Web Inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee Slams UK and US Net Plans (bbc.com) 48
The web's creator has attacked any UK plans to weaken encryption and promised to battle any moves by the Trump administration to weaken net neutrality. From a report on BBC: Sir Tim Berners-Lee was speaking to the BBC following the news that he has been given the Turing Award. It is sometimes known as the Nobel Prize of computing. Sir Tim said moves to undermine encryption would be a "bad idea" and represent a massive security breach. Home Secretary Amber Rudd has said there should be no safe space for terrorists to be able to communicate online. But Sir Tim said giving the authorities a key to unlock coded messages would have serious consequences. "Now I know that if you're trying to catch terrorists it's really tempting to demand to be able to break all that encryption but if you break that encryption then guess what -- so could other people and guess what -- they may end up getting better at it than you are," he said. Sir Tim also criticised moves by legislators on both sides of the Atlantic, which he sees as an assault on the privacy of web users. He attacked the UK's recent Investigatory Powers Act, which he had criticised when it went through Parliament: "The idea that all ISPs should be required to spy on citizens and hold the data for six months is appalling." In the United States he is concerned that the principle of net neutrality, which treats all internet traffic equally, could be watered down by the Trump administration and the Federal Communications Commission. "If the FCC does move to reduce net neutrality I will fight it as hard as I can," he vowed.
Pot meet Kettle (Score:1)
He wants his DRM system, US wants corps to profit and UK wants to spy.
Film @ 11, I guess.
Re: (Score:1)
Yes because giving companies the option to use DRM on their content is totally the same as the loss of all security and privacy.
Sure, put backdoors in encryption, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
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This needs to be modded up dammit...
Re: He did not invent the web (Score:3, Insightful)
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Back to the 90s (Score:1)
Does anyone get deja vu that this is a repeat of the whole 'clipper chip' justification without the hardware...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clipper_chip for the uninitiated.
MY GOD! (Score:2)
My God! They don't have 10,000 gigabit fibre to every homeless tent!
Welcome to the real world.
Eventually we all become irrelevant (Score:1)
Ah yes, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the new champion of DRM is telling us what is best for ourselves.
It's time that he fades gracefully from public before he embarrasses his legacy further.
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It's hard to do DRM with easily-breakable encryption.
Get out of Jail free card (Score:3)
So with a back door, I assume it will be up to the government to PROVE that any files, encrypted or otherwise, were not put there by some 3rd party, that the back door has not been used.
Seems like a get out of jail free card with the use of a good lawyer.
Oh, and please give over the source code so my defence team can see how the backdoor works so we can check if it has been used.
Backdoor = lots of people getting off because the LEOs don't want to spill the beans about the back door, seems self defeating to me.
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I hate to have to say this, but "The courts will save us!" is the fool's cry. It rarely works out.
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The secret became more valuable than the prosecution.
A simple question... (Score:1)
What's to stop the bad guys from just using another encryption scheme without backdoors built into it?
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Ignoring, you know, the entire first-world outside the USA.
Winner of the Turing Award (Score:3)
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So many AC comments labouring the point that yes, TBL was in favour of 'EME'. Is it the same AC, I wonder?
Not very well-phrased, TBL (Score:2)
As I posted here: [slashdot.org] Seems to me that TBL could have done a much better job phrasing the point that backdoors might be intended only for government use, but bad guys always find a way to use them to break security systems wide open.
What is the person on the street really going to make of "they may end up getting better at it than you are"?
He could have pointed to a physical-world analogy: the TSA 'master keys' that can open all sorts of luggage padlocks [wired.com]. For a while, only the government had them. Today, anyon