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Yahoo executive challenges NSA over encryption demands

RainfallWithin

Article from BBC News and posted on 24th February 2015: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-31604503

 

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A Yahoo executive has publicly challenged the National Security Agency (NSA) over encryption "backdoors".
 
Alex Stamos pressed NSA director Adm Mike Rogers on whether the access to encrypted data requested by the US authorities should also be granted to the Russian and Chinese governments.
 
Adm Rogers insisted an agreement could be reached "within a framework".
 
The tense exchange came after many top tech figures refused to attend a White House cybersecurity summit this month.
 
"If we're going to build defects, backdoors or golden master keys for the US government, do you believe we should do so... for the Chinese government, the Russian government, the Saudi Arabian government, the Israeli government, the French government?" asked Mr Stamos, Yahoo's chief information security officer.
 
After initially dodging the question, Adm Rogers - who took over as director of the NSA last year - responded: "I think that we're lying that this isn't technically feasible.
 
"Now, it needs to be done within a framework. I'm the first to acknowledge that."
 
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According to a transcript provided by the Just Security website, he argued that he did not want the FBI and NSA to unilaterally decide what access they should have, but insisted an agreement was achievable.
 
Pressed on whether he thought that access should also be granted to other nations' governments, Adm Rogers said: "I think we can work our way through this."
 
Mr Stamos responded: "I'm sure the Chinese and Russians are going to have the same opinion."
 
The exchange took place before delegates at a cybersecurity conference hosted by the New America Foundation on Monday.
 
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There has been an increasingly tense relationship between the US authorities and Silicon Valley since information was leaked by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
 
Encryption of user data has subsequently become increasingly popular and, in some cases, the companies hand over the keys to users, making it difficult to break.
 
But the White House has asked tech firms to share more data with law enforcement agencies. And the US authorities want them to build in vulnerabilities that they would be able to exploit.
 
The rift was illustrated when, earlier this month, senior Google, Yahoo and Facebook executives turned down invitations to a White House cybersecurity summit at Stanford University.
 
Tim Cook, of Apple, was one of the few top tech bosses to appear.
 
Adm Rogers told the conference on Monday that the NSA needed a way to access data if it was believed that a device was "being used for criminal, or in my case, foreign intelligence or national security issues".
 
But he acknowledged that there were legitimate concerns to be addressed before a "legal framework" could be established.

 

Personal Thoughts

The NSA couldn't possibly have thought that they were going to influence all of these companies into giving them all communications data unencrypted whenever they wanted.

 
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If the NSA manage to get encryption backdoors, and backdoors of any form that will affect me in Australia, then its time to create my own OS and Programs on my old computers.

"We also blind small animals with cosmetics.
We do not sell cosmetics. We just blind animals."

 

"Please don't mistake us for Equifax. Those fuckers are evil"

 

This PSA brought to you by Equifacks.
PMSL

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He's got a point, it sets a precedent... every govt asks for backdoors LOL.

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If the NSA manage to get encryption backdoors, and backdoors of any form that will affect me in Australia, then its time to create my own OS and Programs on my old computers.

If it were that easy :D we would all have custom OS's,ive been struggling for months to get a working movement controller in unity 3d lol...

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If it were that easy :D we would all have custom OS's,ive been struggling for months to get a working movement controller in unity 3d lol...

I never said it was easy......

"We also blind small animals with cosmetics.
We do not sell cosmetics. We just blind animals."

 

"Please don't mistake us for Equifax. Those fuckers are evil"

 

This PSA brought to you by Equifacks.
PMSL

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Hopefully the government sees that these huge companies like Yahoo!, some of the base US technology economic powerhouses, will not tolerate having their user bases and sources of income screwed by some unchallengeable power.

"The unexamined life is not worth living" - Apology 38a, Socrates


 

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It is more than past time for some people at these nameless bureaucracies to get fired and deported/exiled from the country, along with most of congress.

Ketchup is better than mustard.

GUI is better than Command Line Interface.

Dubs are better than subs

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doesnt the US constitution state that the citizens of america have the direct right to unite and overthrow their government should serious oppression occur?

as Trik'Stari said - it is way overdue for this to happen...

This is what I think of Pre-Ordering video games: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wp98SH3vW2Y

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