© Dado
Ruvic / Reuters
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Some terror
investigations have been stopped in their tracks because technology companies
are tipping off extremists online, according to the UK's most senior
counter-terror police officer. Mark Rowley of Scotland Yard said officers have
been forced to prolong dangerous investigations and have lost track of some
terror plots because tech companies do not cooperate fully.
He
added in some cases, counter terror officers were “blinded” by impenetrable
encryption surrounding messages.
Speaking
at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), Rowley branded tech companies “irresponsible,”
suggesting some were even deliberately “undermining” investigations by
withholding important data.
RT report continues:
“Some
simply undermine us by adopting a policy that if they supply data to us they
will tell the subject that they have done that,” Rowley said.
He
claimed gathering intelligence on Islamic State (formerly ISIS/ISIL) is “more
patchy” than probes on al-Qaeda.
“[There
have been] terrorist cases in the past where our digital surveillance gaps have
meant that as the plot has developed we have been unsighted on what they are
planning,” Rowley said.
“If
we are glibly creating a safe operating environment for criminals and
terrorists, we are going to regret it.
“We
have had occasions where we’ve had to prolong dangerous operations and prolong
arrests because encryption has been slowing our process. That delay makes me
very, very nervous,” he said.
Rowley’s
comments come as a huge transatlantic data deal used by many social media
companies was found to have been invalid following the spying revelations by
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
The
US Safe Harbor Decision was found to have been invalid by the EU Commission.
“The
Court of Justice declares that the (European) Commission’s US Safe Harbor
Decision is invalid,” it said in a statement.
The
case was brought against Facebook by Austrian law student Max Schrems, a
privacy rights campaigner, who filed the case in Ireland where Facebook’s
European headquarters are based.
He
said the Safe Harbor deal, which is currently 15 years old, is too weak to
guarantee user privacy.
Irish
authorities must now decide whether data transfers from Facebook’s European
users to the US should be suspended, the court said. They could be suspended on
the grounds that the country “does not afford an adequate level of protection
of personal data.”
Schrems tweeted “YAY” after
the ruling.
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