[–] CPAhem 12y ago ↗ With the news that the NSA is tapping Google's internal fibre links, local encryption of Google is the way to go.The problem is that it makes it harder to use, and to share, especially on multiple devices.Perhaps the innocent days of the early Internet are over, and we now always need to consider that Big Brother is watching. [–] DanBC 12y ago ↗ > Perhaps the innocent days of the early Internet are over, and we now always need to consider that Big Brother is watching.You have always had to assume that your data is available to Big Brother. [–] SilliMon 12y ago ↗ No, in the past, only if you were a tin-foil hat wearing paranoid.We expected our government to uphold the law, specifically the 4th Amendment, which protects us from unlawful searches. [–] DanBC 12y ago ↗ ECHELON was an open secret, with EU parliament reports. We knew how the 5 members avoided the legal problems of spying on their own citizens - A just hands B, C, D and E a list of names to spy on.Here's a report from 2000 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/820758.stm)Here's a report from 2001 (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/may/29/qanda.janeperro...)Risk assessment has always been part of cryptography.
[–] DanBC 12y ago ↗ > Perhaps the innocent days of the early Internet are over, and we now always need to consider that Big Brother is watching.You have always had to assume that your data is available to Big Brother. [–] SilliMon 12y ago ↗ No, in the past, only if you were a tin-foil hat wearing paranoid.We expected our government to uphold the law, specifically the 4th Amendment, which protects us from unlawful searches. [–] DanBC 12y ago ↗ ECHELON was an open secret, with EU parliament reports. We knew how the 5 members avoided the legal problems of spying on their own citizens - A just hands B, C, D and E a list of names to spy on.Here's a report from 2000 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/820758.stm)Here's a report from 2001 (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/may/29/qanda.janeperro...)Risk assessment has always been part of cryptography.
[–] SilliMon 12y ago ↗ No, in the past, only if you were a tin-foil hat wearing paranoid.We expected our government to uphold the law, specifically the 4th Amendment, which protects us from unlawful searches. [–] DanBC 12y ago ↗ ECHELON was an open secret, with EU parliament reports. We knew how the 5 members avoided the legal problems of spying on their own citizens - A just hands B, C, D and E a list of names to spy on.Here's a report from 2000 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/820758.stm)Here's a report from 2001 (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/may/29/qanda.janeperro...)Risk assessment has always been part of cryptography.
[–] DanBC 12y ago ↗ ECHELON was an open secret, with EU parliament reports. We knew how the 5 members avoided the legal problems of spying on their own citizens - A just hands B, C, D and E a list of names to spy on.Here's a report from 2000 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/820758.stm)Here's a report from 2001 (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/may/29/qanda.janeperro...)Risk assessment has always been part of cryptography.
4 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 21.2 ms ] threadThe problem is that it makes it harder to use, and to share, especially on multiple devices.
Perhaps the innocent days of the early Internet are over, and we now always need to consider that Big Brother is watching.
You have always had to assume that your data is available to Big Brother.
We expected our government to uphold the law, specifically the 4th Amendment, which protects us from unlawful searches.
Here's a report from 2000 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/820758.stm)
Here's a report from 2001 (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/may/29/qanda.janeperro...)
Risk assessment has always been part of cryptography.