By
Steve Ranger
Tuesday, January 09 2007 09:58 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/communications/0,39044192,61980050,00.htm
Mobile phone operators and Internet telephony companies will soon face the
"onerous burden" of getting their systems compliant with new European data
retention regulations.
The EU (European Union) Directive on Data Retention requires communication service providers
and network operators to retain traffic and location data to aid the
investigation of serious crimes.
EU member states have until September 2007 to convert the directive into
national laws.
Service providers will have to update their traffic data systems in order to
comply with the new obligations by the time various national governments
implement the European provisions on data retention as law, according to analyst
Frost & Sullivan.
This will be an "onerous burden" on communications service providers and
operators, warned Fernando Elizalde, senior industry analyst at the analyst
house.
Elizalde said the EU Directive will apply not just to mobile and fixed
telephony but also to Internet telephony, e-mail services and messaging services.
And some providers previously not required to retain data will now be governed by the Directive's stipulations.
As a result, call-detail recording systems will need to be updated to cope
with the increase in communication and traffic data that must be stored and
managed. This means costs in the form of assessing current systems, adapting
them and integrating new systems to achieve regulatory compliance, the analyst
said.
As national governments begin work on the transposition of the EU Directive
into national laws, service providers and industry organisations should work
with regulators to "positively influence" issues left open in the European
legislation--such as how quickly companies have to respond to requests for information, the analyst said.
Steve Ranger of Silicon.com reported from London.