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by synchronise 4686 days ago
It also depends on what possible legal action those parties might have taken against them for not complying with a disclosure request on those funds.
1 comments

So basically: "we can't find your money so you're going to jail unless you find it for us?"

I was talking to a friend about encryption the other day and that was his salient point. Unbreakable key? Break it or go to jail.

"Break it or go to jail" is already established law that pre-dates computers ("open this combination safe or go to jail"), but courts have generally held that this law also applies to encryption keys.
And if the contents of the safe are written in code, or some made up language that the courts don't understand, can they compel you to translate them?
Yes, they can. This has also been true for hundreds of years.
Physical security is an integral part of information security. But if governments start doing things like that, what kind of country are we living in?
As always, relevant XKCD: http://xkcd.com/538/