Arab Times

Encryption row spotlights fears

Security, privacy

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WASHINGTON, April 27, (AFP): Has encryption technology given the bad guys a way to operate in the dark? Or has the new tech age gifted law enforcemen­t with unpreceden­ted surveillan­ce powers?

A weeks-long showdown between the FBI and Apple ended last month without a clear winner, but the debate rages on over government access to encrypted data in an era of evolving mobile technology.

Some worry new forms of encryption are creating dark corners for criminals and terrorists to conspire in secret, while others contend just the opposite -- that it has led to a golden age for snooping on citizens.

On both sides, the passions run deep.

The US government dropped its legal battle to compel Apple to help unlock an iPhone used by one of the shooters in the December killing rampage in San Bernardino, California, after saying it had found a means to do so without Apple’s help.

Snowden

Protection

But those involved say it’s only a matter of time before a new case emerges which tests the boundaries of law enforcemen­t and data protection.

“This has created one of the most difficult policy dilemmas of the digital age, as encryption both improves security for consumers and businesses and makes it harder for government­s to protect them from other threats,” said a policy paper from the Informatio­n Technology and Innovation Foundation, a Washington think tank.

“There is no way to square this circle, so any choice will come with tradeoffs.”

For years the debate on encryption, privacy and security had been simmering, amid warnings from the FBI and others that law enforcemen­t was “going dark” in an age of new mobile technology, where traditiona­l tools like wiretaps don’t always work and wrongdoers can increasing­ly operate unseen.

But revelation­s from former US intelligen­ce contractor Edward Snowden stoked fears that electronic surveillan­ce has on the contrary become pervasive and in some cases spun out of control.

Moves by Apple and Google to step up encryption, making it impossible for the companies themselves to use “keys” to unlock data, made the debate all the more urgent.

Detection

So did reports that attackers in last November’s Paris massacre may have used encrypted communicat­ions to avoid detection.

More recently, WhatsApp said it had implemente­d “end to end encryption” that would allow only those sending and receiving messages to view the content.

“No one can see inside that message. Not cybercrimi­nals. Not hackers. Not oppressive regimes. Not even us,” said the Facebook-owned messaging service with a billion users worldwide.

Its move has drawn fierce criticism, with US Senator Tom Cotton calling it “an open invitation to terrorists, drug dealers, and sexual predators to use WhatsApp’s services to endanger the American people.”

David Bitkower, a senior official in the Justice Department criminal division, notes a tendency “to understate the risks to public safety from the implementa­tion of warrant-proof encryption” -- a term cited by the FBI and others to describe encryption so tough that investigat­ors cannot access data with a court order.

Bitkower, speaking at an ITIF forum, argued that it’s not clear “end to end” encryption will make people safer than prior generation­s, when companies stored data that could be requested under court order.

“It’s very important to recognize there are tradeoffs to be made,” he told the forum.

FBI director James Comey also warned of dangers from these new tools.

“I love strong encryption. It protects us in so many ways from bad people,” he told a group of students in Ohio recently.

“Many of us like the idea of a storage space in our lives that no one can get into. But it takes us to a place -- absolute privacy -- that we have not been to before ... No matter how you feel about it, you have to understand there are costs to this new world.”

The next key chapter in the debate is set to play out in Congress, where a proposal that would require tech firms to enable law enforcemen­t access has been drafted. Similar measures are under considerat­ion in Britain, France and other countries.

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