| The law as written protects you against this: RIPA S49(2) (http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2000/23/part/III/crosshe...): If any person with the appropriate permission under Schedule 2 believes, on reasonable grounds— (a)that a key to the protected information is in the possession of any person, (b)that the imposition of a disclosure requirement in respect of the protected information is— (i)necessary on grounds falling within subsection (3), or (ii)necessary for the purpose of securing the effective exercise or proper performance by any public authority of any statutory power or statutory duty, (c)that the imposition of such a requirement is proportionate to what is sought to be achieved by its imposition, and (d)that it is not reasonably practicable for the person with the appropriate permission to obtain possession of the protected information in an intelligible form without the giving of a notice under this section, the person with that permission may, by notice to the person whom he believes to have possession of the key, impose a disclosure requirement in respect of the protected information. If the technology by implementation never gives you the keys and doesn't retain them, then there can't be a reasonable belief that you're in possession of the keys, so the requirement fails at the first hurdle. |