The Intelligence and Security Services Act - also known as the 'drag law' or 'interception law' - gives the AIVD and its military counterpart MIVD the right to pull in and analyse all domestic data traffic. The 'everyone is a suspect' connotation of the law, as evidenced by the upcoming referendum, is meeting a lot of resistance. It is, after the net neutrality debate, the second major debate around the ethics of technology and privacy, but certainly not the last.

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