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From: David Farber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 4 Oct 2005 08:54:46 -0400
To: Ip Ip <ip@v2.listbox.com>
Subject: [IP] Italy requires logging of personal info at cybercafes
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From: Brett Glass <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: October 4, 2005 2:25:50 AM EDT
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: For IP: Italy requires logging of personal info at cybercafes


Want to check your e-mail in Italy? Bring your passport.
An antiterror law makes Internet cafe managers check their clients'  
IDs and track the websites they visit.

By Sofia Celeste | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor

ROME - Looking out over the cobblestone streets of Rome's Borgo Pio  
neighborhood, Maurizio Savoni says he's closing his Internet cafe  
because he doesn't want to be a "cop" anymore.

After Italy passed a new antiterrorism package in July, authorities  
ordered managers offering public communications services, like Mr.  
Savoni,to make passport photocopies of every customer seeking to use  
the Internet, phone, or fax.

"This new law creates a heavy atmosphere," says Savoni, his desk  
cluttered with passport photocopies. He is visibly irritated, as he  
proceeds to halt clients at the door for their ID.

Passed within weeks of the London bombings this summer, the law is  
part of the most extensive antiterror package introduced in Italy  
since 9/11 and the country's subsequent support of the Iraq war.

Though the legislation also includes measures to heighten  
transportation security, permit DNA collection, and facilitate the  
detention or deportation of suspects, average Italians are feeling  
its effect mainly in Internet cafes.

But while Italy has a healthy protest culture, no major opposition to  
the law has emerged.

Before the law was passed, Savoni's clients were anonymous to him.  
Now they must be identified by first and last name. He must also  
document which computer they use, as well as their log-in and log-out  
times.

Like other owners of Internet cafes, Savoni had to obtain a new  
public communications business license, and purchase tracking  
software that costs up to $1,600.

The software saves a list of all sites visited by clients, and  
Internet cafe operators must periodically turn this list into their  
local police headquarters.

"After 9/11, Madrid, and London, we all have to do our utmost best to  
fight terrorism," says a government official who asked not to be named.

Italy claims that its new stance on security led to the arrest of  
Hussein Osman, also known as Hamdi Issac - one of the men behind the  
failed bombing of the London underground July 21.

"Hamdi was well known to our security people and had relatives here  
with whom he communicated, in some form," says the government  
official in an e-mail interview.

But Silvia Malesa, a young Internet cafe owner in the coastal village  
of Olbia, Sardinia, remains unconvinced.

"This is a waste of time," says Ms. Malesa in a telephone interview.  
"Terrorists don't come to Internet cafes."

And now, would-be customers aren't coming either, say Savoni and  
Malesa. Since the law was enacted, Savoni has seen an estimated 10  
percent drop in business.

"So many people who come in here ask 'why?' and then they just  
leave," Savoni says.

Most tourists who wander in from the streets, he explains, leave  
their passports at home or are discouraged when asked to sign a  
security disclaimer.

Savoni says the new law violates his privacy, comparing it to  
America's antiterrorism law that allows authorities to monitor  
Internet use without notifying the person in question.

"It is a control system like America's Patriot Act," he says.

Groups like the American Civil Liberties Union have criticized the  
Patriot Act because it permits the government to ask libraries for a  
list of books someone has borrowed or the websites they have visited.

Under Italy's new antiterror legislation, only those who are on a  
black list for terrorist connections are in danger of having their e- 
mails read, according to the government official.

Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu has declared Italy will stop at  
nothing to fight terror.

"I will continue to prioritize action to monitor the length and  
breadth of the country, without ever underestimating reasonably  
reliable reports of specific threats," said Mr. Pisanu in a Sept. 29  
interview with Finmeccanica Magazine. Pisanu has also called for  
developing sophisticated technology to combat terror on Italian soil.

"There is no doubt that, to achieve maximum efficiency, we need the  
support of the best technological applications," Pisanu affirmed.

As a result, Pisanu has formed the Strategic Anti-terrorism Analysis  
Committee, which aims to examine and take action against all terror  
threats.

Due to new measures, more than 25 Islamic extremists were arrested on  
Italian soil in 2005, according to the Interior Ministry. The  
ministry also reported that they are conducting "rigorous  
surveillance" of high-risk areas of terrorist activity and over  
13,000 strategic locations in Italy. On Aug. 12 and 13 alone, a  
reported 32,703 checks were carried out on suspicious individuals.

Despite the inconvenience, most Italians seem relatively unfazed by  
the law.

"If I am not doing anything wrong, fundamentally nothing is going to  
happen to me," says Mauro Pallotta, a young artist, after checking  
his e-mail at Savoni's cafe.

URL: http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/1004/p07s01-woeu.htm


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