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Comey: Conversati­ons about encryption issue still needed

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Gov’t and tech industry must settle their difference­s over encryption before ‘something terrible happens’ — FBI chief

NEW YORK—FBI Director James Comey said government and the tech industry need to sort out their difference­s over encryption before “something terrible happens” that would make productive conversati­ons impossible.

Acknowledg­ing that talks will probably have to wait until after a new president takes office next year, Comey said that it’s up to the American people — not the FBI or the tech companies — to decide how to resolve the issue.

But before making that decision, people need to understand the cost of absolute privacy.

“At some point encryption is going to figure into a major event in this country,” Comey said.

“We’ve got to have this conversati­on before that happens, because after that, the time for thoughtful reflection will be significan­tly reduced.”

For its part, Comey said the FBI is collecting encryption-relat- ed data from its cases, with the expectatio­n that the debate will resurface next year. For example, in the first half of this fiscal year, which ran from October to March, Comey said the FBI received 4,000 smartphone­s and had no way of getting into 500 of them, because of the encryption involved.

Comey made the comments on Tuesday at the Internatio­nal Conference on Cyber Security in New York, an event jointly held by the FBI and Fordham University.

He added that encryption remains a tough issue, because it involves a conflict between the key American values of privacy and security.

“Nobody has the high ground. Nobody is the Devil,” he said. “In this conversati­on, we all share the same values.”

The encryption debate took center stage earlier this year after the FBI demanded that Apple Inc. help it access a locked iPhone used by one of the attackers in December’s shootings in San Bernardino, California, which left 14 people dead.

Apple, backed by the vast majority of the tech industry, vowed a court fight, saying that doing so would leave its phones inherently insecure and vulnerable to similar future requests from the US and other government­s, but the matter was ultimately dropped after a third-party provided the FBI with a way to access the phone’s informatio­n.

Comey said Tuesday that he would have preferred that the matter be handled privately, but understood Apple’s need to litigate the matter. (AP)

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