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by tptacek
3774 days ago
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This is such a weird argument. You clearly can be compelled to produce private documents as evidence. A private document you wrote is in the exact same sense self-testimony. I don't doubt that you can conjure a first-principles argument that the law says otherwise, but the reality you'll end up in won't be the one we share now. I got snarky because of the "sir" in the parent comment. I SAY GOOD DAY TO YOU, SIR. Totally fair game to ding me for doing that, though. |
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You are correct - but only via due process (court order/warrant, etc..).
What we have here is not due process - but rather systematic bulk collection and inspection of all electronic communications from every citizen. These private communications are then sifted through, looking for anything of interest... and if found, we then (sometimes) go get a warrant to retro-actively wiretap your communications. That's not legal, but it's what's going on.
Regarding full-device encryption - it's the same thing. You need a warrant to compel me to turn over my device. No law makes it legal for the government to "hack" into your device remotely and inspect it's contents (unless you have a specific warrant). If the individual refuses to turn over the device or decrypt it, it's no different than someone refusing to turn over a written letter... and we have punishments for these actions. We don't need to ban encryption for this, we already have mechanisms in place to handle these situations.