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Nations unite against Facebook over encryption plans ‘that endanger children’ (theaustralian.com.au)
8 points by sbuttgereit on July 30, 2023 | hide | past | favorite | 11 comments


Yep, our politicians care so much about children they have been housing unaccompanied refugee children in hotels with no guardians. Many of them have gone missing. For children who are citizens they took away child benefits for poorer families and school meals. Schools are falling down and underfunded. We can't find teachers even for the more prestigious schools. Children have been strip searched by police with no supervision at schools.

All of their actions just scream "we must stop harm to children", don't they? /s


I can't believe I'm on the side of Facebook on this one.

The problem is "nations" don't represent the people in those nations, and those in power are just as capable as big tech in to relying on scare tactics and duplicitous messaging and misleading the populace in order to push forward their own agendas.

Fighting encryption has nothing to do with "saving the children", no more than all the misguided disastrous crusades against one thing or another over the past 50 years have been about saving the children.

I come from a place where in the 2000s the religious institutions through a hissy fit about certain music and subcultures and how they must be suppressed in order to "save the children". Fighting encryption may not be religious in nature but is born out of the same need for power and control.


> The problem is "nations" don't represent the people in those nations

The hell they don't! And who are bigtech companies to decide who the legitimate leader or a nation is? Whatever government is recognized by your government as legitimate gets to call the shots over those people. Democracy is not a human right, and even if it was it is democratic nations that are demanding this to the most part. You don't get to claim you are really fighting for the people when you have no legitimate reason to make that claim. Even if the people wanted privacy at the cost of more harm to their fellow man, the people need to use the law to enforce that, either you have the rule of law, the rule of man or the rule of criminals.


Encryption does not endanger children.


Because without E2E in messaging apps they have no way to encrypt things /s


I will keep saying this: whatever the government's true intent might be, this issue isn't going away. You can develop good/sound tech that either decincientivizes the extrems of platform abuse or detects such abuse while preserving privacy in all other cases and doing all this in a publicly auditable way or the alternative is secret backdoors and device exploitation with zero oversight and transparency.

Look, I'm on HN, I'm into tech, I work in tech. But nothing absolutley nothing provided by tech is worth tolerating abuse of innocents. There is no social, legal or historical expectation of infallible privacy for communication. Governments have always had the right to invade privacy provided there is a legal reason to do so. The idea that technology can be used to undermine the first and most basic reason of a government's existence (the security of their people and in this case the most innocent members of the people) has only been a thing since around the 90s and the price has been high. You can't build bridges only the bad guys can blow up? Then build bridges anyone can blow up but with a high cost. Anyone can blow up real world bridges with enough money on their hands already!

I am not suggesting weaking e2ee crypto but requiring lawful intercept capabilities into messaging apps. Not scanning messages (different topic) for everyone, but giving law enforcement access to the app on the device after being presented with a lawful order. Criminals will just use something else? The let the government do something else about those other things while catching most that still use popular apps (most robbers use the front door fyi, reduction not elimination of crime is the goal).

You don't think the government can be trusted? So what, we live in a society. The contract we have with the government is they develop a probable cause and get a judge to sign off on a warrant and in return we expect them to provide security. You don't like that contract then let's talk about changing it, but if even one innocent child can be spared these nightmares (or even not so innocent adults!) then technologists are conspiring with criminals if they knowingly refuse to obey laws that have existed long before electricity was even a thing!

If the demand is to weaken encryption to allow dragnet surveillance then unless that is lawful in your country (it is not in the US) then why are we even talking about it? If they have a warrant, give them access.

FFS! There are RFCs on how to provide lawful intercept access. I am not suggesting anything new. Why is signal or whatever app anymore special than at&t or the postal service? The government and the mailman can open my mail and we vote, send credit cards/checks, passports, and many other documents much more critical than anything we say on signal.

Please, show me reason here. I am not saying all this just to start an argument or to be contrarian. What am I missing?

https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3924.html


> I am not suggesting weaking e2ee crypto but requiring lawful intercept capabilities into messaging apps.

I'm an Australian, and Australia has already done this. It's the "Assistance and Access Bill (2018)". One link: https://carnegieendowment.org/2021/03/31/encryption-debate-i...

In principle, I agree with you. In practice, that particular piece of legislation looks to strive to get balance between privacy and a democracy defending itself against destabilising influences (like say tax evasion, importing weapons, and terrorism) right. But it fails spectacularly at it in one area: sunlight.

I'm sure it was written by and for the Law Enforcement Agencies (LEA's), and it boils down to letting them see anyone's activities should it be deemed important enough. Everyone that is, except them. The bill says the can force computer companies to help them, and when they do an automatic gag order applies, forever. Reporting on how much it is used is limited to a count, supplied years after the use has occurred.

> You don't think the government can be trusted? So what, we live in a society.

Yep. So do Russians and the Chinese. This demand by the LEA's that be allowed to their stuff without the society they are supposedly serving knowing has a very authoritarian overtone, more reminiscent of them than us. "We know what's best for you - so it's safer you don't know". It seems it's the LEA's in the Five Eyes nations think they should be allowed to operate.


I did not support gag orders or lack of transparency, quite the opposite. I am suggesting the app/protocol to publicly log lawful intercept access and for there to be public auditing for the reasons behind the requests (the time, id and jurisdiction are logged publicly).

The problem you are describing is political ultimately. If the premise is that government's can't be trusted then the protocol/app shouldn't be operated by entities like signal or the tor project who have to answer to them. P2P+e2ee+stego is probably best. But a messaging app operating within the law by corporations must allow lawful access but as part of an established and auditable process, not one off targeted access.


> if even one innocent child can be spared these nightmares

If you feel the government shouldn't be installing cameras in every bedroom and bathroom to protect even one child, then with e2ee we're just arguing degrees.

Society wants to protect children, but it's only willing to go so far to do so.


False equivalency, my opening letters scenario is more analogous than bedrooms. If they have a warrant, they can already install a hidden camera in any bedroom though.


That's a fair point, but I'd feel a lot better if warrants were required for communications monitoring.




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