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by zAy0LfpBZLC8mAC
2291 days ago
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> You build good systems with a combination of technical and legal measures, of course. How is that "of course"? Not excluding one or the other a priori is one thing, but why would it be the obviously right choice to always use a combination of both? > Ban sharing of purchase data (legal measure) and also build systems to the data is encrypted with your on-card key (technical measure). How would that "encrypting with your on-card key" thing work? > Of course legal restrictions don't work well without technical measures, but anything privacy-related is a social problem first and foremost, so it needs legal solutions in addition to the technical ones. How does it follow that when you have a social problem, you need a legal solution? That seems like a complete non-sequitur to me. |
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I guess I've always thought of the two as complementary. You have a goal to encourage or discourage some behavior, or address a problem, so you want both technical and legal measures. You don't want cars stolen, so you make that illegal and also add anti-theft technology to the cars. You want people to pay taxes, so you also develop a system that makes declaring and paying very easy for most. You want protect privacy, you complement legal protections with technology that helps achieve it.
> How would that "encrypting with your on-card key" thing work?
I don't know exactly, it's not my area of expertise. My understanding is that EMV cards have a unique keypair stored on them, in which case it's not a big stretch to imagine a process that encrypts the exact record of what you bought with the card's private key, so it's a technical impossibility to decrypt without your consent.
> How does it follow that when you have a social problem, you need a legal solution? That seems like a complete non-sequitur to me.
I'm a bit baffled - it seems pretty clear to me that legal changes have been a major part of our general progress as a society, and have in most cases been part resolving social problems. Sometimes we change the law to get to a desired solution, sometimes we change the law to enshrine an established solution. With privacy being a social problem, we need both better technology and better laws.