Confidential documents have revealed plans for a major reform of Europol, increasing its rights to monitor the internet, through the European Union Internet Referral Unit (EU IRU). Documents seen by German newspaper Tagesspiegel show that the Luxembourg presidency of the European council has written to those involved in the plan, giving tacit approval for the expansion of surveillance powers.
On 1 July 2015 Europol launched the European Union Internet Referral Unit (EU IRU) to combat terrorist propaganda… http://t.co/vmfOPMArXt
— DSS IT Security (@DSS_IT_Security) July 2, 2015
The documents suggest Luxembourg believes it is "imperative" for Europol to have more "dialogue" with internet companies in order to co-ordinate its use of the web to track terrorists. It has already admitted a program of 24/7 monitoring of social media, including Facebook.
Although, Europol says that the IRU never tracks personal data of subjects, but only works with member states to analyze data they have. However, it is clear from the documents that it is seeking expanded powers in the fight against terrorism.
Rob Wainwright @Europol_EU: principle of data retention is widely accepted by society; proportionality must be ensured #cybersolutions
— Sebastian Hufnagel (@horatio2000) June 10, 2015
German lawyer Niko Härting, who specializes in internet law and the rights of security agencies, told Tagesspiegel:
"If Europol gets its own powers of investigation, it would be an entirely new level of its authority. If Europol itself could procure data, it would be a massive upgrade of its powers and I cannot imagine that this would please the European Court of Justice."
Luxembourg's tacit acceptance of the need for extra powers for Europol will prove controversial in view of the fallout from ex-CIA contractor Edward Snowden's revelations of mass surveillance by the US National Security Agency and Britain's GCHQ.