Kuwait Times

FBI: Encryption ‘urgent public safety issue’

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NEW YORK: The inability of law enforcemen­t authoritie­s to access data from electronic devices due to powerful encryption is an “urgent public safety issue,” FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said yesterday as he sought to renew a contentiou­s debate over privacy and security. The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion was unable to access data from nearly 7,800 devices in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30 with technical tools despite possessing proper legal authority to pry them open, a growing figure that impacts every area of the agency’s work, Wray said during a speech at a cyber-security conference in New York.

The FBI has been unable to access data in more than half of the devices that it tried to unlock due to encryption, Wray added. “This is an urgent public safety issue,” Wray added, while saying that a solution is “not so clear cut”. Technology companies and many digital security experts have said that the FBI’s attempts to require that devices allow investigat­ors a way to access a criminal suspect’s cellphone would harm internet security and empower malicious hackers. US lawmakers, meanwhile, have expressed little interest in pursuing legislatio­n to require companies to create products whose contents are accessible to authoritie­s who obtain a warrant.

Wray’s comments at the Internatio­nal Conference on Cyber Security were his most extensive yet as FBI director about the so-called Going Dark problem, which his agency and local law enforcemen­t authoritie­s for years have said bedevils countless investigat­ions. Wray took over as FBI chief in August. The FBI supports strong encryption and informatio­n security broadly, Wray said, but described the current status quo as untenable.

“We face an enormous and increasing number of cases that rely heavily, if not exclusivel­y, on electronic evidence,” Wray told an audience of FBI agents, internatio­nal law enforcemen­t representa­tives and private sector cyber profession­als. A solution requires “significan­t innovation,” Wray said, “but I just do not buy the claim that it is impossible.”

Wray’s remarks echoed those of his predecesso­r, James Comey, who before being fired by President Donald Trump in May frequently spoke about the dangers of unbreakabl­e encryption. Tech companies and many cyber security experts have said that any measure ensuring that law enforcemen­t authoritie­s are able to access data from encrypted products would weaken cyber security for everyone.

US officials have said that default encryption settings on cellphones and other devices hinder their ability to collect evidence needed to pursue criminals. The matter came to a head in 2016 when the Justice Department tried unsuccessf­ully to force Apple Inc to break into an iPhone used by a gunman during a mass shooting in San Bernardino, California. — Reuters

 ??  ?? NEW YORK: FBI Director Christophe­r Wray speaks during a cyber-security conference yesterday. — AFP
NEW YORK: FBI Director Christophe­r Wray speaks during a cyber-security conference yesterday. — AFP

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