Two high-ranking Secret Service officers serviceThe UK's GCHQ have detailed how they believe authorities could access encrypted end-to-end communications.
The study was written by the National Cyber Security Center's technical director (National Cyber Security Centre) Ian Levy and GCHQ's Technical Director of Cryptanalysis Crispin Robinson and claims that every end-to-end encryption it can be fully functional, but law enforcement has access.
"It is relatively easy for a service provider to silently add a participant to a group discussion or call," the authors report.
“The service provider usually controls the system identity and thus decides who is who and which machines will have access to participate in a conversation or a call”.
The study's authors say such a solution is no more annoying than the telephone surveillance used in the last century, and that their solution would not "weaken end-to-end encryption."
Their idea that developed in Lawfare did not like Edward Snowden at all who called it "absolute madness" on Twitter.
"The British government wants companies to poison their customers' private conversations by secretly adding the government as a third party, which means that anyone on your friends list could be a spy," said Edward Snowden.
"There could be no trust through the mediation of the company."
Absolute madness: the British government wants companies to poison their customers' private conversations by secretly adding the government as a third party, meaning anyone on your friend list would become “your friend plus a spy.” No company-mediated identity could be trusted.
The GCHQ he revealed also how he chooses security flaws that inform technology companies and added that he does not notify these companies about all the vulnerabilities he discovers.
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