I work chiefly in two areas of tech policy: voting, where new hard problems keep coming up, and surveillance, where we mostly just have the same stupid argument over and over.https://twitter.com/techdirt/status/1022159595735863297 …
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Securing things is freaking HARD. We don't know how to do it reliably even without backdoors. Come talk to us when massive data breaches stop being regular events and then MAYBE we'll be ready to discuss backdoors. Until then, we're busy trying to solve fundamental problems.
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"Why don't you focus on advances that would allow backdoors?" We ARE. The reason we can't do secure backdoors are largely the same reasons we can't do security in general at scale. This is something armies of specialists have been working on for literally decades.
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Replying to @jdormansteele @mattblaze
Secure systems are what would “allow backdoors.” Everyone is trying to build secure systems, but not necessarily with the goal of allowing backdoors.
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A system with a backdoor is insecure by definition because someone who's not supposed to has access.
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I don’t disagree. Just providing my interpretation of prior tweets.
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Yes, just pointing out how there are some messed-up definitions (or disingenuous hand-waving away the need for definitions) being flung around in this domain.
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