On Sunday 14 September 2008, Stuart Henderson wrote: > On 2008-09-14, J.C. Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > In the UK, it seems there's such a law. > > > > Page 1: > > http://networks.silicon.com/mobile/0,39024665,39282266,00.htm Page > > 2: > > http://networks.silicon.com/silicon/networks/mobile/0,39024665,3928 > >2266-2,00.htm > > > > "The team cracks low-grade encryption using 100 quad-core PCs but > > for high-grade encryption it relies on the threat of a prison > > sentence for individuals refusing to hand over passwords or > > decrypted files." > > > > Unfortunately, the article does not mention of the specific law(s) > > used for said threats. > > that would be part III of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers > Act 2000, as amended by the Terrorism Act 2006 > > Your favourite search engine should pick up a few references..
Thanks Stuart! I've recently been working on a global list of anti-fraud and anti-corruption government and non-government organizations but the toughest part is of course finding all the relevant statutes across language barriers and international borders. Luckily, I have some help on the legal research side of it. -JCR

