Techdirt covers a new paper published by the US National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine regarding the general access that the FBI and DOJ want to encrypted communications.
Another paper has been released, adding to the current encryption discussion. The FBI and DOJ want access to the contents of locked devices. They call encryption that can be bypassed by law enforcement "responsible encryption." It isn't. A recent paper by cryptograpghy expert Riana Pfefferkorn explained in detail how irresponsible these suggestions for broken or weakened encryption are.
This new paper [PDF] was put together by the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine. (h/t Lawfare) It covers a lot of ground others have and rehashes the history of encryption, along with many of the pro/con arguments. That said, it's still worth reading. It raises some good questions and spends a great deal of time discussing the multitude of options law enforcement has available, but which are ignored by FBI officials when discussing the backdoors/key escrow/weakened encryption they'd rather have.
The paper's suggestions have not been rigorously investigated by those with domain expertise, yet.
Source : Report On Device Encryption Suggests A Few Ways Forward For Law Enforcement
(Score: 2) by bradley13 on Sunday February 25 2018, @08:08AM
...after the fact. If someone is a suspect, the police can use a warrant to read the content as it is being created - i.e., to monitor the person when they are using their phone or computer. Communications are only encrypted enroute; at the endpoints, they are by definition unencrypted. The very existence of a record of communications on the smartphones is something that didn't exist in the past. Phone conversations happened in real-time - there was no recording. So law enforcement is really pining after something that they never had in the past.
The way justice in the US works, they're hoping for additional evidence, so that they can throw even more charges at suspects, so that they can force even more plea bargains. Not that Europe is totally innocence, but the US is a longs ways down an unpleasant path - the American justice system is really screwed up.
OT: And now it's four cops who waited outside, while kids were being killed. [vox.com]
Everyone is somebody else's weirdo.