Former Homeland Security Advisor: Tech Companies Have The Burden Of Proving Harm Of Backdoored Encryption
from the FORTUNES-READ-AND-IGNORED---$5 dept
Last week's one-sided "hearing" on encryption -- hosted by an irritated John McCain, who kept interrupting things to complain that Apple hadn't showed up to field false accusations and his general disdain -- presented three sides of the same coin. Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance again argued that the only way through this supposed impasse was legislation forcing companies to decrypt communications for the government. The other two offering testimony were former Homeland Security Advisor Ken Wainstein and former NSA Deputy Director Chris Inglis.
Not much was said in defense of protections for cellphone users. Much was made of the supposed wrongness of law enforcement not being able to access content and communications presumed to be full of culpatory evidence.
But one of the more surprising assertions was delivered by a former government official. Wainstein's testimony [PDF] -- like Vance's -- suggested the government and phone makers start "working together." "Working together" is nothing more than a euphemism for "make heavy concessions to the government and prepare to deliver the impossible," as Patrick Tucker of Defense One points out. Wainstein says phone manufacturers must do more than theorize that weakened encryption would harm them or their companies. They must hand over "hard data" on things that haven't happened yet.
Kenneth L. Wainstein, a former assistant attorney general for national security at the Department of Justice, told lawmakers that the burden is on technology companies and privacy advocates to show how backdoors would harm user security, rather than on law enforcement to prove that altering the encryption scheme would be safe.
“For the tech industry and civil liberties groups, this means laying out technically specific support for the contention that a government accommodation would undermine the integrity of default encryption. They should provide hard data that demonstrates exactly how—and how much—each possible type of accommodation would impact their encryption systems. It is only when Congress receives that data that it can knowledgeably perform its deliberative function and balance the potential cybersecurity dangers posed by a government accommodation against the national security and law enforcement benefits of having such an accommodation in place,” he said.
The only thing harder than proving a negative is proving how badly things might go if backdoors are inserted or companies are required to retain encryption keys.
As usual, the "smart guys" are ahead of the curve on this bizarre demand. Last year, multiple encryption experts collaborated on a research paper [PDF] that laid out the problems that would result from government-mandated access.
In this report, a group of computer scientists and security experts, many of whom participated in a 1997 study of these same topics, has convened to explore the likely effects of imposing extraordinary access mandates. We have found that the damage that could be caused by law enforcement exceptional access requirements would be even greater today than it would have been 20 years ago. In the wake of the growing economic and social cost of the fundamental insecurity of today's Internet environment, any proposals that alter the security dynamics online should be approached with caution. Exceptional access would force Internet system developers to reverse forward secrecy design practices that seek to minimize the impact on user privacy when systems are breached. The complexity of today's Internet environment, with millions of apps and globally connected services, means that new law enforcement requirements are likely to introduce unanticipated, hard to detect security flaws.
So, if Wanstein is looking for answers, he already has them. So does James Comey. So does Cyrus Vance. (Although, to be fair, Vance hasn't really feigned much concern for tech companies or their customers.) They just don't like the answers they've received. This is why they continue to claim that a perfectly safe, government-mandated encryption backdoor is just a "smart guy" breakthrough away. Any day now, someone at Apple or Google will shout "Eureka" and hand over the unicorn Comey, et al insist must exist.
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Filed Under: chris inglis, crypto wars, cy vance, encryption, homeland security, john mccain, ken wainstein
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Give these people encrypted devices with backdoors, then give the backdoor key to China and tell them to have fun.
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Homeland insecurity
Why don't they get the NSA to design this magical system?
It would have to be open source so that anyone can implement and rigorously test it but that is not hard.
The NSA has a Lot of very smart people. Why can't they 'nerd harder'?
Or maybe it's not really that easy.
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Re:
So what you do is announce mandatory adoption of a proof-of-concept deployment for the immediate family members of government employees.
No need to provide the backdoor key to China.
Just make it publicly known that the backdoor exists in the proof-of-concept system.
It'll be secure, after all, so having their family members on the new code wouldn't be an issue, right?
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Re: Homeland insecurity
It's a bad assumption that the NSA _hasn't_ designed and implemented such a system.
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Re:
For the congress critters with a background in law, the "problem" is a lack of willingness on the part of the tech companies to comply.
The congress critters with math/science/engineering backgrounds seem to come down on the "wtf, no, that's not how math works, this is a bad idea" side of the argument.
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Re: Homeland insecurity
At this point they have no excuse not to have familiarized themselves with the facts of the matter, which means unless the one making the claim is so colossally incompetent that they aren't fit to run a gorram lemonade stand they know they are asking for the impossible, and they don't want to provide a clear example of their own 'smart people' failing to achieve the impossible that could then be used against their idiotic claims by the companies they're trying to pressure.
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Taking idiocy to it's (il)logical heights
While he's at it he should demand that companies that create and sell locks provide hard evidence showing how easily picked or bypassed locks would be harmful to security, so he can ignore that too.
I know by this point that the anti-encryption crowd does't actually have any good arguments to make but they could at least try to avoid the insanely stupid ones like 'Provide evidence about how crippling security would present a threat to security'.
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Re: Re:
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Backdoors are safe I tell you!
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Re: Backdoors are safe I tell you!
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Re: Re: Homeland insecurity
what is being proposed is impossible to accomplish.
the NSA may have tried, but they would not have succeeded. They are asking for the impossible, using a well understood and known truth as a false and than asking for proof on something that has already been proven time and fucking again!
They are deflecting, a classic government maneuver that works too fucking well and too fucking much!
Politician A makes proposition.
Politician B gives alter proposition.
Politician A runs to media and said no one gave them any alternatives so we HAVE to go with A, when it reality A just did not like B's proposition.
Therefore we ALL treat B like he never even happened. There is more than enough fucking proof on this subject and the Government is just sticking it fucking fingers in their ears and screaming la la la la la... and trying to say do it anyway.
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Re: Taking idiocy to it's (il)logical heights
For example, ANSI 156.2, "Bored and Preassembled Locks and Latches", Establishes performance requirements for bored and preassembled locks and latches, and includes cycle tests, strength tests, operational tests, security tests, material evaluation tests, finish tests, and dimensional criteria.
Similar criteria are available for safes, etc.
If you know the specs the physical lock was made to withstand, you know what's required to break it.
_This_ is probably what non-technical legislators are thinking of when they're saying "make crypto accessible"
To be fair, crypto also has ratings that are somewhat analogous to physical locks - key sizes, ciphers, hashes, etc.
Where locks and crypto differ, however, is in how they can be accessed. Assuming I live in the US, a hacker physically located china is going to have an exceedingly difficult time using a crowbar to pry open my front door.
The same cannot be said of internet-connected devices.
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Case in point. DRM (a form of anti-copy "encryption") Usually only takes a few days to circumvent.
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weaknesses are a problem even when not added intentionally
We need for Vance et al to be ready to put their money where their ignorance is; are they willing to take personal responsibility when a software weakness (backdoor) falls into the wrong hands and puts citizens at risk? They have received multiple warning that undermining security puts citizens at risk and they have ignored those warnings. Do they have the backbone and sense of responsibility to allow themselves to be treated as accomplices when the exploit they want to introduce puts people in harm's way?
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The burden is always on the government.
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Re: Re: Homeland insecurity
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'Put your money where your mouth is' in a more literal sense
They'd hire someone, or someone would volunteer(and I imagine there would be many volunteers for something like this) to intentionally create crippled encryption with a unicorn door, with the key to be held in a 'secure' location that is as accessible as a major company could manage. Once that's done all their personal data would be 'protected' by the encryption, and the public would be informed that it exists, though given no other details beyond that.
They'd never do it of course, because while they're incredibly dishonest I doubt any of them are that stupid, but it would be nice watching them squirm for a bit and try to explain how crippled encryption is plenty to protect the public, but not enough for public servants like themselves.
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Sure
I'm waiting. Until that evidence is produced don't even think of messing with my encryption.
In the interest of protecting taxpayers money, I suggest that the government start gathering their evidence by googling "OPM hack"
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Re: Re: Re: Homeland insecurity
Rather the distinction I was trying to make was between 'Intentionally lacking in knowledge' and 'Knows better and lying'. Stupid or dishonest essentially, one or even both is possible, but at this point 'neither' isn't.
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Re:
The issue is that you can show these guys actual hard proof of the damage they are trying to cause and they will just wave it off. They are messing with systems they don't understand and they choose intentionally to not understand.
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Re: Re: Homeland insecurity
retro-cover for future lawsuits
against the government. The pattern
has been the same since y2k.
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Problem is that they can't be everywhere at once. Tracking down bad people after-the-fact of a crime rings hollow if that crime could've been prevented with use of unbreakable encryption.
This is a security (successfully responding to crime/espionage) vs. security (successfully preventing crime/espionage) issue. No amount of resources given to law enforcement and national security types could equal the security benefits to society that unbreakable encryption provides.
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EASY ....
FUCK YOU USA GOVT , your full on retard now....
second thought DONT CALL ME FUCK HELPING STUPID
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@ 22
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BKorP55Aqvg
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Re: Re:
Not really! While true this does have "some" play, the logic involved in this problem requires no education to understand!
The problem is nothing more than fundamental mental dissonance because someone needs an excuse to TAKE more power, nothing more. It is nothing ever more, in fact you should view about 100% of ALL government activity to work in this direction at all times and in all places. Even when they make it look like they are helping, it's only because they gained a power they can use to crush with it.
And to never ever view the benevolence of one agent of the state as any benevolence of the state itself! The state has only 1 mode, malevolence and it must be rigorously controlled! This encryption debate is pure proof of that malevolence. The snarky comments about education, ignorance, stupidity, and other jokes on sanity are ill fitting of these times and do nothing to reveal the truth about government corruption.
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Senate Hearing
Industry Nerd: Thank you senator for your time. I'll be brief, I only have one exhibit. This is what happens when security is weakened.
(boots up a ten-year-old Windows computer with no updates)
(picks up mic off stand, drops it on the floor, and walks out)
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Re: Senate Hearing
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Re: 'Put your money where your mouth is' in a more literal sense
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Know Nothing Nincompoops and You
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Re: 'Put your money where your mouth is' in a more literal sense
That way nobody could prove how dangerous encryption backdoors are without getting arrested and charged.
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Re: Homeland insecurity
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Whoops, they just slipped my fingers, good thing I have another pair.
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Re: Re: 'Put your money where your mouth is' in a more literal sense
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Re: Re: Homeland insecurity
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Why would Europe, Russia, and China want to use such non-encryption? Spy-encryption? Why would non-U.S. companies want to implement such schemes, except if they really really want to get access to that market?
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PROVE you don't have a unicorn!
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"Working together"
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The question that first comes to mind is:
On further reflection I suspect his intention is to bait people in the tech sector into take a position that is empirically correct but politically untenable. He wants to create a bullshit debate so he can go McCarthy on them and start locking the commi's up for doing science, again.
Crypto is classified as a munition. If consumers use it and no harm is intrinsic to it's use, material posession of it is protected by the second amendment. The action of using it is protected by the 4th amendment. The institutional subversion of it, is a violation of the 3rd amendment.
But before you even GET to any of those arguments, the institutional surveillance infrastructure that is currently in place is corrosive to the first amendment, and a violation of the third amendment WITHOUT encryption even being a factor.
So if there is anyone that needs to be brought to heal in terms of proving their patriotism, it sure as fuck isn't anyone in the scientific community.
It isn't just that these guys are wrong scientifically. They are wrong scientifically AND wrong legally. The burden of jurisdiction, precedes the burden of proof. In this case, once the former is served, the latter becomes irrelevant.
If truth has already been conceded for political expediency, then the continuation of debate is futile. Which would likely be why Apple didn't show up in the first place.
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Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
Knowledge is a classified munition.
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Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
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Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
This is misleading. Crypto is not considered a munition by any US law.
It is considered a munition by ITAR (International Traffic in Arms regulations), but that only comes into play when in imports and exports. It has nothing to do with what US citizens can possess and use.
Also, the ITAR restrictions themselves were relaxed years ago, but certainly not eliminated. To the best of my knowledge, there has been only a single instance of someone being sanctioned under ITAR in over a decade: http://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/about-bis/newsroom/press-releases/107-about-bis/newsroom/press-rele ases/press-release-2014/763-intel-subsidiary-agrees-to-750-000-penalty-for-unauthorized-encryption-e xports
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Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
If they've taken punitive action based on it, then it is recognized law. Absent more specific interpretations, stare decisis should apply, should it not?
Which is my whole point. They have already decided WHAT cryptography is. What they are trying to do now, is manufacturing a basis of bullshit to deprive citizens of the benefits of it.
This entire issue is a "separate but equal" law, where an aristocracy reaps the benefits of the labors produced by a technological labor class, while formally depriving that class of the product of it's own labor.
This isn't about national security, it never has been. It is about blackbirding the domestic technician population. The same motive has been behind the demonization of computer technicians across modern pop culture. It is about preserving power in a market that is consistently finding people "too sophisticated" to be bothered with computers, less valuable.
They are unconcerned for the offense they give. Perhaps even unaware of it. So were the Romans to the Visigoths.
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Re: Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
Fair enough. I was drawing a distinction between regulations and law that isn't really relevant in this situation.
Nonetheless, it only applies to imports and exports, and has nothing to do with what citizens can possess and use.
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This is proven
Perfect handling of them is impossible.
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oh wait....
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
Personally I think it would be hard to convince a jury, not to extend second amendment protections to strong crypto. Once you explained to them that strong crypto is currently what protects their financial security, I doubt many would concede to allowing the fed to make crypto it's own exclusive domain.
I suspect this argument would have come up if Lavabit hadn't had it's right to habeas corpus violated.
So the fact that the fed is having this argument AT ALL, is likely the result of Constitutional malpractice. They aren't on the slippery slope anymore. Now it is more like careening down the side of a mountain.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
Regulations backed by law are essentially law, imo.
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A practical demonstration
Put $100,000 in the safe.
Anyone with a valid key is allowed to open the safe and take the money.
Set the desktop background of every computer in the NYPD to a picture of the key and instruct the police to keep that picture secret and out of view at all times.
See how well that works out.
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Re: Re: 'Put your money where your mouth is' in a more literal sense
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
(Just to be clear, I think the ITAR classification of crypto is a really bad thing, but that's different than whether or not there's a Constitutional problem.)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
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Re: Re: Taking idiocy to it's (il)logical heights
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What happens when Country #2 wants the key?
Then who would provide encryption technology to the US government?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
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Re:
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The question that first comes to mind is:
ITAR is a set of regulations that falls squarely under that umbrella.
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Tyranny and Dictatorship in the making
No entity is above the law; government or otherwise - unless tyranny and dictatorship follow. And the people are stripped of their legal right to live a free life without government interferences.
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