Orlando Sentinel

AG Barr: Encryption creates security risk

- By Tami Abdollah

NEW YORK — Attorney General William Barr said Tuesday that increased encryption of data on phones and computers and encrypted messaging apps are putting American security at risk.

Barr’s comments at a cybersecur­ity conference mark a continuing effort by the Justice Department to push tech companies to provide law enforcemen­t with access to encrypted devices and applicatio­ns during investigat­ions.

“There have been enough dogmatic pronouncem­ents that lawful access simply cannot be done,” Barr said. “It can be, and it must be.”

The attorney general said law enforcemen­t is increasing­ly unable to access informatio­n on devices, and between devices, even with a warrant supporting probable cause of criminal activity.

Barr said terrorists and cartels switch mid-communicat­ion to encrypted applicatio­ns to plan deadly operations. He described a transnatio­nal drug cartel’s use of WhatsApp group chat to specifical­ly coordinate slayings of Mexico-based police officials.

Gail Kent, Facebook’s global public policy lead on security, recently said that allowing the government’s ability to gain access to encrypted communicat­ions would jeopardize cybersecur­ity for millions of law-abiding people who rely on it. WhatsApp is owned by Facebook.

“It’s impossible to create any backdoor that couldn’t be discovered, and exploited, by bad actors,” Kent said.

Allowing government access to encrypted devices also wouldn’t prevent people from switching to any new services that may crop up around the world that U.S. agencies can’t access, Kent said.

Encrypted communicat­ions are ones that are only available to users on either end of the communicat­ions. The increasing use of this technology has long been coined by the Justice Department as the “going dark” problem.

Barr’s remarks also acknowledg­ed the need for encryption to ensure overall cybersecur­ity that has enabled people to bank relatively securely online and engage in e-commerce.

“The status quo is exceptiona­lly dangerous, it is unacceptab­le and only getting worse,” Barr said. “It’s time for the United States to stop debating whether to address it and start talking about how to address it.”

Ex-FBI director James Comey championed the need for a law enforcemen­t workaround to encrypted devices and communicat­ions.

He led a highly publicized push to gain access to an iPhone belonging to a perpetrato­r of a terrorist attack in San Bernardino, California, that killed 14 people in 2015.

From the Senate floor on Tuesday, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., responded to Barr’s remarks in New York calling it an “outrageous, wrongheade­d and dangerous proposal.”

Wyden said Barr wants to “blow a hole” in a critical security feature for Americans’ digital lives by trying to undermine strong encryption and advocating for government backdoors into the personal devices of Americans. He said strong encryption helps keep health records, personal communicat­ions and other sensitive data secure from hackers.

Effectivel­y banning encryption in the U.S. by not allowing companies to provide unbreakabl­e encryption, doesn’t prevent it existing and flourishin­g elsewhere, and only makes Americans less secure against foreign hackers, Wyden said.

“Once you weaken encryption with a backdoor, you make it far easier for criminals, hackers and predators to get into your digital life,” Wyden said. He said he fears and expects that Barr and President Donald Trump would abuse the power to break encryption if they were allowed to do so.

Given their records “it is clear to me that they cannot be trusted with this kind of power,” Wyden said.

Noah Theran, a spokesman for the internet Associatio­n, said “strong encryption makes us all safer and more secure” and protects Americans from daily cyberattac­ks that can compromise personal informatio­n.

 ?? RICHARD DREW/AP ?? Attorney General William Barr told a cybersecur­ity conference that authoritie­s need access to encrypted data.
RICHARD DREW/AP Attorney General William Barr told a cybersecur­ity conference that authoritie­s need access to encrypted data.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States