the Bill passing in the Lower House

And because things weren’t crazy enough, the Encryption Bill is being tied to the passing of the Migration Amendment (Urgent Medical Treatment) Bill to remove children from Nauru

If you want to keep up to date with whats going on in the House of Reps, you can watch live or follow #aabill on Twitter.


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