• @[email protected]
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    16 hours ago

    FBI Assistant Director Bryan Vorndran said, “The FBI has been really, really consistent about our stance on lawful access encryption. We’re actually big, big supporters of it, but it has to be reasonably responsibly managed so that we can get what we need on the other side.”

    So they want to keep the backdoors but have the Chinese government stop naughtily using them when they’re only for American use. Good plan! A quick call to Xi Jinping should sort the whole thing out.

    • @PlantJam
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      2312 hours ago

      I’m no encryption expert, but wouldn’t a backdoor of any kind be inevitably exploited by a malicious actor?

      • @[email protected]
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        12 hours ago

        Yes, but politicians and police keep fantasizing about a magical crypto-backdoor that only they can use, no matter how many times people explain this to them or how many times they get burned.

        • @rottingleaf
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          34 hours ago

          Frankly a person with such persistence trying to get a tool they never justly need should get punched in the face until they get smarter.

          I mean, there already are laws about what should be surrendered to them in legal proceedings and how. That’s not impeded by any encryption. That everybody has right to remain silent is already a rule, encryption just reaffirms it with math.

          What they are trying to create is a tool for illegally violating people without being detected, thus not causing outrage and not having to justify it.

          It’s literally an unprecedented penetration of government structures and agencies and political groups by criminals who want to use those organizations to spy after others. By thieves. They should all be found and put in jail.