Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

If progressively more governmental communications are made through encrypted means, we cannot access them as citizens.


If they're subject to records retention requirements, they should be retained anyway; and if they're not, they're in the same category as things like phone calls which are currently ephemeral.

(Note that in first world countries phone calls will be digital everywhere except maybe the last mile, and GSM and upwards are digital to the handset)


End to End encrypted does not mean the messages have to be stored and retained encrypted and inaccessible. I imagine the responsible sysadmins have figured out something to follow retention laws.


You're not supposed to be able to access any and every government communication. You're not supposed to know what the nuke codes are, or when there's an undercover mission in progress, or [insert punchline here].

Presumably, if there's an investigation, they just force the government employee to give up the keys.


Yeah, end-to-end encryption is strange here. Aren't there laws in France to ensure retention of government employee communications?


And this is somewhat okay. Though in my opinion there should be some way to lawfully intercept, this brings us back to the same dilemma as with private messaging.


Thanks, I understand but those communications are not supposed to be accessible. This tool will be used by top level gouvernement employees.


Indeed




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: