It's a fact. As of this Tuesday, the Dutch ISP's are required (by Dutch law) to log all Internet activity of their customers and store the data for 12 months (at the moment). Gitmo Nation has expanded a bit further to the east, according to the No Agenda podcast host Adam Curry (which is a great podcast by the way).
Anyway, the logging is no longer limited to the basic IP connection data, the new law requires the ISP's to log the following information:
General Internet Access:
- Loginname
- IP Address
- Name and address details of of all the parties involved (when available)
- Time and Date the communication took place
- Used service(s)
- The callers phone number in the case of dial-up Internet access
- The number called for dial-up Internet access
- DSL, phonenumbers, MAC address (when using public/ISP sponsored WiFi/Network access)
E-mail:
- IP address used to access or send e-mail
- User ID
- E-mail address of the sender, recipients etc. (basically the FROM, TO, CC and BCC fields)
- Registered e-mail alias addresses when available
- Time and date of the communications
- Name and address details of all the parties involved (when available).
- Method used in sending/receiving the e-mail (webmail, POP, SMTP, IMAP, etc.)
Internet VoIP:
- Phone numbers of both parties
- IP addresses
- Name and address details of all the parties involved (when available)
- Time and date of the communication (start and finish)
- Protocols used during the communication
- Successful and failed attempts to communicate
The 'fun' part is that the Dutch government won't (or can't) give a real reason why this information is required..... Why can't they give the proper reasons for creating and passing this law. Theoretically we still live in a democracy.
My thought is that it's probably based on some vague report by some high-profile consulting company that scared the shit out of the politicians (accountability??). Especially the terms 'child pornography' and 'terrorism' are most likely THE keywords on which the decision is based. And no one wants be publicly not against those two.... And so the privacy of the Dutch citizens crumbles, and crumbles.
Time to start using more and more encryption in all of your communications if you ask me, and start running your own services on a server in your attic .
/me is removing the dust from his PGP keyrings....