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posted by Fnord666 on Friday December 16 2016, @05:34PM   Printer-friendly
from the what-photos? dept.

The Freedom of the Press Foundation has called on professional camera makers to implement encryption in cameras to prevent governments from easily searching and seizing the contents:

An open letter written by the Freedom of the Press Foundation and signed by over 150 filmmakers and photojournalists calls on professional camera makers such as Nikon, Canon, Olympus, and Fuji to enable encryption to protect confidential videos from seizure by oppressive governments or criminals. The Freedom of the Press Foundation is a non-profit organization that has several noteworthy members, such as "Pentagon Papers" Daniel Ellsberg, Edward Snowden, and EFF's co-founder John Perry Barlow, on its board of directors.

[...] Filmmakers and photojournalists that film documentaries or shoot photos of abuses committed by governments or terrorists in dangerous parts of the world are constantly under threat of having their videos and photos seized and destroyed. The danger is even bigger when these bad actors can see what's on the cameras--it's not just the documentation of abuses that is exposed, but also the confidential sources that may have wanted to keep their identities hidden. Encryption would ensure those who seize their cameras couldn't see the contents of the cameras, nor the journalists' sources.

This won't necessarily ensure that the information collected by journalists is disseminated, since border agents and law enforcement officers can just destroy encrypted equipment. For that, cloud storage or live streaming features are needed, as well as reliable access to the Internet even during times of political crisis and network shutdowns.

Also at The Register, CNET, and TechCrunch (they also found a small cameramaker that is planning to ship on-camera encryption).


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  • (Score: 2) by edIII on Friday December 16 2016, @09:46PM

    by edIII (791) on Friday December 16 2016, @09:46PM (#442226)

    What you say is:

    1) "I'm the picture TAKER, that's all I can do. I point, click, and an encrypted file gets created with information I've never seen, possessed, or interacted with. If I connect it to Internet, everything syncs back to my employer's servers in the United States. Here is my job overview and the manifest of pictures my employer would like me to take."

    2) "Please speak with Bob Smith, my supervisor, at 714-555-1212 in the United States. He's the picture READER. Only he can decrypt these pictures and view them. When I'm done I hand the entire device to him and my job is done."

    With a setup like this it's rather easy to create TAKERS and READERS. It's like getting angry at the guy in the nuclear silo because he can't unlock anything. It's a two person operation, and when you separate those two people by oceans and thousands of miles it makes it pretty difficult to unlock again.

    Sounds reasonable to me, and not even a lie. That's the truth.

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