Bye-bye big brother
By Jo Best
Published: 21 November 2008 15:18 GMT
The unpopular Communications Data Bill may have been axed from the next round of parliamentary legislation, according to reports.
Whitehall sources have told The Independent that the Bill will now not be included in next month's Queen's speech setting out the legislation the government intends to table for the following year.
Despite the sources reaffirming the government's commitment to the Bill, there is no replacement timetable scheduled for the Bill.
The Bill was initially planned to come into effect by 2009 and require all ISPs to keep the "who", "when" and "where" details of all web, VoIP and messaging traffic for at least 12 months, bringing the UK in line with an EU directive. Contents of communications were not to be kept, however.
According to the government, the Bill is intended to bring the UK's crime fighting and detection capabilities up to speed with changes in technology by allowing the retention of new sets of communications data.
However, the Bill has attracted criticism since its publication. The information commissioner Richard Thomas warned the plan is a "step too far for the British way of life" while the Lords queried how effectively the database storing the communications information would be able to cope with the three billion emails and 57 billion texts sent every year.
A Home Office spokesman declined to comment on the contents of the Queen's speech.
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