Potential for IT Security Professionals to become illegal / subject to Govt registration, in UK.
Pardon the banner headline, but I just wanted to hammer point home before explaining it, because this is one of those times when I will be actively compaigning against a bill, and hope that by catching public perception whilst the matter is warming up, we may be spared having to fix it in the House of Lords.
Go read [news.bbc.co.uk] – specifically:
Providing or receiving terrorist training could be outlawed under planned new anti-terror laws.New offences could cover people going to terrorist camps overseas or finding out how to build a bomb through the internet, said the Home Office.
So, aside from the implicit desire of the government to filter your Google search results (“Click [here] to disable your local Government-approved result-filtering, please be aware that doing so will result in notification of your local criminal authorities”) – here is a slightly more scary train of thought for Computer Security professionals such as myself:
- the only way to secure an architecture is to know how hackers work
- “hacking techniques” == “potential terrorism methodology”
- “learning security” == “act preparatory to terrorism”
- “being a security person” == “being a terrorist, or submitting self to registration and government watch, paying for membership of an accredited body (ie: a stealth tax) to obtain a permit to work.”
Sound crazy? Not really. This sort of legislation has been mooted before, specifically the Private Security Industry Act of 2001 which was deployed to filter out bogus nightclub doormen (“bouncers”) but was written in an all-embracing way that would mandate registration of IT Security Consultants – a feature which I seem to remember taking considerable effort of many people to have revoked.
For what happened to the bouncers, go check-out the Security Industry Authoirity:
Welcome to the SIAWelcome to the website for the Security Industry Authority (SIA). We exist to manage the licensing of the private security industry as set out in the Private Security Industry Act 2001. We also aim to raise standards of professionalism and skills within the private security industry and to promote and spread best practice.
This site will keep you up to date on all aspects of licensing, the impacts that licensing will have on the private security industry, progress being made and what those connected with the security industry may need to do as a result of the new regulations.
…which sounds great if you visit pubs and clubs and want to be sure of not being knifed by the guy who’s on the door, but if you’re a IT Contractor and have ever been asked to prod a customer’s firewall ruleset, consider very carefully whether you want to have to get a ID Card to permit you to do so.
Or to configure SSH.
Or to have the root password.
Or indeed do anything on a computer, because everything on a computer is something to do with security.
Blair may have said that the government would act with caution and not bring in strict new laws to boost security – but I see reason to doubt him in the light of these reports.
And yes, I would rather we didn’t react at all.
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