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Australia Biotech Encryption Government The Military Science

Draconian Australian Research Law Hits Scientists 150

An anonymous reader writes: The Australian government is pushing ahead with a draconian law placing "dual use" science (e.g. encryption, biotechnology) under the control of the Department of Defence. The Australian ACLU, Civil Liberties Australia, warns the law punishes scientists with $400,000 fines, 10 years in jail and forfeiture of their work, just for sending an "inappropriate" e-mail.

Scientists — including the academics union — warn the laws are unworkable despite attempted improvements, and will drive researchers offshore (paywalled: mirror here).
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Draconian Australian Research Law Hits Scientists

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  • count as dual use technology ?

    Lame .. Never expected this from the Australians ..
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Actually, yes.

      Beer/Alcohol research has always multipurpose; from basic food preservation (under similar conditions water goes bad faster than beer) to potential health benefits (red wine (in moderation) can be good for you).

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by dohzer ( 867770 )

        I take it you missed the article saying that no consumption of alcohol is good for you, and the previous studies failed to take other factors into account before announcing their findings that alcohol could be beneficial?

        • Those studies are wrong.

        • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
          It seems a bit much for me to swallow that this single study is going to refute decades of many studies all at once. Who cares for everyone else is saying moderate consumption is good, they're all wrong. Soon we'll find out that fruits really aren't that good for us because they have sugar in them. The new recommendation is to never eat any fruits.

          I want to see more research on the subject.
    • http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pu... [nih.gov]
      http://www.themalthouse.co.nz/blog/125-the-beer-of-revenge

      Louis Pasteur's beer is the basis of Fosters.
    • by dbIII ( 701233 )
      Most definitely. Fosters is a beer of revenge against Germany
      From http://www.jcu.edu.au/cgc/Beer... [jcu.edu.au]

      Pasteur’s anguish at the national crisis was magnified by the loss of his laboratory and the threat to his son's life. The war had jeopardised everything he cared about - Nation, Family and Science - and he was physically incapable of fighting back. This overwhelming feeling of impotence left him with an obsessive hatred of Germans and their nation and, by the end of the war, Pasteur had formulated a p

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I think kangaroos, and draconian laws. They conservatives are the way they are because of fear. Is this because everything in Australia can kill you?

    • The law is expected to be passed by the left labor and green senate, it appears to have by partisan support.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        No surprise! Labor supported the data surveillance laws too https://newmatilda.com/2015/03/24/labor-and-journalists-have-sold-you-out-brandis-surveillance-law

        Labor and Liberals same.

      • Same here in the USA (Score:5, Interesting)

        by NotQuiteReal ( 608241 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @11:17PM (#49333385) Journal
        The "Left" and the "Right" are both the "Same" - e.g. "the ruling class".
        Voters are just the "little people".

        Notice how power shifts from one to the other and they keep adding bricks, each to their own wall, but neither side takes down bits the other side has put up?

        Someday, the walls will meet and you will be on the outside...
        • If you really believe there's no difference between left and right in Oz, you're simply not paying attention.
    • Two words: Drop bears.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @10:24PM (#49333175)

    If they criminalize research and communication regarding IT security, they will soon be without it. That is basically suicide in today's Internet.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Not so much "be without it", but more like "out of the loop with researchers in the field".

      That is beyond stupid for a Five Eyes [wikipedia.org] nation. One would expect measures to draw researchers into the country. Not chase them away!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Is there any country in the world that's not screwing up how IT-related laws are handled? It seems like every government is just paranoid of losing control.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @08:12AM (#49334971)

        You are not wrong on that. My impression is that governments are so afraid of their population, that they are willing to risk losing it all. Paranoids make the absolutely worst leaders, yet these seem to be what rises to the top.

      • by prefec2 ( 875483 )

        There are different levels of stupidity. And it stretches out in different directions. For example, in Germany it is complicated to have public wi-fi and they had create a law similar to the UK as a web black list to stop child porn. However, the latter was never applied, as the public outraged and they dropped it with a new law. Presently, they try to do fix the first issue too. However, media industry is very much in it, so it might take some time until it gets away.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by MrKaos ( 858439 )
      Any chance we can talk about the meta data laws while there is still a chance to stop it? I know it's my submission but there is a slim chance that maybe we can do something if enough people know http://slashdot.org/firehose.p... [slashdot.org] please please let there be some hope
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @02:58AM (#49334021) Homepage

      The reason for the law "The DTCA is intended to simplify trade between Australia, the US and the UK" that being imports from the US and UK. So yeah, it basically kills research in Australia on purpose, to force it into import only mode, to ensure those other two countries can buy primary resources and lots of land with funny money from two countries rapidly sliding into bankruptcy. Note the same political party is looking to raise university fees to US levels and open market the education loans. Australians are only meant to be servants for the future owners of Australia (after he made sure his daughter got a scholarship from a soon to be fully funded private university and a no work job and the person who tattled, to ensure they aligned with US styled freedom of information, was prosecuted). They did fund medical research though, but want to make big cuts universal health care, the rich only will get the use of Australian tax payer funded medical research.

    • The USA already did that for a while, hence RSA having to do their work offshore for many years due to utterly insane export restrictions.
  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @10:28PM (#49333197) Journal
    Per a spokesweasel(in TFA): "Some academic research uses proliferation-sensitive controlled goods and technologies. While the sensitive items are used for legitimate civilian research by Australian researchers, they can also be used for the proliferation of military, nuclear, chemical or biological weapons. "

    Notice anything odd? The word 'military' shows up along the usual trio of "nuclear, chemical, biological". Last I checked, the boundaries of 'military weapons' were very, very, broad, running the gamut from fancy-nuclear-power aerospace widgetry to relatively crude hand-fabricated small arms more or less loosely based on designs dating back to the first half of the 20th century, if not older.

    Is there some stricter definition of 'military weapons' that makes this slightly less ridiculous, or are they in fact export-controlling basically any tech you could conceivably integrate into a weapon in some fashion, including weapons already extremely widely available, adequately functional with downright crude technology, and otherwise utterly absurd to pretend are still within the reach of counter-proliferation efforts?
  • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @10:41PM (#49333263)
    if there were some foundational document that codified your right to both military weapons and speech of all sorts, and prohibited the government from passing laws restricting either.
    • if there were some foundational document that codified your right to both military weapons and speech of all sorts, and prohibited the government from passing laws restricting either.

      Even then it would obviously not cover obscenity, which is defined as "I know it when I see it". And, well, the algorithmic description of SHA-1 [wikipedia.org] is pretty suggestive, don't you think?

      • I can be as obscene as I want with whomever I want that's of voting age and associates with me freely of his or her own volition. In print, online, and in person. Just not over RF broadcasts.
        • And more to your point, I (the collective manifestation of the citizenry) have leverage against a government that does as you suggest by keeping firearms in my possession, being proficient in their use, and advocating (through constitutionally protected peaceable means) for my right to do so. This is one of the functions of the second amendment: to act as a check on a government that overreaches. Tax-dodging nuts holed up in the mountains notwithstanding, governments need checks on their powers that have te
          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            And yet not once has the second amendment stopped your government from ignoring the Constitution that you referenced up the page.
            The British Monarch could assert her supremacy if she was doing it with the support of the people, eg an unpopular government that refused to call an election when their term ran out.
            The American people could assert their supremacy just by sitting down and refusing to serve the rich, not much need for guns though handy if the government sicked the troops on the strikers, which his

          • And more to your point, I (the collective manifestation of the citizenry) have leverage against a government that does as you suggest by keeping firearms in my possession, being proficient in their use, and advocating (through constitutionally protected peaceable means) for my right to do so. This is one of the functions of the second amendment: to act as a check on a government that overreaches. Tax-dodging nuts holed up in the mountains notwithstanding, governments need checks on their powers that have te

        • Just not over RF broadcasts.

          Then all the bad guys have to do to deny you freedom of speech is deny you wired Internet [slashdot.org]. This means you have to transmit your Internet connection over RF.

          • Literalism is such an unpleasant thing. By RF broadcasts I am specifically referring to the thing that the FCC asserts authority over: high power transmissions from large centrally located antennas operating in a one-to-many mode. While the FCC regulates siting, frequency allocation, and power levels over point-to-point and telephone transmitters, it has never asserted authority over the content of the transmissions and wouldn't dare try.
  • by Dr. Spork ( 142693 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @10:41PM (#49333271)
    Australian geeks and scientists: The weather is also nice in Silicon Valley, and they pay better. Do you really need another reason to leave?
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      But the U.S. government is even more retarded than its Australian counterpart.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Is that a joke? Why would educated aussies working in one of those fields want to go to the US?

      There are so many better options that suggesting the US is laughable. I'll stay in Aus anyday rather than go there. If I moved, there are about a dozen better options if not more.

      You keep pretending that USA is the height of humanity, burying your head in the sand and acting like an arrogant cunt works so well.

    • by prefec2 ( 875483 )

      In Europe we have great social security and we do not fight science (that much). Beside the Torys in the UK, we will not hunt you for your research. We have all kinds of weather and our food is much better. Ah yes, the content of your doctoral thesis belongs to you. Do you really need another reason to leave?

  • New Zealand? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @10:45PM (#49333281)

    Meanwhile, the Kiwis are doing everything they can to build a prosperous biotechnology industry. The government has been heavily promoting a "knowledge-based economy" for nearly a decade. If you're working in Australia, trained in biotech, and would like to work with less tax, fear, and general oppression then why not leave the matrix and give NZ a go.

    • Really tempting, have been considering it.

    • Re:New Zealand? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @02:23AM (#49333897)

      I live in Dunedin, New Zealand.

      Right now, we are faced with the closure of one of the premiere biotech facilities in the South Island, Invermay, in spite of a backlash by the farmers, scientists, and people of the region, all in the name of budget.

      The country is rapidly turning into a right-wing system, we're being pummelled with fear and hate messages from our government ("Unemployed? It's not our fault for mismanaging the economy, it's not the banks fault for ruining the world economy, it's your fault because there are no jobs in the region!") Workers rights are being removed (we've just had the first employer of many back down from the now-legal removal of all of our breaks, because it suits them) at a high pace.

      There's little money being pumped into research, all publicly owned assets are being flogged off (It's a New Zealand fire sale! Everything must go!) in spite of massive public opposition.

      It's an ideological nightmare, and things are getting worse. Educated people are leaving because the pay and conditions here are shit.

      Think twice before coming here.

    • Absolutely. The people are wonderful, the climate's amazing, the country is beautiful. And oh, ho ho, the sheep, the sheep! The sexiest little fluffy...WOMEN I MEANT WOMEN!

  • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @10:49PM (#49333289)
    Because it seems to criminalize a wide swath of legitimate civilian research. From TFA
    high-performance, neural, optical and fault-tolerant, computers,
    electronics,
    wavelength research (remember, wi-fi was ‘invented’ in Australia),
    heat-shielding,
    telecommunications,
    information security research,
    robotics,
    human, animal and plant pathogens, both bacterial and viral,
    fibre optics,
    cryptography.
    satellite technology.
    sensor technology.
    signal and image processing.
    composite materials, andthe list could go on and on.
    This effectively criminalizes half of all science related activity at colleges. It's not just the best and brightest it's literally asking the A ark to sail in some kind of reverse HHGTG parody.
    • wavelength research (remember, wi-fi was ‘invented’ in Australia),

      Silly me, I thought wifi was invented in 1942 by an Austrian-American woman and an American guy.

      Austria and Australia do sound the same, I admit.

      • CSIRO patented [patentology.com.au] a few things related to Wi-Fi in the 90's. They like to claim that Wi-Fi wouldn't have existed without them.
      • by mcl630 ( 1839996 )

        Hedy Lamarr and George Antheil invented spread-spectrum communications in 1942. It's used in WiFi, but I wouldn't call that "inventing WiFi".

        • Hedy Lamarr and George Antheil invented spread-spectrum communications in 1942.

          That's Hedley... No, wait. It is Hedy Lamarr. Never mind.

          • show some respect, Hedy was a nerd AND a movie goddess.

            She's probably best recognised by geeks by her likeness (unauthorised) appearing on Corel software packaging.

    • by Uberbah ( 647458 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @12:55AM (#49333697)

      Whisteblowers have been sent to Federal Pound-Me-In-The-Ass Penitentiaries under the odious Espionage Act at a higher rate under Obama than all previous presidents combined.

      But Petraeus, who casually flashed Specially Compartmented Information - a much higher classification than any of the Top Secret information released by Manning to Wikilieaks - just to impress his mistress, will only face probation.

      Or the cable operator who was sentenced to years in jail for carrying a Hezbollah tv channel, because it's on a State Department list of terror groups, while at the same time prominent politicians from both parties openly accepted large amounts of money from MEK [salon.com] to lobby on the group's behalf. A group also....on the State Departments list of terror groups.

      So we could see the same thing in Australia. Defense contractors will be free to skirt the law and sell to any shifty customer. People who annoy the state, [wikipedia.org] though, will feel the full force of the law.

      • If the cops aren't required to arrest everyone who commits any arrestable defense, then by definition you have selective enforcement. Our entire system of law is actually designed for it.

        • by tepples ( 727027 )

          Then the problems are that 1. too many offenses are arrestable, and 2. too many people arrested for whistleblowing are given prison terms.

        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          If the cops aren't required to arrest everyone who commits any arrestable defense, then by definition you have selective enforcement.

          Cops and prosecutors don't have unlimited resources, so by definition they have to pick and chose which laws to enforce. Ideally, this means they threaten the 19 year old who gets it on with her 16 year old boyfriend with probation rather than having to register as a sex offender for the next 30 years, and instead focus on the deputy mayor who got caught slapping his wife ar

          • Cops and prosecutors don't have unlimited resources, so by definition they have to pick and chose which laws to enforce.

            The state doesn't have unlimited resources, so by definition it should not make laws it can't or shouldn't reasonably enforce.

            Ideally, this means they threaten the 19 year old who gets it on with her 16 year old boyfriend with probation rather than having to register as a sex offender for the next 30 years, and instead focus on the deputy mayor who got caught slapping his wife around.

            Alas, we know that's not how it works.

            That's sounding a little Randian.

            Only if you have poor reading comprehension skills.

            The solution to corrupt actors within the state isn't to get rid of the state, but the corrupt actors.

            Nobody suggested abolishing the state.

  • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @10:55PM (#49333321)
    What this law actually does is drive any serious research out of Australia to other countries. Like say, China. Well done.
  • Next they'll outlaw talking about, researching, or planning for climate change, evolution, genetic research, and such. The poor sods had better move to America as quickly as possible.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      They already effectively did that 2 years ago.

      We no longer have a minister for science, they butchered funding (to the point of mass layoffs) at all government agencies related to climate/weather/etc (geoscience australia, csiro, beuro of meteorology) causing thousands out of their job and entire divisions (eg: the climate change division at GA) to cease to exist.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re "Next they'll outlaw talking about"
      One time pad encryption would {#`%${%&`+'${`%&NO CARRIER
    • I don't think we'll be a safe haven for that kind of stuff for long... and don't look to Europe either. The whole world is turning hard right. It'll soon be the norm for scientists, activists, soldiers, and everyday citizens to be sent to psych wards and prisons for speaking the truth.

      It's best to stay where you are, and fight where you are, because that's your country, and you might as well fight it at home because there will be no escape if all we do is run.

      • by prefec2 ( 875483 )

        Even our government sucks big time, we are not limited by similar rule in Germany. For example, the content of my thesis belong to me. This applies to your bachelor, masters or doctoral thesis (if you do some industrial cooperation there might be strings attached). Anyway, this might be different on this isle in the west who will reelect Cameron any day now.

    • I was being sarcastic here, since all of the things I listed are banned or heavily restricted in at least some US states. Most recently, the governor of Florida has prohibited state emplyees from using the phrase "climate change."
  • As an Australian who grew up loving my country... I am fucking glad I left more than 5 years ago.

    Australia is slowly turning to shit. :/

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      False. Australia is quickly turning to shit.

      I say this as an Australian still living in Australia.

    • Agreed. The US is bad, but not as bad as Australia, which is why I left there.

      I can deal with overly eager racist cops, lack of decent social care, lack of regulation in the market, corruption and ignorance and apathy in the general populace.

      I'd much rather deal with that then the crazy censorship and rights-stripping laws the commonwealth countries are so eager to introduce.

      • by prefec2 ( 875483 )

        You could come to Europe, we ware far less fucked up (excluding the UK). We have decent health care, some market regulation, limited corruption, and demonstration going on for every this and that. We even have unions. However, we use other languages every few kilometers. So it can be also interesting to learn something new.

        • How easy is it to emigrate? :)

          A lot of Aussies travel freely on student/working holiday visas but those dry up once you hit 30. Unless you have a European grandmother and can thus get residency, opportunities are limited, was my impression.

    • I very strongly disagree - it's quickly turning to shit. Full steam ahead into the cliff and nothing slow about it.
      Cutting everything other than quarrying when the mining boom is over is onion skin eating insane.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @11:13PM (#49333377)

    The The Defence and Strategic Goods List includea :

    " “Microprocessor microcircuits”, “microcomputer microcircuits” and microcontroller microcircuits, manufactured from a compound semiconductor and operating at a clock frequency exceeding 40 MHz;

    Note: 3A001.a.3. includes digital signal processors, digital array processors and digital coprocessors."

    See http://www.comlaw.gov.au/Details/F2013C00051
    CATEGORY 3 — ELECTRONICS, 3A001

    I'm speechless :-(

    contains processor or

  • ... is a factor here. If you can constrain your academics for "defense", then you can more easily constrain them for "IP" reasons as well. And there's no bigger business than defense.
  • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Tuesday March 24, 2015 @11:45PM (#49333515)

    I'm glad to hear that someone is trying to out-stupid *my* country.

  • Outraged x2 (Score:4, Informative)

    by countach ( 534280 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @03:27AM (#49334107)

    I'm outraged by this law, sure.

    But I'm doubly outraged that I had to read on slashdot that this just passed the senate and there has been ZERO coverage of this in the mainstream media. Shame on you Fairfax, News Ltd and ABC. You went to sleep and betrayed us.

    • by prefec2 ( 875483 )

      You cannot rely on TV directly controlled by the government and even less on private news corporations. The first say what the leading party says and latter indoctrinate you in the ideas of the owners. Anyway, I am sorry for you and your country to be governed by such mean people.

  • by DMJC ( 682799 )
    I would be outraged, except Australia really hasn't got a tech industry. Try naming a CPU developed here since 1995....Good luck. same with Applications. I can't name a single top ten application that was written in Australia and I can barely list some games that were developed here. Australia's high tech industry is essentially dead. We do some minor solar research, never fund it enough and barely make anything any more. Hell we can't even make cars after 2017. We're the tourism/mining/agriculture country.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      They had great pride in active missile decoy work http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N... [wikipedia.org] and over-the-horizon radar http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J... [wikipedia.org]
      Now it will be all about tracking online comments and finding who in Australia posted a dual use paragraph.
    • by prefec2 ( 875483 )

      Desktop applications, like games and office tools, and enterprise applications used in businesses are not the only applications. Many more are developed for embedded systems in cars, trains, planes, machinery, houses, control systems of all sorts. In German economy the relationship between enterprise and embedded systems 8 to 20 mrd. Euro. Normally, you do not hear anything about those software systems. Anyway, this new law may cause severe damage to the scientific community in Australia. Looks like a reall

  • if your live is in jeopardy in Australia, you might consider coming to western Europe. We do not have wild animals with bags running through the outback. However, we have a real diverse set of climates and the best of it, we are not already that rotten that we have such laws. (Please note: It might be different in the UK).

  • Instead of making their homework politicians try to control knowledge. Beside the fact that this ever backfired in history, it is also stupid in terms of the economy. Europe will rather sooner then later reduce its demand on coal and China is also doing it. Other natural resources are also limited and will not support the country for ever. You could see what happens to a country which has a ideological closed view of the world if you look at Venezuela. While it is important to give the poor schools and food

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

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