France To Require Internet Companies To Detect 'Suspicious' Behavior Automatically, And To Decrypt Communications On Demand
from the going-from-bad-to-worse dept
Techdirt has been charting for a while France's descent from a bastion of enlightenment values to a country that seems willing to give up any freedom in the illusory hope of gaining some security. According to a story in Le Figaro, even worse is to come in the shape of a new law (original in French, found via @gchampeau):[the proposed law] wants to force intermediaries to "detect, using automatic processing, suspicious flows of connection data". Internet service providers as well as platforms like Google, Facebook, Apple and Twitter would themselves have to identify suspicious behavior, according to instructions they have received, and pass the results to investigators. The text does not specify, but this could mean frequent connections to monitored pages.As well as being extremely vague, none of this "automatic detection" will require a warrant, which means that the scope for abuse and errors will be huge. And then there's this:
The Intelligence bill also addresses the obligations placed on operators and platforms "concerning the decryption of data." More than ever, France is keen to have the [encryption] keys necessary to read intercepted conversations, even if they are protected.As we've noted before, there is a global push to demonize encryption by presenting it as a "dark place" where bad people can safely hide. What's particularly worrying is that the measures proposed by France are easy to circumvent using client-side encryption. The fear has to be that once the French government realizes that fact, it will then seek to control or ban this form too.
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Filed Under: encryption, france, free speech, internet companies, liability, suspicious behavior
Companies: apple, facebook, google, twitter
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I saw some data flowing suspiciously just the other day. It was like 'I'm gonna go here.' and then totally changed it's mind at the last minute and went to a site about bomb making instead.
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That is because the government want everything, as using the Internet is a suspicious activity.
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People deserve it.
And of course, those leaders will deserve it when the people get fed up and protest or rebel.
The cost going into protecting a nation from every last racist comment or terrorist threat on the interwebs is going to bankrupt the nations.
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Just Get to it
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Re: Just Get to it
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Anything associated with Tor-valds
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The French have cracked the "halting problem"
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Re: Re: Just Get to it
Guilty until proven innocent! The way every politician wants it.
The Electorate(or whatever passes for one) in every nation has pretty much failed their own nation.
Politicians should be never trusted! The moment you do, is the moment they will prove why they can't be.
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bearing in mind that, like other countries worldwide, France was condemning China, N.Korea, Tehran and other countries for the lack of freedom, privacy and human rights. strange how those particular countries now have better records in these departments than the so-called 'top of the crop' countries!!
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Re: Re: Just Get to it
If the police arrest you it is up to you to prove your innocence not for the police to prove you are guilty as in English and American law.
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The obvious solution to this issue
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blog
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Apply everything to the real world
Banning end-to-end Encryption. Forget the whole government easily reading your mail. How about the mailman. How would you feel if all of the mail being delivered wasn't in envelopes but open? No? Well how about you can still put it in envelopes but keep a "backdoor", aka no glue to hold it shut. Does that sound ok? That is what these governments are mandating.
Now lets get to no phone encryption. To better protect you the government is now mandating you are not allowed to have doors on your house. Wait you don't like that suddenly. But it is for YOUR SAFETY to CATCH BAD GUYS! Ok fine you can have doors but the padlocks must open from the outside with a screwdriver. No exceptions or you go to jail.
Man what a wonderful and free society we live in!
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Automagically
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Re: The obvious solution to this issue
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Re:
That happens to me all the time too. Here I am reading blog comments about some intelligence agency overreach, and the next minute, somebody posts a recipe for an explosive (?) in answer to another comment. I think it mentioned liquid Dawn soap and styrofoam.
What are we to do?
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Because it is so easy...
-"Why do you say that Carl?"
-"look at what it says next to r-o-u-t-i-n-g protocol"
-"ooooh yes, it says IS-IS. Those god darn terrorists are so busted"
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Re: The obvious solution to this issue
The only way a nation could deal with that is to block those sites, so it would result either in the laws being revised to something more reasonable or France doing the blocking. French citizens would then be mad at their government rather than the companies.
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Beware!
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Re: The obvious solution to this issue
Yeah, you wish. Nobody would even notice. France has its very own island off the internet - they don't read and bloody surely don't produce any pages in any other filthy language. You could have the best pro-class freeware app in the world - if you host it on a French site, nobody will ever know about it outside France because it will never get indexed in English. Oh, you think I'm kidding...?
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Re:
Assuming that wasn't sarcasm(it's so hard to tell these days), you answered your own question there.
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Same old same old.
Which France are you talking about? The one that for the most part gladly gave up it's freedoms to invading Nazis in the illusory hope that licking Nazi boots would provide some security to the established order? That France?
Yes, there was a French resistance (otherwise known as terrorists), but for the most part they welcomed the Nazi's with open arms.
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Re: Same old same old.
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Good luck with that.
When I have a Perfect Forward Secrecy, I won't be able to decrypt old transmissions. Ever. What then? Force me to save the keys? And force the hard drives not to break? And software not to have bugs? Put the "calling authorities" feature? But where and how? I can use Open Software and build my own computers from chips - it might be slow, but completely in my control - force the chip manufacturers to put the back door? How?
And then comes the plausible deniability. "Random data? Must be encrypted - so you have to give us the keys (like in Britain)". And so I will. To the disposable message. The real one will still be there, just not visible - good luck with that.
It might only work in Eurasia, maybe with Airstrip One.
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Re: Re: The obvious solution to this issue
The problem with that idea is that all these big tech companies are apparently completely ignorant of how the internet works. They all believe that it's mandatory to have an office in every country in the world, or those people won't be able to access their service.
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