Why is that when the government says "But, but computer!" judges abandon common sense and case law. Even when the tables are turned there is still an amazing amount of techno-ignorance in the process. Consider the long ago (tech time anyway) prosecution of Microsoft. The idiots in charge completely ignored their success with IBM and attacked via the browser vector. Andrew Schulman at the time of pre-trial investigation had three books entitled Undocumented this that and the other thing. Each should have been a successful blueprint in terms of anti competitive behavior. Had this and the browser been part of their war chest I think the result would have been considerably stronger (i.e. the bust them apart goal would have been reached) with a appropriately more useful public result. <end_of_slightly_off_topic_rant/>
rayiner|12 years ago
It's exactly the opposite. It's technologists that say "but, but computer!" and demand special treatment for computers are involved.[1] Judges generally treat computers in terms of real-world analogies to concrete things, and these analogies often clash with idealistic notions held by technologists.
This case is actually an excellent example of that phenomenon. I've heard people say that their laptop/phone/etc is an "extension of their mind" or something to that effect. Because the 5th amendment only applies to testimonial incrimination (because of the use of the word "witness" in the text of the 5th), you need that nexus to the mind in order to justify concluding that forcing someone to give up an encryption key is equivalent to forcing them to testify against themselves.
The more obvious (to me, anyway) analogy is that a laptop/phone is like a backpack or briefcase. I keep documents, photos, notes, etc, in my laptop just as I would keep them in a briefcase. Well, under the case law it is not prohibited under the 5th amendment to force someone to unlock a briefcase! That act has no nexus with a person's internal thoughts and is thus not testimonial.
[1] Other examples include various CFAA-related things. Nobody would defend just walking into peoples' houses and saying "hey, your locks suck!" but defend analogous behavior with regard to computer security all the time. You also see it in the e-mail context. E.g. most people who complain about the government possibly subpoenaing e-mails they store on Google's servers would not see the problem with the government subpoenaing Enron's records they stored at their accounts' premises. Technologists generally want to ignore the obvious physical analogies in favor of ones based on how they perceive the electronic world (i.e. it's "my personal documents" even though it's stored on a cloud and dozens of engineers and sysadmins have access to them).
kinghajj|12 years ago
betterunix|12 years ago
I can think of a few reasons:
(1) My understanding of the legal theory is that computers are considered to increase the capabilities of the population; hence, the government's power to enforce the law must also be increased. Consider a car analogy: you must display visible license plates to identify your vehicle whenever it is on the road, yet that was never required for horses, carriages, bicycles, or any previous mode of transportation. Likewise with computers: where previously you might have been able to whisper a secret to someone a foot away from you, now you can secretly communicate with someone across thousands of miles.
(2) It is assumed that the spirit of the law must be upheld. If the police are legally allowed to wiretap a suspect as part of an investigation, then encryption must not be allowed to get in the way of that. In other words, technology must not defeat the law, even in spirit.
(3) Conservative views of technology: quite a few judges are still of the opinion that personal computers are just fancy cable boxes, and so doing anything that violates the will of service providers or governments is "abuse." Entering a URL manually is considered to be vastly different from writing a script to generate and fetch URLs automatically, even if there is no technical difference. If you discover that your phone lets you make a free long distance call when you whistle into it, you are a criminal; if you discover that a web server will give you anyone's account number when you enter the right URL, well, you're an even worse criminal.
(4) Ignorance of what is actually possible with computers. See e.g. how Kevin Mitnick was treated when prosecutors claimed he could whistle into a phone line and thus launch a nuclear strike.
ds9|12 years ago
It is precisely this fact which makes the current "going dark" argument an example of overreaching and mendacious, bad-faith deceptive rhetoric: encryption does not take away any powers the police formerly had; to the contrary, the demand for decryption goes far beyond traditional wiretapping principles.
AnthonyMouse|12 years ago
The obvious counterargument is that it would have to be a two way street or you would have endlessly expanding government powers. Thus, if computers increase the capability of law enforcement (e.g. to wiretap at scale or search recorded communications without individual law enforcement officials having to listen to them) then the individual's rights against government surveillance must also be increased.
Moreover, if the argument is that we need to maintain the historical balance between privacy and law enforcement interests then even the existing powers of law enforcement go too far, because the technology available to law enforcement officials when the amendments in the Bill of Rights were adopted didn't allow real-time communication between individuals to be recorded whatsoever.
And I have to imagine a lawyer would ask what case establishes this legal theory of government automatically gaining new powers as a result of technological advances, because I'm not aware of any such precedent.
> Consider a car analogy: you must display visible license plates to identify your vehicle whenever it is on the road, yet that was never required for horses, carriages, bicycles, or any previous mode of transportation.
It is easy to draw a distinction between cars and computers because the reason we require identification for cars is not that they are more powerful than bicycles etc., it is that they are more dangerous. Computers, by contrast, are for the most part not dangerous at all. No innocent bystanders are killed when someone uses the internet while intoxicated. Moreover, we can see how the distinction plays out with automobiles, because anyone can use mass transit anonymously, which is clearly much more powerful than a bicycle in rapidly getting you from here to there, but also not very dangerous.
> It is assumed that the spirit of the law must be upheld. If the police are legally allowed to wiretap a suspect as part of an investigation, then encryption must not be allowed to get in the way of that. In other words, technology must not defeat the law, even in spirit.
I'm not seeing any coherent principle in this argument. If the police are legally allowed to stand in the street and look at you through the window when you are standing in your living room, then a curtain "must not be allowed to get in the way of that"?
It seems obvious that just because the use of a technology makes the jobs of law enforcement more difficult doesn't mean that people have no right to use the technology.
And it is also quite beside the point, because I don't think anyone is making the argument that no one can use the specific technology (e.g. encryption), the question is rather whether someone who has already used it can be compelled to reveal the secrets against his will.
unknown|12 years ago
[deleted]
tedunangst|12 years ago
saraid216|12 years ago
Honestly, the EFF is the only entity that it is even bothering to do something about this.
Keep this in mind when computer interface design is built towards making sure the user doesn't need to understand what's happening. It's part of it.
IceyEC|12 years ago