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posted by janrinok on Sunday February 15 2015, @06:27AM   Printer-friendly
from the surprise-surprise dept.

The New York Times reports that President Obama met yesterday with the nation’s top tech executives and company officials on a host of cybersecurity issues and the threats posed by increasingly sophisticated hackers amid a deepening estrangement between Silicon Valley and the government. “What has struck me is the enormous degree of hostility between Silicon Valley and the government,” says Herb Lin. “The relationship has been poisoned, and it’s not going to recover anytime soon.”

American firms are increasingly concerned about international competitiveness, and that means making a very public show of their efforts to defeat American intelligence-gathering by installing newer, harder-to-break encryption systems and demonstrating their distance from the United States government. “In some cases that is driving them to resistance to Washington,” says Obama’s cybersecurity coordinator, Michael Daniel. “But it’s not that simple. In other cases, with what’s going on in China,” where Beijing is insisting that companies turn over the software that is their lifeblood, “they are very interested in getting Washington’s help.”

Silicon Valley execs have also been fuming quietly over the government’s use of zero-day flaws. “The government is realizing they can’t just blow into town and let bygones be bygones,” says Eric Grosse, Google’s vice president of security and privacy. “Our business depends on trust. If you lose it, it takes years to regain.”

 
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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by khallow on Sunday February 15 2015, @07:14PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Sunday February 15 2015, @07:14PM (#145340) Journal

    Change is coming. Aristocrats are being dramatic because they want to prevent it or constrain it in some way, even though they aren't sure what it is going to look like. Your willingness to watch is what gives them power. If the tech bubble in the 90's proved one thing, it proved that they will abandon you. Return the favor.

    Don't be an idiot. Divide and conquer is the most common way to defeat an enemy. Politics doesn't have permanent enemies. Here is an issue on which you are in agreement with the so-called "aristocrats". Exploit the division between business and government rather than letting government exploit the division between business and public.

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