''Can
We Have All The Cryptography Keys Please?''
British Prime Minister David Cameron is
widely reported to be in the United States, amongst other reasons, to
request 100% intelligence sharing on issues of cryptography.
There is no doubt that
secure communications are an invaluable tool in the hands of anyone.
Cryptography, is
invaluable for, say, dissidents in North Korea to let the outside
world know what is happening without being shot as spies.
I recall many years ago visiting a
country within the sphere of influence of the former Soviet Union.
The computer
connection for the outside world was never working at the hotel and likewise at all the other hotels.
Excuses were always
made why it was 'OUT OF ORDER' – despite my polite requests to see
if I could look at and possibly fix one of the computers – which
offers were always politely declined.
I recall from history
books when intelligence sharing was at a high level after World War
II between the U.S. and Great Britain. Little did most Americans
know that the British Secret Service (MI6) was riddled with Soviet
spies and there was hardly anything the Soviet Union was unaware of
as soon at it landed on a British desk anywhere in the world.
Today there is no
reason not to think that there are many Edward Snowdens well
placed within many countries who would relish the thought of
compromising commercial intelligence to, say for example, China and
Russia.
For the U.S. to order
cryptography companies to cooperate with foreign intelligence
services – or indeed for the NSA to share all it's keys with
allies– would be sheer madness – and I have no doubt, from
historical precedents, would be a death sentence for dissidents in
many different parts of the world as details of their online
activities became available to their governments.
The truth of the
matter is that cryptography is more valuable as a business tool than
it is for terrorists.
More countries
(especially totalitarian) worldwide are privately more up in arms
about their inabilities to read secure citizens and business
communications than they ever were about terrorism. Countries such
as China and Russia are having to invest such vast resources simply
into codebreaking where the algorithms have become so complex
(quantum genetic algorithms and intelligent molecular genetic systems for example) to make their cracking very
time consuming , very costly and way beyond the reach of small
nations.
You recall how 9/11
was used by so many diverse U.S. government departments to 'snoop' on
everyone, worldwide?
'Fishing' expeditions and 'trawling' became the order of the day.
The effects of such
are still being felt in terms of new legislation, worldwide, to this
very day.
Some might even argue
that a new financial system was evolving during the course of
2002-2006 which would have profound effects on world economies later
on.
So too today this
issue of secure communications is being used to open the floodgates
to every type of intrusion of privacy.
My concern is more the
fact that such information sharing by the NSA will most certainly
result in this information yet again ending up in the hands of the
very totalitarian regimes and business competitors – China and
Russia - but even more serious is that dissidents living under such regimes
will have absolutely nowhere to hide nor to communicate with the
outside world as none will feel safe and secure online.
The U.S. government has 'betrayed' so many of it's allies recently (see my previous blog) is yet another betrayal just around the corner?
Very soon the U.S. will have not a single ally (or to be more precise, interest) it can trust as all will fear being 'sold out' or 'outed' 'at the drop of a hat'.
The U.S. government has 'betrayed' so many of it's allies recently (see my previous blog) is yet another betrayal just around the corner?
Very soon the U.S. will have not a single ally (or to be more precise, interest) it can trust as all will fear being 'sold out' or 'outed' 'at the drop of a hat'.
©Patrick
Emek, 2015
Many countries are developing their own 'autonomous' and 'firewalled' internet and intranet systems completely shielded or configured with narrow ports of entry and exit. North Korea is one of such countries. I have chosen it in this blog purely as an example of the dilemma which dissidents worldwide face.
https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/bitstream/handle/10919/11283/CJRieserVTPhDEEDissertation101804.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y