• @catsup@lemmy.one
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    151 year ago

    Outrageous. I would actually be protesting if this were to happen in my country, and you wouldn’t hear the end of it. Protect-the-children my ass, this is an attack on the freedom of the common folk. Criminals will continue to use encryption even if its against the law; they were already commiting crimes, so what’s one more in the list?

  • Kool_Newt
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    111 year ago

    What if I wrote a script and shared it that allowed me to have a chat like experience but worked by sending each other SSH commands? Would that script be illegal? Will they make SSH illegal or force backdoors in it?

    • @socsa@lemmy.ml
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      81 year ago

      This is exactly why this shit is stupid. Basic private key infrastructure will never have the backdoors they believe they need. Nor should it. The principles and algorithms are simply too well known, and there are far too many code examples to truly put this cat back in the bag. All this does is make the average person less secure while doing nothing to actual spies, terrorists or organized criminals.

  • ghost_laptop
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    71 year ago

    How is a country going to end encryption worldwide? The West okay, bu what jurisdiction do they have over me?

    • @happyhippo@feddit.it
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      1 year ago

      That’s what I also fail to grasp.

      If things get serious and for example the WhatsApp, Telegram and Signals of the world have to disable e2ee to keep operating in the UK, I guess they could just leave that market before compromising data privacy of their users worldwide.

      I don’t see this “ending encryption worldwide” thingy happening, at all.

      But they could dig themselves a deeper hole after Brexit, that’s definitely possible and wouldn’t surprise me a bit.

      • ghost_laptop
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        -21 year ago

        Or ship specific versions of their software for the UK, as it is done with other software in other countries with restrictions.

        • @perezoso@lemmy.ml
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          41 year ago

          A lot of them have already said they’d withdraw (facetime, iMessage, signal, WhatsApp included).

    • @seasonone@opidea.xyzOP
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      21 year ago

      Just make a list how many companies tech companies operate from west. All those companies have to follow the law of the homeland.

      • ghost_laptop
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        11 year ago

        Sure, but most of those companies didn’t even care much about privacy any way. How would this affect Matrix for example?

        • @f314@lemm.ee
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          41 year ago

          Apple have already said they will shut down iMessage support in the UK if the bill passes.

        • @seasonone@opidea.xyzOP
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          -11 year ago

          this cryptographer working thing which will affect quantum computing, blockchain and integration of data. I don’t know much about Matrix so I can’t comment on that.

    • @Shikadi
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      01 year ago

      Idk where you live, but much of the world already lacks privacy

      • GunnarRunnar
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        31 year ago

        What you said means pretty much nothing if you don’t take the time to explain it.

        • @Shikadi
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          11 year ago

          What I meant is, I literally don’t know where you live, so I don’t know why it doesn’t impact you “outside the west”

  • @Shjosan@sockermunk.se
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    71 year ago

    This bill seems to be all sort of bad (maybe with some good intentions), really hope it doesn’t pass to not give other countries any ideas

    • @ISOmorph@feddit.de
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      231 year ago

      Please don’t fall in that trap. Authoritarian attacks on citizens have always been neatly wrapped in either anti-terrorism or protect-the-children propaganda since the dawn of politics. This is a very obvious and delibirate attempt to further remove freedom from the common folk.

  • @worfamerryman@beehaw.org
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    41 year ago

    It’s not really that hard to deploy a matrix server. So this bill is dumb as anyone who wants encrypted messages can easily have them.

    • I’m all for Matrix, but the things is, Matrix is primarily developed by people in the UK. They will be easily forced to implement backdoors.

        • I’m not sure auditing would be enough. We would literally need a development team outside of dictatoric countries like the UK, where such things can be forced.

  • CoachDom
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    31 year ago

    Would VPN protect an individual against such actions?

    • @thejml@lemm.ee
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      71 year ago

      VPN will encrypt your communications between your local PC/phone/device and the VPN server you connect to. After that, the data packet transits just as if you’re anywhere else. So if they can crack that encryption, your data is still open. They might not know where the packet came from, but if you are talking PII, that’s not really important. (Does it really matter what IP you had when you tell them your health history and name? Or full banking info?)

      • CoachDom
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        51 year ago

        I really don’t like that.

        Even if it will get dismissed/amended so it doesn’t ruin open and private internet, the direction it’s all going really worries me. Every couple of months/years you will hear that the governments are trying again and again…Eventually they will succeed - enter “1984”

      • CoachDom
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        1 year ago

        What about decentralised solutions like Matrix? I think they would have hard time accessing anything if it’s stored on a private server. EDIT: Or is it on ISP level? So no matter how you access/communicate - it will all be scanned the point when data leaves your device and communicates with web.