EFF Sues The Gov't, Demanding Proof That It Needs To Put Wiretap Backdoors Into All Communications
from the where's-the-proof dept
About a month ago, news broke that the feds were going to push for new legislation that would require wiretapping backdoors be put into all forms of internet communications. This is a bad idea for any number of reasons -- including the fact that this would make it much easier for others to spy on the communications of Americans. However, all indications are that the feds (especially the NSA, who wants to pretend they're "protecting" Americans from security issues, while really just wanting to spy on more Americans) are going to push forward anyway.Part of the justification for the push for such wiretapping mandates is that new technology has made it much more difficult for law enforcement to to intercept necessary information. So the EFF made a simple request: prove it. It filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the evidence that new technologies were actually hindering law enforcement. However, the US government apparently ignored the request, leading the EFF to sue the government over its failure to respond to the request.
"The sweeping changes the government is proposing, to require 'back doors' into all private communications technologies, would have enormous privacy and security ramifications for American Internet users," said EFF Staff Attorney Jennifer Lynch. "Any meaningful debate must be based on the information we're seeking in the FOIA requests, so the government's failure to comply in a timely manner is troubling."
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Filed Under: backdoors, encryption, freedom of information, surveillance, wiretapping
Companies: eff
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Too broke
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Re: Too broke
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Re: Too broke
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EFF
Anyway, kudos to the EFF again for fighting the good fights. I'm just ashamed of our government for so quickly stamping out EFF's battle against AT&T for their horribly justified phone-tapping scheme. Obama's "more open" government thus far has been every bit as bad as Bush's, but maybe we'll see some light at the end of the tunnel.
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Re: EFF
Actually the worse things get for him, the more hostle people are towards him, and the worse his approval rating gets, the less open the governmnet will become. Its the nature of the beast. Also his decisions will begin getting worse as his approval rating tanks and things go poorly.
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Re: EFF
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Re: Re: EFF
First: Don't care about it at all,
second: Recognize you will get votes by pretending you will do something about it,
third: get more votes by pointing out the other guy was pretending and you actually do something about it (but screw it up),
forth: Fix the screw up, but only back to how they started and get a bunch of flak for not fixing em better,
fifth: Don't care about it at all
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Re: EFF
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Also ....
It seems like the government is attempting to alter the outcome of certain policies by preventing the news and information from getting out until it is to late and the policy has been implemented. open governmnet anyone, or beginnings of a police state.
JMHO David
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Re: Also ....
Exhibit #1 ACTA
I'll leave you to fill in the rest.
If we look at Canada is pretty much the same groups and on the let's keep it all secret end there's the RCMP and other security agents. The people they're trying to hide it from are the same or our version of them.
And no, it doesn't matter if the government of the day is left or right of centre. Governments just love secrecy as do the bureaucrats. After all, it means not having to answer embarrassing questions.
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Re: Re: Also ....
Speaking of this wiretapping backdoor ... one wonders if perhaps this is something hollywood has a hand in to find all file sharers. If they do its probably in some small way.
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this is another license to print more money and make more criminals.
You cannot rule over innocent men.
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Ridiculous legislation
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Re: Ridiculous legislation
Oddly enough that's not the worst part of such legislation. The privacy issue is appalling all by itself but in actual fact such legislation will have exactly the opposite effect on security than the stated intention.
The worst bit will be apparant when it turns out that putting a known vulnerability deliberately into things takes about a week for dozens of exploits to be readily available and the resultant security flaw now in every communication system cannot be patched due to law and so every communication is now vulnerable to a greater or lesser degree.
I say stated intention because clearly it's not the real intention - you;d think there are 1 or 2 security proffessionals in the public sector who can point out what a hash this kind of thing is after all.
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Two Words for the FBI
If they haven't learned already, as they were educated 15 years ago, then we need to replace the FBI with a new bureau capable of conducting criminal investigations in a well-populated world.
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Just like gun laws...
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Re: Just like gun laws...
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Re: Re: Just like gun laws...
Yes... except it's kinda difficult to shoot yourself with your own encryption :-) Unlike guns, where as I understand it a large percentage if not the marjority of firearms injuries in the States are from the owner's own weapons, very few organisations lose access to their own security.
Perhaps it's like allowing the sale of bullet proof vests and marketing them as bullet proof vests but making the main chest plate from drink cans rather than ballistic plate...... You think you're bullet proof - until you're dead.
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Re: Re: Re: Just like gun laws...
Fairly easy to encrypt your data and then lose the key....
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Re: Just like gun laws...
I think something less pithy, but more accurate would be: 'The only people who will have security from being spied on will be the people who the government purports to want to spy on.' Because the people they really want to spy on is who they will be able to spy on: mostly everyone.
I'm not a pessimist though. In a police state, this is just something the government does. But in our glorious democracy, even the NSA is reduced to badgering the intractable gridlock that is Congress for legislation that it wants. They may get their proposal passed, but it'll take years, include a rider for Ohio farm subsidies, and end up applying only to Palm Pilots and Yahoo Messenger.
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Re: Re: Just like gun laws...
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Re: Re: Re: Just like gun laws...
It's comments like that that keep government in you business rather than out of it. Let Darwinism handle the "too dumb".
Side note here. Open carry ANYwhere solves the pillow problem, but hey security vs freedom right?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Just like gun laws...
And yes I'm sure someone is going to argue you can use encryption to encode a terrorist attack message, but that's the message not the computer encryption - you could remove the computer encryption and the message might be "The ptarmigan flies south in winter", for which semaphore is still secure.
Please don't do the "guns don't kill people, people do" thing either. The intent of encryption is defensive -someone attacks it and it sits there like a brick wall, it's rather rare for encryption to attack you back. A firearm, is by neccessity offensive - even if you don't use it until soemone attacks you the only possible use of it is to attack him back.
I'm not a gun control nut - I rather like the things actually, they're fun - but control of things directly dangerous to other people is exactly what government should concern themselves with (with hopefully as light a touch as possible).
But it's a dangerous analogy to compare guns to encryption and computer security and is exactly the sort of thing governments will hang their hat on as an excuse for ludicrous controls over why "law abiding people" shouldn't need it.
I'll leave you with a thought on guns:
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Just like gun laws...
Patrick Henry
"This year will go down in history. For the first time, a civilized nation has full gun registration. Our streets will be safer, our police more efficient, and the world will follow our lead into the future!"
Adolph Hitler
Chancellor, Germany, 1933
Correlation =/ Causality
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back doors
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Re: back doors
Don't forget how easily exploited an open source backdoor might be. Doesn't matter though, a backdoor, closed or open source, will be exploited.
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Re: back doors
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heres an idea
naaa lets just fuck em all....
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competition.
The next natural step for the crybabies that cant spy on you would be to outlaw 'foreign' messaging applications, and the US would lose part of a fairly large worldwide industry.
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It's like cops who stop people that break speed limit laws. The govt can't stop real criminals so they set arbitrarily low speed limits and go after victimless criminals in an effort to collect money and claim that they're doing something constructive. Then our mainstream media paints people who speed as really bad people that need to be stopped. There is little to no evidence that these speed limits save lives or reduce accident rates. Heck, the autobahn has no speed limits in some places and their accident and fatality rates are much lower than that of many U.S. states. When you have ridiculously slow speed limits on roads designed to go faster, what do you expect?
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missing the point
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Worse case scenario? Google Tor project.
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EFF!
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Land of the free,
Henri
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Confusion to the control freaks!
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