Lord Bracknell
On fire
Ballet bloody auto correct
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Auto Correct is, in fact, just another form of encryption. It simply makes messages unintelligible.
Ballet bloody auto correct
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No objection from me either. Encryption is important so that criminals can not pick up information about you that you don't want to share, so it is there for a reason.I do not use whatsapp but if I did I would have no objection to the security services being able to read the messages, but that is only me.
The bad guys will install a second door with a different lock. The good guys will assume everything is okay right up to the point when the key is copied or lost.
I'm guessing most WhatsApp users, like myself, just use the app, because it's free for most to send images, videos, and phone and video calls.
If you have nothing to hide, then there's no problem.
The encryption thingy is just gimmicky really. IMO
Unless you're all budding secret agents!
I'm absolutely positive they can do it. You could be right in the sense that maybe they're already doing it and this recent debate is just a Govt. play to drum up public support for an eventual law being passed.
While I use the app much like you I am worried about encryption being opened up for security services. This is on the basis that as soon as yoy put a backdoor into any program it immediately opwns it up to hackers. I don't want my credit card bank details etc made effectively freely available to hackers.
What benefit would it achieve anyway as I assume that terrorists would drop communicating via whats app and use another form which the security services would need to catch up with.
You never know but maybe the infinite jukebox thread is all in code
ThisThis is ridiculous and we are sleepwalking into a nightmare scenario.
The old BS about "if you don't do anything illegal you have nothing to worry about" is the scariest part.
It isn't what is illegal NOW, or what THIS government will do or even the NEXT government. But history shows time and again that governments CANNOT be trusted with this sort of power because it WILL be abused by someone, somewhere further down the line.
Have we learned nothing from history and will allow the government to have access to everything in the name of "security"?
What if some future government, sometime in the future, decide that supporting a football team is a subversive act that needs to be stamped out. Everyone who has ever posted on NSC suddenly and retrospectively becomes a criminal and loses their rights, their freedom or even their lives. If everyone happily allows the government to see everything we do now, how do we protect ourselves from abuses in the future?
I can understand the desire to stop terrorist incidents before they happen but the trade off just isn't worth it!
Wasn't the Snooper's charter already being implemented, but it wasn't legal? The passing of the Snoopers Charter was just to make what they were already doing legal. This may be the same sort of scenario (FWIW I don't think these encrypted messages can be decrypted at present).
The thing in this case is that the reports are the lone-wolf attacker may have been using WhatsApp before the attack on Wednesday. They don't even say he was using it, let alone whether he said anything to do with the attacks. This is just the security services taking advantage of a nut job to latch onto the general publics fear and erode our rights to privacy even further.
However, surely they can just access his phone, given it was clearly in the car with him at the time.
It depends. If the phone's locked then that's a whole different kettle of encrypted fish, as shown by the FBI case last year where tried to get Apple to unlock a phone.
However, surely they can just access his phone, given it was clearly in the car with him at the time.
In the scenario above then surely the requirement is for a law allowing the Government to force Google & Apple to add a "law enforcement code" to open every phone.
Why would this have ANYTHING to do with Whatsapp or indeed any other service provider that may use encryption to protect their customers' privacy?
For this specific situation, yes I agree. However this creates a situation where the security services can only ever be reactive rather than proactive, at least where communication is concerned - normally by the time you have the terrorist's phone, it's too late for a number of innocent people and their families.
I do not use whatsapp but if I did I would have no objection to the security services being able to read the messages, but that is only me.
If they so desired could the powers that be just block whats app from working in this country if it cant be de crypted
Ballet bloody auto correct
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