French Conservatives Push Law To Ban Strong Encryption (dailydot.com) 246
Patrick O'Neill writes: The French parliament this week will examine a bill that would require tech manufacturers of computers, phones, and tablets to build backdoors into any encryption on the device. The anti-encryption bill is being presented by 18 conservative members of the National Assembly as part of a large "Digital Republic" bill. According to the article, The new French bill briefly praises encryption’s role in protecting user data but immediately pivots to criticizing the effects of strong encryption on state security forces.
"France must take the initiative and force device manufacturers to take into consideration the imperative of access for law enforcement officers, under the control of a judge and only in the case of an investigation, to those devices," the legislation reads, according to a translation by Khalil Sehnaoui, a Middle-East security specialist and founder of Krypton Security. "The goal is to avoid that individual encryption systems delay the advancement of an investigation."
Security is only as strong as its weakest door (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Security is only as strong as its weakest door (Score:5, Insightful)
I was thinking: sounds like a fair law, if then the state/police is fully responsible if their backdoor becomes public, and can be abused by others :). But then i think they'd not risk it, because they know the won't be able to keep their backdoor secret, and don't want to face the consequences :).
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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Painting the door the same color as the wall works as camouflage right up until someone gets up and touches it.
On the other hand panting the wall the same as a door has fooled many wily coyotes.
if all men were Anonymous, would you let your sist (Score:2)
French Conservatives Push Law to Promote Society-Wide Identity Theft
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I thought of this immediately. france was one of the few modern countries to make encryption illegal for users, for a LONG time.
they dropped that rule.
now they want to go back to the bad old days.
look, france, do we REALLY have to start the old and tired 'france surrenders!' jokes all over again? we're all tired of that old joke, but maybe you citizens need to tell your government that you don't want to go backwards and hide in fear any more.
good luck with that, though; our own people (US) won't do this e
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It doesn't matter if the wall you build is thirty feet high and six men can walk abreast if you can kick in a door.
Or, y'know, just walk around it [wikipedia.org].
Re: Security is only as strong as its weakest doo (Score:2)
Might as well bring back Nazi Germany too.
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From some perspectives it's worse now.
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The government wants to be able to decrypt anything immediately and is willing to force weakpoints into encryption to do it. This makes messages less secure if anyone wants to decrypt them and gives the government the ability to decrypt everything. Requiring disclosure of passwords in court provides a number of benefits (vs that terrible system): The courts may
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Might as well bring back Nazi Germany too.
Or Nazi UK. Where, if they ask you for the password and you refuse you can go to jail until you agree.
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How so? As long as it is actually on topic and appropriate, such as now talking about totalitarian ideologies, it is not Godwins law. To quote your link,
Will likely not pass (Score:5, Informative)
Please note that the conservatives don't have a majority in the Assemblée Nationale, so this law will likely not pass, at least under its current form. But it's also true that PS hasn't been the strongest defender of privacy and personal freedom, they did a few nasty things in the wake of the terror attacks of last year, so who knows exactly what will happen...
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Then the French government outlaws the use of OpenBSD and the like. If during an investigation they find the offending software on your machines, you get an automated 10 years sentence. You can avoid this by revealing the encryption keys, with cumulative 5 years sentences for every key and every time you refuse. Is Theo de Raadt living anywhere in the EU? Then he can be arrested and brought to France to stand trial for aiding and abetting terrorists. You cannot solve a political issue through technology bec
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Well, unless they start censoring the internet within their borders, these laws are as useless as, say, anti-pirating laws. If people want strong encryption, they'll get it. This only affects the non-technical/lazy.
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How fucking delusional are you?
How many gov't backdoors already exist in products that you use, either directly or indirectly?
OS/modems/telecom/internet/BIOS/etc,etc,etc
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You are aware that the Frenchies actually used the US as the blueprint here, yes?
I mean, did you really expect them to come up with such a masterplan all by themselves?
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Laws like this aren't proposed to make people safer; they're proposed to make people feel like someone is doing something to make them safer. So the consequences of this proposal depend on the degree to which the French people feel vulnerable at this point in time. At a minimum it's bound reinforce the Conservatives' standing with their xenophobic base. It might gain them supporters. Depending on how future events play out, something like it may even pass, even though it demonstrably won't make anyone sa
Funny, phoney war on encryption (Score:5, Insightful)
You know who else don't like strong encryption? The terrorists [theintercept.com].
You have to admit that the terrorists have already won. They've pwn your asses so completely that you're stabbing your own liberty like crazy.
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Because (Score:4, Informative)
The Paris terrorists used un-encrypted communications repeatedly prior and during the attacks ... so ... ?
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The Paris terrorists used un-encrypted communications repeatedly prior and during the attacks ... so ... ?
This has nothing to do with terrorism. Terrorism is a fear keyword the politicians will use to get what they want in place.
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The Paris terrorists used un-encrypted communications repeatedly prior and during the attacks ... so ... ?
That's true but do you not remember the kneejerk claims of communication via encrypted ps4 chat. That's the line they're running with and be damned if a little thing like the truth stands in the way.
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So, why don't they ban ps4s?
They know not what they do (Score:5, Insightful)
While water is great at quenching thirst, it also can kill a person if drawn into their lungs. Therefore, we demand that bottled water manufacturers make their water such that it can no longer drown someone.
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What about one-time pads? (Score:4, Funny)
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Also, strong passwords have been shown to hinder law enforcement from entering someone's account - which they promise they'd only do when approved by a judge and no they aren't crossing their fingers behind their back. Therefore, all passwords must now be "12345". As a bonus, nobody will ever be locked out of their luggage ever again!
This only deals with hardware-based encryption (Score:3)
With software encryption, you'll still be able to do what you want.
Re: This only deals with hardware-based encryption (Score:3)
And with a pre-arranged language like the Navaho Codetalkers it doesn't matter if someone listens in, it's futile to decode for someone not knowing the language and context.
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Knowing in 3 days that your main bridge is going to be bombed in an hour isn't really going to help you a lot, ya know...
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The hardware will always report your ip, and log, collect or allow a trap door, back door. Any software allowed on top is just bait to make a user think they have something creative and useful.
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It is kinda tedious to do AES in your head...
Dear France: (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Dear France: (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, please be the guinea pig and backdoor your encryption. Then when your banking system collapses because some idiot leaked the keys, maybe it'll light a lightbulb in governments elsewhere.
I'm afraid that you're giving other governments too much credit.
They'd look at France's failure as one of implementation, not of concept.
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They'll arrest those that expose the idiocy in the implementation and the harebrained concept and consider the whole deal safe again.
Why should It be different this time?
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Who would be responsible if someone suffers financial harm due to their phone being compromised by criminals using the government-mandated "backdoor"? Could the French government itself be sued for damages in that case?
Clever. (Score:2)
- Convince one large-ish nation to ban effective cryptography.
- Monitor incoming and outgoing communications
- Compare the weakly encrypted (decrypted therefore) with the strongly encrypted data.
- Improve your systems to be able to break the strongly encrypted data.
- Government!
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This is called a known-plaintext attack and does not work against decent crypto algorithms.
Yeah, defeating terrorists (Score:3)
You know what, if you want to defeat terrorists, try to not provide them with weapons and political support for a start.
We got these blow back attacks because France has supported terrorism as a geopolitical weapon against Syria, among other state sponsors of terrorism such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey and the US.
So don't support terrorism and let Syria defend itself if you don't want terrorism.
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Most terrorists in the west are 3rd generation muslim immigrants. Lets not create a new generation of 3rd generation muslims and kick out all new ones who want to enter.
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When you make strong encrytion criminal.. (Score:5, Insightful)
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You are working under a mistaken belief of the purpose of the legislation. Terrorism prevention is just the flag of convenience it's currently sailing under.
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it will give terrorists a backdoor to everybody's device
That goes without saying -- as will the fact that every cyber-criminal in the world will have access within a few weeks. At that point you may as well just post your driver's license, social security number, bank account numbers, and credit card numbers on Facebook, Twitter, and anywhere else the general public can get them -- because they won't be safe anymore. It'll ruin the Internet completely because there will be NO security for anyone.
They (and other countries) should pass these laws (Score:2)
I'm serious. The countries should pass the laws
We live in a society that is ruled by money first. These countries should pass the laws, and the major players in the system (Apple, Google, Samsung, Sony, etc), should simply pull the products out of the country. They would take a hit to the wallet for a VERY short while, but would give those major players a HUGE advertising campaign to run on - "We won't give up your privacy".
Top tier products disappearing alone would piss off the populations in most count
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The major problem is that most of the markets don't actually care about privacy in these contexts. Your standard iPhone user wouldn't know privacy from their privates.
Yes, everyone agrees that losing privacy is bad, but rarely does anyone know what that entails except for a relatively small informed group.
Software (Score:2)
How can you you make hardware that will automatically backdoor an arbitrary software crypto implementation that has no backdoors. Sure this would make it harder to use conversations in games on PS4 and XBOX1 as a means of talking in secret, but that is about it.
OOPS (Score:2)
NSA on line 1; China on Line 2... (Score:2)
They're happy to build in backdoors to all equipment supplied to France.
Seriously, hardware manufacturers could simply put backdoors into equipment destined from France, and depending on the laws where the device is made be obliged to provide access to other governments when required by law. Meanwhile, anyone buying a device elsewhere would still have no backdoor and bring it into France if they want secure communications. Software services would be harder to localize given the ability to use VPNs and the n
Genesis (Score:4, Insightful)
There are people still alive in France who remember European governments that would have used this to spy on political opponents, and track and kill them. One still exists, reborn from a brief democratic interlude.
One should look in the long term and deny government certain powers out of principle. We have lots of evidence of historical democracies disappearing because they needed to have emergency powers (Rome, Greece, 1930s Germany) and zero evidence for long-term survival of them.
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Actually *France* has a long history of losing their government to emergency powers and the like. They don't appear to have learned their lesson, or they don't actually care. Starting to think its #2.
Terrorists Won't Care (Score:2)
Then only terrorists will have secure communication capabilities.
It is easy to hide messages in large photo images and not be able to tell whether there is actually any hidden data in the photo.
Governments think organized criminals & terrorists are stupid.
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Agreed. A long time ago (15 years ?), encryption in France was limited to a certain number of bits. This was a real annoyance for any government / educational / company because they had to use specially-weak software (remember ssj instead of ssh ?) while everyone else did not care.
That was the stupidest thing to do.
France must take the initiative (Score:2)
Yet more prooff... (Score:2)
Jumped the Shark (Score:5, Interesting)
Why is it that "conservatives" in so many countries have completely lost their minds?
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It's the human condition, 90% of us are barking mad.
Woof
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They haven't lost their minds. Playing to fear is a standard political tactic. It gets votes. Why wouldn't they use it? They'd be stupid not to.
Oh, you mean that it is counterproductive and causes more problems than it solves? Well I'm sure that they believe that once they are in power, it will be temporary.
Vraiment? (Score:2)
Ils sont fous, ces Français....
French? Uk? US? China? (Score:2)
Gravity, etc. (Score:2)
Encryption is just math, attempting to legislate math is like tying to legislate gravity or the speed of light.
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Yes, but it is very easy to discover. Right now, if something is encrypted, you can't read it, so you can't prosecute for the content of the encrypted text.
Under this law, you get prosecuted if it is encrypted and they can't read it. It doesn't matter if it is your shopping list or not.
A law to control encryption means that as long as they can identify a file as encrypted, you could go to jail just for having an encrypted file they can't break.
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The speed of light will be a certain number of meters per second no matter what (that's the definition of the meter), but the legislature can still set speed limits that are far under lightspeed.
When encryption is outlawed... (Score:2)
Give France a break (Score:2)
This is just a few conservatives sponsoring a bill. How many times have we been laughed at for Pi = 3 or teaching the Fred Flintstone theory of evolution.
Oh boy, this is going to be great! (Score:2)
Please do! Don't hesitate, can we somehow support you?
France bugs out of the data center business and pretty much nixes its cloud storage industry. If only some other European countries could follow, we could become the data center of Europe!
The real problems. (Score:2)
Which terrorists will this stop? The cats out of the bag on strong encryption. You can force every hardware manufacturer to sell machines pre-installed with weak encryption, and nothing stops terrorists (or anybody) from replacing this software with strong encryption. You can't stop the spread of strong encryption because it's math.
The best you can hope for is to mandate that every citizen allow you to read their personal data, and hope that the ones that refuse are the terrorists.
And even if that someho
Ummm...no (Score:2)
"France must take the initiative and force device manufacturers to take into consideration the imperative of access for law enforcement officers"
No, fuck law enforcement officers in this regard.
They exist to serve and protect the citizens, but all government agencies everywhere have forgotten this...
Good luck with that (Score:2)
France must take the initiative and force device manufacturers to take into consideration the imperative of access for law enforcement officers, under the control of a judge and only in the case of an investigation, to those devices.
The only problem is that there is no such thing. Asking for government-only access to decryption is like asking for government-only access to perpetual motion, you know, in case we run out of power from other sources.
This just in...... (Score:2)
This just in......French Conservatives Push Law To Make Pi Equal to 3.0
Next up, French Conservatives Push Law To Make Kids Turn That Darn Music Down
French Conservatives Push Law To Stop People From Thinking Bad Thoughts
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We used to have these very informative posts about HOSTS files, sometimes more than once per thread.
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The moo cow posts are usually right on topic, sometimes using knowledge that's inferred from the topic.
My guess is that someone wrote a script to warn him when new threads are making it to the front page. If that person has a desk job it's easy to always post in every thread.
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When today's dumbfuck generation tries trolling and all you can do is facepalm...
Someone cue the face palming cows please...
or would that be face hoofing cows?
Because that would have to really hurt...
I have to stop now, I've run out of ellipses,,,
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No, populism. Currently, conservatives ( and also neo-liberals ) thrive on it, here in Europe. Poland even has a conservative-populist government. So does Denmark.
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The purpose is running scared of the terrorists they imagine lurking within every shadow. They see things in the world only under the context of "Could a terrorist use this against us in any way, shape, or form no matter how unlikely?" If the answer is yes, then the thing must be banned or, at least, highly secured.
For example, the shoe bomber tried unsuccessfully to blow up an airplane with a bomb hidden in his shoe. They are scared that another one might succeed so now we need to remove all shoes when
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No, you are exactly wrong. Hindering prosecution is already against the law. By inhibiting the State's ability to examine encrypted evidence you are preventing them from proving your innocence.
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ROT-14.
It's one better!
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Preventing hardware manufacturers from building strong encryption into their products accomplishes nothing.
False. It makes strong encryption off by default. So that instead just working out of the box, people have to decide to encrypt something, and go out of there way to locate and use tools to encrypt something; and deal with the hoops and hassles because its not baked in.
That accomplishes *something* pretty significant.
What this does is expose normal users to security risks, while *doing nothing to prevent any determined user to encrypt whatever the hell they want*
Swing and a miss. You are absolutely right to say that normal users are vulnerable and that determined savvy users will encrypt whatever they want.
Your unspoken assumption that terrorists and c
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Swing and a critical miss. How much of a tech-savvy super villain do you think you need to be to flip an option in device settings, choose a password and wait a while until it reboots?
What you gibbering about? That doesn't help you if that built in encryption is backdoored, which is precisely the scenario in question here.
If the built in encryption is backdoored, Then you have to add your own encryption layers. And that isn't something the average crook is going to try do, or get right even if he tries.
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If the built in encryption is backdoored, Then you have to add your own encryption layers. And that isn't something the average crook is going to try do, or get right even if he tries.
No, the crook just installs an alternative OS (like CyanogenMod) developed in another country which doesn't have the backdoor, then enable full-device encryption as usual. It's not as if you have to be an expert in programming and cryptography just to install and use secure software which someone else wrote.
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No, the crook just installs an alternative OS (like CyanogenMod) developed in another country which doesn't have the backdoor, then enable full-device encryption as usual.
LMAO.
*I* have yet to install an alternative OS on my phone. And I'm *IN* the demographic that does that sort of thing. And in the demographic that likes to do that sort of thing.
It's not as if you have to be an expert in programming and cryptography just to install and use secure software which someone else wrote.
Gotcha, so lets say we believed Windows was beholden to government masters and spooks... (wait we DO already beleive that don't we? If not as a certainty, than as a likelihood).
So criminals obviously being risk-averse must all be using something like Tails linux right? Nope... they still use windows.
'Normal' don't install alternativ
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So just 3D print your next firearm.... Don't think the ammo is coming off the printer, but the bullets sure could...
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Anybody can buy a gun anywhere.
So the reaction here in the states is to restrict guns in various ways. Watch for this and other countries to start restricting encryption.
Re: That is Le Pew (Score:4, Informative)
The point is moot because the French president obtained special powers after the attack in Paris until February to enact pretty much any anti-terrorism legislation.
No he didn't.
The state of emergency allows a certain number of police actions to be done on order of a "prefet" (an administrator) rather than a judge:
1. Banning of public gatherings.
2. Search warrants.
3. House arrest.
It lasts 3 months (so its nearly over).
Thats it. Nothing more, no power to pass legislation.
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Parent explains how that is not the case, with sufficient information for anyone to check it and is left at +1.
User moderation at its finest
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The only problem with your analysis is that currently, the false grandparent is at +1 Informative, and the correcting parent is at +4 Informative.
Slashdot definitely has big problems with its moderation system, but this doesn't look like one of them. Of course, we could also argue that your post pointing out this stupidity is what shined light on this particular instance and it got corrected quickly as a result.
But I'll say it again, as I've complained countless times before: the "feature" where you can't
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I agree moderating a reply to you or yourself should not be allowed, or possibly someone you replied to. But just because made post in a story shouldn't stop you moderating I generally read post in articles that I am interested in so it severely limits the moderation I can do. Also I think you should be able to change a moderation, I you read a post and think it is valid and then good counter argument is presented you should be able to change your mind.
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Appropriate quote from Politico on the US presidential campaign candidate: