Encrypted communication is making law enforcement and counter-terrorism investigations more difficult, but fears of “going dark” are overblown.
Source: Encryption fears for law enforcement overblown: Study – Times of India
Encrypted communication is making law enforcement and counter-terrorism investigations more difficult, but fears of “going dark” are overblown.
Source: Encryption fears for law enforcement overblown: Study – Times of India
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.
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
Harvard’s internet arm frets about gizmo security
Source: Sure, encrypt your email – while your shiny IoT toothbrush spies on you • The Register
WASHINGTON — For more than two years the FBI and intelligence agencies have warned that encrypted communications are creating a “going dark” crisis that will keep them from tracking terrorists and kidnappers.
Source: New technologies give government ample means to track suspects, study finds – The Boston Globe
“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
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
Internet of Things opens government access to real-time, recorded communications.
Source: Gov’t doesn’t need crypto backdoors to spy—your TV and toothbrush will do | Ars Technica UK