German ISPs Can't Retain Data Europe Says They Must Retain?
from the someone-want-to-help-explain-this-one dept
This one is a bit unclear, and we’d appreciate it if someone who knows more about the specifics could fill in the details, but there seems to be some contradictory rules in Germany concerning what sort of data an ISP retains on its customers. After all, the European Parliament has now said that data retention by ISPs is a must, even if it’s a pointless and costly endeavor. However, the Inquirer is reporting on a case in Germany where the courts have apparently said that any data that is not needed for billing purposes cannot be retained, as it’s a violation of subscriber privacy. According to the article, this means ISPs can’t even store the IP addresses of websites you visit. So, if we understand this correctly, the EU is saying that ISPs need to keep lots of data… which the German courts are saying is an illegal violation of privacy.
Comments on “German ISPs Can't Retain Data Europe Says They Must Retain?”
No Subject Given
ok… so u posted a topic to say u didnt know anything about it?? makes a lot of sense to me ^_^
i expect the number of topics u dont know a/b to be very large, so post away.
Re: No Subject Given
ok… so u posted a topic to say u didnt know anything about it?? makes a lot of sense to me
The story is interesting. What Mike appears to be saying is that the *details* are unclear — since they seem to contradict. That’s not a topic he doesn’t know anything about, but that he’s hoping someone has more details.
I swear the level of idiocy in the comments lately has been almost too much to bear. People have absolutely no reading comprehension.
No Subject Given
So this means spam will be comming from Deutschland and no one can track back past the ISP it is comming from.
Re: No Subject Given
Once again, High idiocracy.
Spam originating from Germany, or ISP located in Germany could not be linked to SPAMMING because their would be no record of the violations.
Data In = Data Out
Deutschland is not Germany.
UberNoob
Re: Re: No Subject Given
Deutschland is Germany.
No Subject Given
for once a isp that works for its customers, is it the aoclyple, last i saw my former isp(for a good reasons support to name a few) sbc’s owner was trying to make google a premium service for some bullshit reason aka greed
Re: No Subject Given
aoclyple?
From what I understand
The EU rules supercede any national laws barring exclusive exemption. So German law mean nothing in this case.
This is the same reason absinthe is now legal (or rather no longer illegal) in the EU though it had been banned throughout most of Europe.
Full story at heise.de
The full story is available at the highly reputable IT magazine heise.de at http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/68801