What’s the effect of
Section 114A?
This amendment will
significantly impact the law governing internet publications by persons in
Malaysia, including news reporting, blogging and interactions in the social
media. The amendment will allow the prosecution or a plaintiff to rely on a
presumption of fact to prove the identity of the person responsible for an
internet publication. Essentially, the internet user identified in the
amendment is deemed to be the publisher of content, unless the user proves
otherwise. The burden of proof has shifted.
Scenario 1: Getting an IP address from Google 
There is an article titled “Azmin makan duit rakyat
Selangor”. The author wrote her name as Nazmi. Azmin brings Nazmi to court.
Nazmi in her defense said “it was not me Min, sumpah! Bukan I Min!
Percayalah…”.
Since the article was written in blogger.com (owned by
Google), the police can request the IP of the “mysterious writer” from Google.
Every time you log in to your blogger or Goggle account, your IP will be stored
in Google system. From the police investigation, they found that the IP does
not belong to Nazmi’s account. Turn out the actual writer is: Faekah. This isn’t so easy. Fortunately, Google is very transparent
about government request, and have reported that up until 2011, the Malaysian
Government have never requested for any user data, we have requested for
takedowns but not user data. What that means is that we’re not sure if Google
will happily comply with our request, the success rate of these government
request range from 0% (in the case of Turkey and Russia) up to 93% in the case
of the US Government. So we’re not sure how successful we would be, and to blindly
assume it’s a simple matter of asking Google for an IP address is just plain
ridiculous.
Secondly, there are various ways to obtain a separate IP
address from a separate entity. In my posting about how to activate your Kindle
in Malaysia, I advocated using a service like Texasproxy or Hidemyass, proxy
servers mask your IP address from Google by substituting it for their own IP
address, and you could proxy over proxy providing extra layers of IP address
obfuscation.
Scenario 2: MAC addresses can identify you
There is photo of Izzah painted with the words “Izzah Penipu
dan Gila Kuasa”. The account was under the name Chua. Izzah brought Chuato
court. Chua in his defense said : “Zah..bukan abang sayang…abang sayang
Izzah..takkan la abang nak sabotage syg. Abg ni suka gigit…gigit
telinga…sabotage ni tak main”.
In the words of Sheldon Cooper, this is HOKUM!
Scenario 3: Twitter complying with Government request from Malaysia
A tweet goes like this: “@anwaribrahim, you penipu kaum
India! You promise macam2 sebelum GTX12 tapi skrg habuk pun tarak ada.
@#$%@#%”. The account was tweeted under the account psurendram. In anger, Anwar
brought Surendran to court and in Surendran’s defense he said: “Boss…sampai
hati boss tuduh saya macam ini…lupakah janji2 kita dahulu? Sebangsa, Sejiwa,
Sehidup, Semati? Cuma tak selubang sahaja…tu ka sebab boss marah?”
Source: http://www.keithrozario.com/2012/08/evidence-act-114a-technological-misconceptions.html
In my humble opinion, the new amendments pushes an innocent party to show that he is not the publisher. Victims of stolen identity or hacking would be experiencing more mishaps and troubles due to their carelessness and others' mischief. We are well informed that, since computers can be easily manipulated and identity theft is quite raging, it is dangerous yet unfair to put the onus on internet users solely. An internet user will need to give an alibi that it wasn’t him. He needs to prove that he has no access to the computer at that time of publication and he needs to produce call witnesses to support his alibi.
Obviously, it is against our very fundamental principal of “innocent until proven guilty”. With general election looming, I fear this amendment will be used tyrannically by the Malaysians. Fortunately, the amendment is not in force yet. I strongly hope that the government will re-exaine into this amendment and come out with better provision that would not put the internet users' freedom at jeopardy as well as causing speculative issues regarding proving of evidence virtually.
In my humble opinion, the new amendments pushes an innocent party to show that he is not the publisher. Victims of stolen identity or hacking would be experiencing more mishaps and troubles due to their carelessness and others' mischief. We are well informed that, since computers can be easily manipulated and identity theft is quite raging, it is dangerous yet unfair to put the onus on internet users solely. An internet user will need to give an alibi that it wasn’t him. He needs to prove that he has no access to the computer at that time of publication and he needs to produce call witnesses to support his alibi.
Obviously, it is against our very fundamental principal of “innocent until proven guilty”. With general election looming, I fear this amendment will be used tyrannically by the Malaysians. Fortunately, the amendment is not in force yet. I strongly hope that the government will re-exaine into this amendment and come out with better provision that would not put the internet users' freedom at jeopardy as well as causing speculative issues regarding proving of evidence virtually.

in my humble opinion, this law cannot be fairly enforced across the board. what if someone uses the govt’s wifi ap to post scandalous content? the govt sues itself? what if najib’s account gets hacked?
ReplyDeletethey say it is easy to prove your innocence. i don’t think so. the folks behind this don’t quite understand how technology works.