Hong Kong Police Can Now Demand Phone Passwords Under New Security Rules
6 hours ago
- #National Security Law
- #Hong Kong
- #Digital Privacy
- Hong Kong's National Security Law amendments allow authorities to demand device passwords without a warrant.
- Refusal to unlock devices can result in a year in jail and a HK$100,000 fine.
- Providing fake credentials carries a three-year prison sentence.
- The law applies to anyone with access to encrypted data, including spouses and IT administrators.
- Privacy tools like Signal and VPNs may now carry criminal liability if deemed a threat to national security.
- Chief Executive John Lee implemented these changes without Legislative Council oversight.
- The amendments allow customs to seize 'seditious' materials and freeze assets.
- UK law lecturer Urania Chiu criticized the powers as 'grossly disproportionate' and infringing on privacy rights.
- Since 2020, 386 people have been arrested under the NSL, with 176 convictions.
- The changes signal how authoritarian governments can weaponize technology against users.