German Government Official Wants Backdoors In Every Device Connected To The Internet
from the bring-back-the-old-Germany-we-know-and-hate! dept
The US Department of Justice is reviving its anti-encryption arguments despite not being given any signals from the administration or Congress that undermining encryption is something either entity desires. The same thing is happening in Germany, with Interior Secretary Thomas de Maizière continuing an anti-encryption crusade very few German government officials seem interested in joining.
The key difference in de Maizière's push is that he isn't limiting potential backdoors to cell phones. He appears to believe anything connected to the internet should be backdoored… possibly even the cars German citizens drive. (h/t Riana Pfefferkorn)
The RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland (RND) reported that Thomas de Maizière had written up a draft proposal for the interior minister conference, taking place next week in Leipzig, which he has called “the legal duty for third parties to allow for secret surveillance.”
According to the RND, the proposal would “dramatically extend” the state’s powers to spy on its citizens.
And it's not just backdoors being suggested. De Maizière wants all electronics to be law enforcement-complicit. All things -- especially those connected to the internet -- should be constructed with government access in mind.
For example, the modern locking systems on cars are so intelligent that they even warn a driver if their car is shaken a little bit. De Maizière wants the new law to ensure that these alerts would not be sent out to a car owner if the police determined it to be justified by their investigation.
De Maizière wants the government to be able to intercept and block notifications sent from cars to the people that own them. But it's far more than smarter cars being compromised on behalf of the government. If de Maizière gets his way, it will be every connected device everywhere.
De Maizière also wants the security services to have the ability to spy on any device connected to the internet. Tech companies would have to give the state "back door" access to private tablets and computers, and even to smart TVs and digital kitchen systems.
It's rare for government officials to blatantly state citizens should be under surveillance at all times. Craftier politicians tend to use less direct rhetoric, even if they aspire to the same goals. This blatant call for mass surveillance of millions of innocent people has provoked a reaction from de Maizière's colleagues, although probably not the one he was looking for.
The proposal was met with astonishment by digital activists and politicians on Friday.
De Maizière seems blissfully unaware Germany was once home to a powerful dictator who killed millions of his own citizens while deploying a secret police force. And once that period ended, part of Germany rolled directly into a program of intense domestic surveillance utilizing the Stasi -- one of the most brutally effective secret police forces ever wielded by a government against its own people. De Maizière's proposal is so tone deaf -- given the history of the nation he serves -- it's tempting to believe he's an under-recognized satirist. But de Maizière seems completely serious. Fortunately for Germans, no one else seems to take de Maizière quite as seriously as he does.
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Filed Under: backdoors, encryption, germany, iot, privacy, surveillance, thomas de maiziere
Reader Comments
The First Word
“This would be great news for terrorists
They wouldn't have to spend time and money and resources looking for exploitable security holes, because they'd be included in every device as it rolls off the assembly lines. Their task would reduce to the far simpler task of figuring out to utilize the bugs that they already know are there.So if I were one of the bad guys, I'd stop working on technical issues for moment, and use my resources (including sockpuppets on social media) to do everything possible to see that this becomes law.
And THEN I would get to work.
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Spelling error
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Chinese influence
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I've always found the way these statements are worded peculiar. It's as if the implication is that you have to consider yourself an activist to be astonished by such things.
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Re:
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Just another tactic
"Yes, we're bugging parts of your car - but if THIS had passed, it would be so much WORSE!"
"We don't want to be intrusive like THIS suggestion was, we just want reasonable access for law enforcement..."
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Well, maybe he just forgot to mention his role model.
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I can however see certain politicians who are "encouraged" by IOT manufacturers to advocate everything should be IOT connected for everyone's safety.
It's time we humans start electing representatives that can actually think clearly and stop going for whomever can flail their arms and shout the loudest.
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Re: Spelling error
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Light Bulbs
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Re: Re: Spelling error
Same with every other politician advocating this kind of thing, the idea tends to collapse when you take magic out of the equation. Sadly their response tends to be to tell the people meant to implement them that they're not practicing the magical arts enough.
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Re:
This is the guy who pushed for harsh data rentention laws after the terrorist attacks in france, ignoring that france had a similar law that didn't prevent anything.
Then he pushed for an even harsher version right after the EU just ruled against this type of law.
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yeah
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Really?
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And you all thought...
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Good News!
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The problem is that probably Hitler wouldn't have found an audience for his ideas outside of the context of his time. Pop a few terror attacks in Germany and people may start thinking twice. This type of moron has to be metaphorically killed in the nest. And yet he is inside the govt.
Sure he is kind of a laughingstock. So was Trump.
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Re: yeah
Sad but true...like every politician and tinpot dictator out there, the rules aren't enforceable for those in the high-class, only those in the low-class. Imagine if they actually pushed this stuff out to their own devices...it would be a self-fixing problem.
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Re: Re: Re: Spelling error
Magic locks are the worst.
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Re: And you all thought...
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This would be great news for terrorists
So if I were one of the bad guys, I'd stop working on technical issues for moment, and use my resources (including sockpuppets on social media) to do everything possible to see that this becomes law.
And THEN I would get to work.
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Actually, East Germany would be a more apt comparison
Also, because I like pointing fingers, simply collating all of the data provided to the Stasi would have required vast amounts of computing power... almost like IBM selling computers to the Nazi regime.
==
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/east-german-domestic-surveillance-went-far-beyond-the- stasi-a-1042883.html
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/in-germany-legacy-of-stasi-puts-different-p erspective-on-nsa-spying/2013/11/18/a0b1b37c-4940-11e3-b87a-e66bd9ff3537_story.html?utm_term=.81a770 6197e1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi
==
http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/b/black-ibm.html
http:/ /www.americanheritage.com/content/hitler-and-ibm
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Fuck you.
Sincerely,
The World
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Spelling error
spell HARDER!
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Re:
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Re: Re:
They just get extra points for having actually produced one.
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Re: Re: yeah
every nation gets the government it deserves after all.
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Re: Just another tactic
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Re: Good News!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Spelling error
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Re: Re: Re:
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Just use an Intel processor
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