The Daily Caller

The Daily Caller
 FILE - In this Jan. 27, 2011 file photo, Sony Computer Entertainment President and CEO Kazuo Hirai speaks how to use its new PlayStation Portable "NGP" at PlayStation Meeting 2011 in Tokyo. People are turning over personal information to online retailers, social networks and others in growing numbers, even as concerns about privacy mount. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi, file)  

Digital rights groups blast Dutch computer plan

AMSTERDAM (AP) — Digital rights groups have called on the Dutch justice minister to retract a proposal that would give the country’s police the right to break into computers, including foreign citizens’ computers, to combat cybercrime.

Minister Ivo Opstelten says investigators have the right to install Internet taps with court permission, citing the need to fight online pedophiles. That sometimes requires breaking into computers.

But a coalition of rights groups — including the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Netherlands’ Bits of Freedom — say other countries will likely follow suit and then attempt to enforce their own laws abroad.

The coalition said “these local laws would not solely address cybercrime, but also issues deemed illegal in other countries, such as blasphemy and political criticism.”

The Dutch parliament debates the proposal this week.