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posted by on Wednesday January 25 2017, @11:22AM   Printer-friendly
from the ROT-13-is-too-secure dept.

Like other politicians and government officials, President Trump's nominee for the position of Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, wants to have it both ways when it comes to encryption:

At his confirmation hearing, Sessions was largely non-committal. But in his written responses to questions posed by Sen. Patrick Leahy, however, he took a much clearer position:

Question: Do you agree with NSA Director Rogers, Secretary of Defense Carter, and other national security experts that strong encryption helps protect this country from cyberattack and is beneficial to the American people's' digital security?

Response: Encryption serves many valuable and important purposes. It is also critical, however, that national security and criminal investigators be able to overcome encryption, under lawful authority, when necessary to the furtherance of national-security and criminal investigations.

Despite Sessions' "on the one hand, on the other" phrasing, this answer is a clear endorsement of backdooring the security we all rely on. It's simply not feasible for encryption to serve what Sessions concedes are its "many valuable and important purposes" and still be "overcome" when the government wants access to plaintext. As we saw last year with Sens. Burr and Feinstein's draft Compliance with Court Orders Act, the only way to give the government this kind of access is to break the Internet and outlaw industry best practices, and even then it would only reach the minority of encryption products made in the USA.

Related: Presidential Candidates' Tech Stances: Not Great


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 26 2017, @06:58AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 26 2017, @06:58AM (#458840)

    Yep, this is an american fire drill here, as opposed to a chinese one.
    I run FreeBSD and am not at all concerned with any of the spying these assholes are capable of.
    As long as we have a free people on the planet somewhere, uninfected uncompromised code will always be.

    Or course those running M$ windoz are already compromised with backdoors and an OS that spies on you and rats you out everytime you switch the thing on.
    I imagine M$ compliance will satisfy these critters and leave them to quandary OSS and something they can't touch, meddle with or control.
    And this is priceless!