Potential legislation may transform the UK into an ideal environment for hackers

Potential legislation may transform the UK into an ideal environment for hackers

It looks as if people are⁤ at last⁤ waking up to a second extraordinarily dangerous requirement buried within a UK government bill designed to promote the nation as a surveillance ⁢state. It ⁣means bureaucrats can delay or​ prevent distribution of⁣ essential software updates,‍ making every computer user far less secure.

A ​poor law

This incredibly damaging limitation is just one of the‍ many bad ideas buried in the UK’s latest piece of shoddy tech ‌regulation, the Investigatory Powers Act. What makes the⁤ law doubly dangerous is that in the online world, you ⁣are only ever⁤ as secure‍ as your least secure ‍friend, which means ⁣UK businesses will likely suffer by being flagged as running insecure versions‍ of operating systems.

I’ve written about ‍the bill before, of course. The proposals are​ so appalling that Apple, WhatsApp,⁢ Meta, and others are quite prepared to shutter messaging services for UK customers if need be.

I expect Apple‌ will ⁢make good on this ‍threat; it is not ⁢prepared to negotiate the safety of its users. You can read its nine-page statement on the matter ⁣for more insights.

The UK becomes a⁣ hacker’s playground

Make no mistake, the proposals from the UK Home Office will make the internet less ⁣secure. UK users will become ‌magnets for complex attacks as hackers, rogue governments, and well-organized criminals exploit ​any newly revealed threats in the UK‍ as they​ know the law will automatically generate‍ a delay before software updates ship.

The rest of the world might ⁤have patched any such‌ flaws, but the UK might not.⁤ That means ‌if ⁢you want to ⁣create a botnet, spread⁤ phishing attacks, or design complex multi-stage attacks, you’ll target UK‍ computer users first, ‌because‌ they will‍ be less well-protected by ⁤design.

Given the dangers of‍ phishing,⁢ ransomware ⁤and every other kind of genuine⁤ online‍ harm, the impact of that will be to threaten business interests on a global basis. The repercussions will be felt as high-profile attacks against⁣ UK targets take place, even as international partners begin to avoid online connections with the nation.

No one wants to expose their corporate systems to ransomware from dealing with a poorly protected UK IP address.

How it works

Under the⁤ proposed‌ laws, ⁤tech firms will be obliged to share any security updates they need to publish with the UK government before they are released. The government can then delay or even forbid‌ release of the software — and there is no review system companies‌ can turn to if they think the decision is wrong.

In addition, the government can⁣ forbid software updates ‍that⁣ repair security gaps the government itself is using for surveillance. “Together, these provisions ​could be used to ⁤force a company like⁤ Apple, that would never⁤ build a backdoor, to publicly withdraw critical security features from the UK market, depriving UK users⁣ of‍ these protections,” Apple has warned.

The laws as proposed aren’t even in line with international agreements, such as…

2023-08-26⁤ 04:48:02
Article‍ from www.computerworld.com ⁤ rnrn

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