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by lern_too_spel
3339 days ago
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> What the FBI was asking for was custom software development to be done to circumvent existing software and hardware functions. Which is exactly what was requested in the Lavabit case, to the letter. I used the discovery example to show that courts compel work all the time, which you originally claimed they could not do. |
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What you're saying is not true. If you take a look at what happened in the unsealed documents regarding Lavabit [1] the FBI wanted a copy of the SSL private key. That's it. The owner of Lavabit offered to do some coding so they could target the meta data of a single person but it was rejected so he ultimately shut his service down.
> I used the discovery example to show that courts compel work all the time, which you originally claimed they could not do.
Discovery is seeking data that already exists and is reasonably accessible. You can't use discovery to force someone to write software the doesn't exist to provide additional functionality to a product. The FBI had to resort to using the All Writs Act in order to attempt to do this and backed down before it could go through and set a precedent. I'd suggest taking a look at how electronic discovery [2] works.
Also the HN discussion around the Apple vs FBI case was rather interesting and is full of good information [3].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavabit
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_discovery
[3] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11116801