In an essay on the current justification for authorities in the EU and around the globe seeking to break end-to-end-encryption to fight child sexual abuse and exploitation, researcher Susan Landau discusses the issue in historical context, and explains why breaking encryption leads us in the wrong direction.
“Think differently. Think long term. Think about protecting the privacy and security of all members of society—children and adults alike. By failing to consider the big picture, the U.K. Online Safety Act has taken a dangerous, short-term approach to a complex societal problem. The EU and U.S. have the chance to avoid the U.K.’s folly; they should do so. The EU proposal and the U.S. bills are not sensible ways to approach the public policy concerns of online abetting of CSAE [Child Sexual Abuse and Exploitation]. Nor are these reasonable approaches in view of the cyber threats our society faces. The bills should be abandoned, and we should pursue other ways of protecting both children and adults.”
[Edit typo.]
I’m pro encryption, but journalism should not call somebody a scientist in the title unless the subject they’re talking about has a falsifiable hypothesis and empirical evidence.
Scientist says chocolate is the best flavor of ice cream. And then there’s no study, just somebody’s opinion, a person who has on occasion done science before.
The entire point of putting that title on the person in the headline is to add the air of authority. It’s an appeal to authority. Which scientists will tell you is not science.
Scientist says it’s technically correct, but misleading.
I disagree with the specifics of what you’re saying but not the point. She is a scientist, she’s speaking her opinion sure, but it’s an opinion based on hundreds of thousands of hours in a field. Identify her as a scientist and an expert.
But, that doesn’t mean you’re wholly wrong. It would be beneficial to us all of journalists came up with a better mechanism to sort learned opinion from study outcome. Some publications are good at this, but on the whole, whether you grock the source of the data from the headline is wildly variable.
I do however have one last point. The headline isn’t the article. You aren’t meant to get all the nuances of an article from the headline, otherwise we wouldn’t call it a headline, it would be the article itself. There comes a point where, so long as the headline writer isn’t deliberately disingenuous, it falls to the reader to follow up on their questions by reading the other 98% of the information in front of them.
[Edit: Misgendered the scientist in question, sleepy brain + skim reading == derp]
@jet @Jaccident
Yes, that’s the whole thing. Although I get @jet’s point, we can’t tell everything in the title, and you’ll need to name the original writer by her profession, even if she expresses her opinion. That’s why I wrote “essay” in the body’s text first sentence. (But I’m open to edit the headline, that’s not the point, just provide a proposal.)
Information theory is a science
Cool! Can you point out the falsifiable hypothesis, and the experiment conducted in this article?
This is grounded in information theory. Without a perfect CONTEXT AWARE classifier (i.e. not one that will report you for sending your family doctor a photo of your child’s medical condition) with perfect integrity protection it’s impossible to solve. All other solutions means it either can be evaded or that it can be abused to spy on innocent people. No circumvention of this basic fact is possible.
Pointing out opinions, and flaws of a plan according to opinions is useful. And it’s a good exercise. But it’s not science.
Getting access to the world’s data, isn’t about protecting anybody, it’s about getting access to the data, the excuses just an excuse. But that’s just my opinion.
And getting access to all that data is dangerous and will lead to abuses
And instead of making us safer from crime it will make us less safe from crime
https://cyberhoot.com/blog/fake-emergency-search-warrants-becoming-a-problem/
https://krebsonsecurity.com/2022/03/fake-emergency-search-warrants-draw-scrutiny-from-capitol-hill/
The science of information theory has pointed out what properties are possible and not possible from these systems. From there, areas like sociology has pointed out the social consequences. And those consequences are bad according to the vast majority of people.
The only opinion here is if it’s good or bad to increase risks of harm (and what counts as harm, but that’s not the issue at hand). And I say that’s bad.