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by nxor
241 days ago
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Thank you, and I see it's registered in the UK.
I think it started in the US? Well, not like it's relevant anymore.
And can you answer this question:
If everyone has secure chat, then won't that benefit criminal organizations?
I struggle to understand the love for private communication when it seems like that would benefit, for example, religious sects and sex abuse rings.
NOT that I like that Zuckerborg keeping all my messages. |
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Yes, sort of.
The thing is, the government is already not permitted to wiretap people, at least without reasonable suspicion.
Wiretaps themselves are not admissible in court, and can only be offered as a mechanism to correlate behaviour anyway. At least in the UK. (Which, is ironic when you consider what's going on there with online speech, but I digress).
Factually speaking, in order to do a crime you have to physically do a crime, the police knowing when and where do not require access to your communications to figure out. They will sting people, get people to turn on other people or simply catch red-handed when doing ordinary police work.
If we legitimately believe what the governments of the world are saying: that we need to embolden the police. Then funding them properly is the right start, yet nobody seems to be doing that. The EU has been making cross border communication easier though, which is in-line with emboldening the police, so I'll give them that.
Having more information will do very little to help, for the same reason that phone taps aren't given out freely (and never have been) - because even if you have the data, you have to choose how to act on it, and you'd need the resources to investigate and follow-through.
There is a distinct irony that unencrypted SMS is more secure than online messengers, because there are legal protections.