Encryption May Hurt Surveillance, But Internet Of Things Could Open New Doors : All Tech Considered : NPR, 2 February 2016

Tech companies and privacy advocates have been in a stalemate with government officials over how encrypted communication affects the ability of federal investigators to monitor terrorists and other criminals. A new study by Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society convened experts from all sides to put the issue in context.

Source: Encryption May Hurt Surveillance, But Internet Of Things Could Open New Doors : All Tech Considered : NPR

IoT Opens New Privacy, Surveillance Issues, Says Harvard Study, 1 February 2016

Data wants to be free. Not as in there not being a financial cost, but more in terms of being accessible to many. But not all entities want data to be free, for a host of reasons. The U.S. governmenthas since the early Snowden days a few years back suggested that their ability to track suspects using technology is under threat because of encryption by tech companies.

Source: IoT Opens New Privacy, Surveillance Issues, Says Harvard Study 02/02/2016

WSJ CIO Network: Former Director of CIA, NSA Argues for End-to-End Encryption – The CIO Report – WSJ, 2 February 2016

“America is more secure with end-to-end unbreakable encryption,” said General Michael Hayden, who is now a principal of the Chertoff Group, a global advisory firm focused on security and risk management.

Source: WSJ CIO Network: Former Director of CIA, NSA Argues for End-to-End Encryption – The CIO Report – WSJ

Study: Government really doesn’t need surveillance backdoors, 1 February 2016

Officials at the highest levels of U.S. law enforcement have spent more than a year trying to scare Americans into believing technologies designed to keep private communications out of government hands create a digital playground for child molesters, jihadists and other shady characters. A new study from Harvard reveals why the claims hold very little truth.

Source: Study: Government really doesn’t need surveillance backdoors