Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 17,455
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
It isn't a matter of debate. It's a matter of fact. Locks are security measures designed to keep someone physically away from a thing. It is an actual block in the path to keep an actual thing out of hand.You do realize that asserting something repeatedly doesn't automatically make it true, right? Despite what Fox News thinks.How is locking a closet door when the Police have a warrant protected by the Fifth Amendment?I already explained that it already exists in the form of the fifth. This is only a minor problem to the police state though as that the judges who rule on it think encryption is a lock.The 14th is about SCOTUS having authority to deal with the issue state by state.
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You started a thread on the Constitution and didn't want it to go into Constitution interpretation?Fuck. This tread went exactly where I didn't want to go. Constitution interpretation.
God damn it! I wanted to talk about it raining outside, not the weather.
I'm sloppy when I start threads. I need to work on that. Here is my revised title: Should citizens of any country (and specifically the US) have an inalienable right to have strong crypto and security tools.
The 2nd amendment was me just thinking up random shit. I've read ideas even more crazy in Law Review Journals. I wonder if the Federalist Society has thought of this? Maye I'll send 'em a note. If the NRA, The Federalist Society, and libertarians all got together I bet they could take the idea push it fairly far.
Repeat after me until you internalize this fact: 'encryption is not a lock'.
Encryption is not a lock.
Encryption is not a lock.
Encryption is not a lock.
Are you citing case law here that devulging passwords is protected under the Fifth Amendment, according to the Supreme Court? If it is, it is, and I can readily accept that.The fifth protects you from explaining the meaning of any thing that might incriminate you. It protects you from having to say WHY you were in the alley at 5 AM covered with blood. It protects you from having to explain the stones in your pocket. It protects you from having to point out the line on your books that is code for 'this was spent on hookers'.
I take that to mean the answer to my above question is no. I'm not trying to be snippy. The law is whatever the law is perceived to mean.Why should this protection not extend to allowing a person to refuse to explain data on a hard drive?
Until the Supreme Court says otherwise, the State will assume the most power possible and will insist that you have to decrypt your data.They have an entitlement to the data as it is, but not to its meaning.
How is allowing access to your home which has stolen goods in it not self-incrimination but divulging a password is? I could ponder, if the officers find a bunch of keys, you are probably not required to say what they are for. You can just not talk. So perhaps we are looking at a similarity, and you aren't required to put forth a password.
A lock can be cut. A block can be moved. The only thing keeping a person from getting the thing in hand is effort.
Encryption is not such a thing. No amount of effort, no period of waiting, no fear of effort can ever complete the meaning of something that has been perfectly encrypted. In fact something encrypted as so literally has no meaning. It is not data, it's undistinguishable from randomness. It IS randomness. It has no meaning. The meaning has been removed. Depending on the string and algorithm used to decrypt the message, literally ANY message of that specific length may be produced.
The word 'aardvark' could, similarly, refer to any thing in the universe, or nothing at all. It is nonsense without some context. An encryption's decryption phrase is not a key, it is a context. It is literally a context in which the message makes sense. Any request for that context is litteraly a request for the context of the data to be explained, as much as a request for the context of any other thing, it ought be allowed to be withheld if it is incriminating.
You ought not just change the rules when the context you wish to have reveals a particularly large piece of information.
At that point the protection of a person to not self-incriminate is arbitrary. When is a piece of context 'significant' enough to compel (torture) from a victim?