Internet and telecommunications industry associations raised objections when the directive was being debated, but at that time their concerns were for the length of time the data would have to be stored and how the companies would be compensated for the cost of gathering and keeping the information. The directive ended up leaving both decisions in the hands of national governments, setting a range of six months to two years. The German draft settled on six months, while in Spain the proposal is for a year, and in the Netherlands it is 18 months.
Thu, Feb 22, 2007 - Page 4 News List
Europe prepares new Internet and phone laws
BIG BROTHER? The new `Data Retention Directive' has some people worried about a policy shift in Europe -- a long defender of individual privacy rights
NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE , PARIS
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