Should ISP block child pornography?

bzs at theworld.com bzs at theworld.com
Sun Dec 9 05:54:36 UTC 2018


My impression is that like the judge in my previous note they did
neither, or both, or all of the above.

The law apparently just says if LE or a court of competent
jurisdiction demands the contents of a device it has to be provided in
a readable form and how that's accomplished is not their (the
legislature's, LE's, et al's) problem to specify. Provide it or face
consequences.

So what you list are two possible solutions, remove encryption
entirely or add a backdoor, or sniff and save everything submitted to
the encryption routine, etc.

I suppose the mischievous thought is whenever one receives such a
demand send back a cleartext copy of the Australian Constitution, or
the lyrics to the Sex Pistols' "God Save The Queen".

How can they prove that's not the correct decryption without the
encryption key? I suppose they can drag you in to testify under oath.

Next Up: Australia's Legislature Outlaws Cancer!

On December 8, 2018 at 18:26 owen at delong.com (Owen DeLong) wrote:
 > Which is it…
 > 
 > It’s being reported on NPR as “Australia required Apple and others to remove encryption protections from their devices.”
 > 
 > That’s a massively different (and arguably even worse) outcome than “Australia is requiring Apple and others to provide
 > decryption technology to law enforcement.”
 > 
 > Owen
 > 
 > 
 > > On Dec 8, 2018, at 14:41 , bzs at theworld.com wrote:
 > > 
 > > 
 > > On December 8, 2018 at 19:41 hank at efes.iucc.ac.il (Hank Nussbacher) wrote:
 > >> Governments that require ISPs to block "certain" sites have no clue what is
 > >> required technologically to adhere to their demands.
 > > 
 > > Well that's certainly true.
 > > 
 > > Australia just passed a law mandating decryption be made available to
 > > law enforcement simply ignoring the many technical explanations about
 > > why we don't know how to do this without compromising security
 > > entirely.
 > > 
 > > I've often said if a judge in their court orders you to raise your
 > > left foot in the air you would be well-advised to lift that foot.
 > > 
 > > If the judge orders you to also raise your right foot the judge
 > > doesn't have a problem, YOU have a problem.
 > > 
 > > -- 
 > >        -Barry Shein
 > > 
 > > Software Tool & Die    | bzs at TheWorld.com             | http://www.TheWorld.com
 > > Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: +1 617-STD-WRLD       | 800-THE-WRLD
 > > The World: Since 1989  | A Public Information Utility | *oo*
 > 

-- 
        -Barry Shein

Software Tool & Die    | bzs at TheWorld.com             | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: +1 617-STD-WRLD       | 800-THE-WRLD
The World: Since 1989  | A Public Information Utility | *oo*



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