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Privacy Issues Loom Large as Legislation Allows Greater Access – To You

This article is more than 4 years old
News
Privacy Issues Loom Large as Legislation Allows Greater Access – To You

The recently amended federal spending bill in the U.S. has provisions that substantially decrease the barriers to law enforcement agencies entitlement to a person’s emails, documents and anything else available electronically, regardless of international borders. The bill has raised eyebrows in the cryptocurrency community, as another example of the heavy-handedness of the government and encroachment on individual rights.

Particl, an open-source, decentralized blockchain project, has tweeted about the implications of the new legislation and reiterated its insistence that “the best way to keep your data secure is to not share it in the first place.”

Employing a blockchain structure that promises complete control on access and privacy, the project also issues the PART token that users can employ to access their platform and maintain their privacy. The outfit is not alone in its concern about the way the Clarifying Lawful Overseas Use of Data (CLOUD) Act was passed and what it contains.

Big Brother is More Than Watching

The newly passed CLOUD Act, signed into law on March 23, 2018, was stashed deep down inside voluminous other information and legislation. Lawmakers in the house would have had to reject the whole package in order to oppose the CLOUD Act component, something that would risk government shutdown.

The act is an attempt to both broaden and enhance law enforcement agencies’ abilities to police international online activity, anathema to many in the community. Observers are worried that beyond the general truth that government interference online is seldom a good thing, the legislation is both targeted and potentially highly invasive in its reach.

Responses such as those from Particl are emerging as regulators hack away at the fundamental building blocks of privacy legislation in the U.S. A vocal response to lawmakers’ constant erosion of a citizen’s right to online privacy is emerging in the wake of the act being signed into law. Notable Bitcoin advocate Andreas Antonopolous responded by urging the use of encryption methods to secure your data.

Although the president and chief legal officer of Microsoft, Brad Smith, said on March 21, 2018 that the bill was “a strong statute and a good compromise,” many have a wary eye on encroaching legislation that enables authorities’ access to private lives. While Microsoft officially feels that the legislation “gives tech companies like Microsoft the ability to stand up for the privacy rights of our customers around the world,” other commentators see nothing but erosion in the new structure.

Digital Evolution between Lawmakers and Blockchain Users

The new U.S. CLOUD Act also makes it much easier for law enforcement to access overseas data that might be stored on foreign servers. Signed into law by Donald Trump, the tagged-on legislation is aimed at crossing borders in pursuit of data no matter the domestic privacy legislation in place. It essentially eases law enforcement’s ability to pursue investigations across borders, while also making it easier to access any information on the home front.

As proponents applaud the legislation, others see it as a fundamental affront to life on the blockchain. Legislators pinned the CLOUD Act onto the spending bill just before it was passed.

The CLOUD Act modernizes the rules that govern criminal investigators who seek access to emails, documents, and conversations on the internet. Now those agencies are no longer prevented from access to, for example, a person’s Outlook account, simply because Microsoft has stored that information on Irish servers, resulting in greater global policing capacity in the future.