IWhy would people from those countries, especially, want to enable them to communicate with impunity?
They already can, VociMike. They already do. The same argument against encryption can be made against closed doors and thick walls.
There are many types of encryption. There is bit-shifting, XOR methods, text compression, RSA, SHA-1. The trick here is that these require a “key” or cipher to decrypt. Most supercomputers can weed out this pretty fast (days or weeks).
SHA-1-based stream ciphers, as far as I know, are still secure, even in the face of the recent weakness discovered in the hash function itself.
RSA is still completely secure and used every day by any computer professional who works on remote computers.
Then there is encryption that crypts the text based on a formula caluculated from the “key”, and then compresses the crypted text using another cipher routine (like WinZip does).
Winzip “security” can be easily cracked. Zipfiles have not had adequate in-file security since the floppy disk days.
Decrypting requires knowing the key, and then knowing how to find the formula inside,
Which anyone with a disassembler can do easily.
and then knowing the decompression routine.
Again, you have the program, you have the routine. The government would not have any problem with this at all.
This is the method that the Feds are deathly afraid of.
No, they’re probably more afraid of things like
this.
Coming from a country that doesn’t have freedom of speech or expressions and having a government that doesn’t care much for its citiziens, I can support what the US government is doing.
Your government that doesn’t care much for its citizens and curtails your freedom of speech and expression likely started down that path exactly how the US is going down it now.
I actually feel safe that they are working for my interests and keeping this country safe.
Curtailing your privacy and liberty is not “working for your interests.” Suspending habeas corpus and legalizing torture is not “working for your interests.” The government, like any large group of people with power, is seeking to fulfill its own interests.
I’m sure the British rulers of the Colonies also felt that they were serving their citizens’ best interests as well.
I see these surveilance as not something that impedes on my privacy but as a protective measure…
Then you’ll be fine with mandatory video cameras in your home, and with the government reading all your mail?
after 9/11, it seems to me that these work are very important to protecting people here.
If we suspend liberties because of 9/11, the terrorists have already gotten exactly what they wanted. They’ve gotten terror, and they’ve gotten panic. This is what they thrive on.
Unless I have something to hide, I wouldn’t have much worries that they are looking through what I’ve sent.
What happens when you write that you aren’t happy with the job your congressman is doing, and you suddenly find yourself disenfranchised? Or you mention in a letter to your wife that you aren’t particularly fond of your boss, and the governement comes to you and threatens to reveal this letter to your boss unless you do some work for them,
pro bono? Would that cause you to worry?
This is just my opinion but I have to say I feel protected and safe and have a voice here thanks to our government…
You’re more in danger from your own government now than you were five years ago. Five years ago, the government could never legally lock you up and throw away the key. Today, it can. Five years ago, the government could never legally waterboard you and torture you, and then use your coerced confession as evidence in a military tribunal; now it can.
and I would do my best to make sure everyone here has it too.
History has shown that governments with unchecked power pose far more danger to their citizens than any group of private individuals, no matter how angry they are.
Jeremy