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RIM, Nokia, and Apple provides Indian government with backdoor to their OSes?

post #1 of 3
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a relatively new post; neither (re)confirmed nor denied by other sources, yet
https://twitter.com/#!/csoghoian/sta...24871009468416

person who wrote the tweet http://www.dubfire.net/
ZDNet picked up the story two days ago http://www.zdnet.com/blog/india/have...lular-comm/838
post #2 of 3
Quote:
Originally Posted by emacs72 View Post

a relatively new post; neither (re)confirmed nor denied by other sources, yet
https://twitter.com/#!/csoghoian/sta...24871009468416

person who wrote the tweet http://www.dubfire.net/
ZDNet picked up the story two days ago http://www.zdnet.com/blog/india/have...lular-comm/838

It wouldn't be a huge surprise if true. There's been numerous issues around the world when mobile companies have attempted to close their users communications to governments. BB in particular has had to cave to some authorities in the Mideast, and perhaps India too, tho I can''t remember for certain.

Anyone who thinks their mobile activities, emails, texts and phone calls can't be monitored by some government agency with cooperation from the providers like Apple, RIM, Nokia, telcos, etc, isn't facing reality

EDIT: Yes, India is one of those that insists it's intelligence agency has access to communications of mobile devices sold in the country.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-0...ification.html

melior diabolus quem scies

"No theatrics and no more personal attacks, just stick to the logic and tell me why I don't have any argument ~ Jragosta/2012

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melior diabolus quem scies

"No theatrics and no more personal attacks, just stick to the logic and tell me why I don't have any argument ~ Jragosta/2012

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post #3 of 3
I think we need to remember what a back door is. It is secret access hidden from the world. These are governments saying give us explicit access to the network stream content. It is very front door, and just illustrates the differences in what amount of privacy a government allows its citizens.

This is about explicitly allowing "wiretaps" to be able to access unencrypted or decryption of network streams. Seeing as more apps/functionality are implementing encryption for privacy, that becomes a problem for governments that don't believe that encryption privacy a legal right. So rather than a back door, this will ensure there is some way for the government to access decryption keys.

Unfortunately, as soon as that is allowed in software for those privacy-adverse governments, basic security can potentially break to make that same capability available to other governments and malicious criminals.
Hiro's Hall of Shame ignore list: Tulkas -- because we know he wasn't born dumb.
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Hiro's Hall of Shame ignore list: Tulkas -- because we know he wasn't born dumb.
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