Electronic Communications Act 2000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- 25 May 2000 (in part)
- 25 July 2000 (sections 7, 11 and 12)
| Act of Parliament | |
| Long title | An Act to make provision to facilitate the use of electronic communications and electronic data storage; to make provision about the modification of licences granted under section 7 of the Telecommunications Act 1984; and for connected purposes. |
|---|---|
| Citation | 2000 c. 7 |
| Dates | |
| Royal assent | 25 May 2000 |
| Commencement |
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| Other legislation | |
| Amends | |
| Amended by | |
Status: Amended | |
| Text of statute as originally enacted | |
| Revised text of statute as amended | |
| Text of the Electronic Communications Act 2000 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk. | |
The Electronic Communications Act 2000 (c. 7) is an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that:
- Had provisions to regulate the provision of cryptographic services in the UK (ss.1-6); and
- Confirms the legal status of electronic signatures (ss.7-10).
The United Kingdom government had come to the conclusion that encryption, encryption services and electronic signatures would be important to e-commerce in the UK.[1]
By 1999, however, only the security services still hankered after key escrow.[citation needed] So a "sunset clause" was put in the bill. The Electronic Communications Act 2000 gave the Home Office the power to create a registration regime for encryption services. This was given a five-year period before it would automatically lapse, which eventually happened in May 2006.
The act implemented the Electronic Signatures Directive 1999, which member states had until 19 July 2001 to bring into local effect.[2] The act was adopted into the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000.[3]