国产视频

In Short

The #CryptoDebate is Coming: Are You Prepared?

When Apple and Google announced their plans to enable encryption by default on new iPhones and Android smartphones, they ignited a ferocious debate about whether this move was a victory for user privacy and data security or would put Americans at risk by depriving law enforcement of access to critical evidence. On Monday, 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute will give both sides an opportunity to make their case in a : 鈥淚s FBI 鈥楪oing Dark鈥 or in a Golden Age of Surveillance?鈥 (You can ). To shed more light on the issue, we鈥檝e put together a brief background on the debate and a bibliography of relevant articles, analyses & op-eds that have come out in since the Apple and Google announcements in September.

On one side, law enforcement advocates argue that Apple and Google鈥檚 move will exacerbate the so-called that they鈥檝e been complaining about for years, saying that the proliferation of new digital communications services and security features are frustrating investigators ability to get the evidence they need even when they have a lawful search warrant . The Attorney General and FBI Director James Comey have gone so far as to suggest that Congress may need to take action to force companies to redesign devices and online services products, so that government investigators can always access encrypted data or wiretap online communications when they have appropriate legal authority.

On the other side, technology and privacy advocates point out that smartphone encryption is good for cybersecurity and the U.S. tech economy. They argue that ensuring that law enforcement has a or some other means to access encrypted communications would undermine the overall security of these devices and the data stored on them. They also argue that such a move would put U.S. companies 鈥 which are still suffering in the wake of the NSA revelations 鈥 at a serious competitive disadvantage in the global technology marketplace. Finally, they argue that weakening security in this way is unnecessary because we already live in a where law enforcement investigators have access to more data than ever about us, our communications, and our movements than ever before.

At Monday afternoon鈥檚 debate here at 国产视频, former FBI Counsel will make the case for law enforcement鈥檚 interests. Weissmann served as the General Counsel for the FBI from 2011 to 2013, and is now a Senior Fellow at both the Center for Law and Security and the Center on the Administration of Criminal Law at New York University. Former White House Technology Policy czar will advocate for the other side, arguing for strong encryption without backdoors for law enforcement. Swire is currently a Professor of Law and Ethics at the Georgia Institute of Technology, and recently served on the President鈥檚 NSA review group. , who worked for over three years as the Chief Privacy and Civil Liberties Officer at the Justice Department before joining Wilkinson Barker Knauer LLP, will moderate.

For more details and to RSVP for the #cryptodebate, visit the . If you see something relevant that we missed in the bibliography, please email kehl@newamerica.org.

THE #CRYPTODEBATE BIBLIOGRAPHY

Download as a PDF
in reverse chronological order

Major announcements, statements, & general news coverage


鈥淛ames Comey, F.B.I. Director, Hints at Action as Cellphone Data is Locked鈥
David Sanger and Matt Apuzzo, The New York Times, October 16, 2014

鈥淕oing Dark: Are Technology, Privacy, and Public Safety on a Collision Course?鈥
Remarks of FBI Director James Comey at the Brookings Institution, October 16, 2014

鈥淔BI Director on Privacy, Electronic Surveillance鈥
60 Minutes, October 12, 2014

鈥淗older Urges Tech Companies to Leave Device Backdoors Open for Police鈥
Craig Timberg, The Washington Post, September 30, 2014

鈥淔BI Blasts Apple, Google for Locking Police Out of Phones鈥
Craig Timberg & Greg Miller, The Washington Post, September 25, 2014

鈥淣ewest Androids Will Join iPhones in Offering Default Encryption, Blocking Police鈥
Craig Timberg, The Washington Post, September 18, 2014

鈥淎pple Will No Longer Unlock Most iPhones, iPads for Police, Even With a Search Warrant鈥
Craig Timberg, The Washington Post, September 18, 2014

Original Apple Announcement, 鈥淎 message from Tim Cook about Apple鈥檚 commitment to your privacy.鈥
September 17, 2014

Pro-crypto analyses & op-eds, or news articles with a strong positive angle


鈥淒ebating the FBI on Smartphone Encryption鈥
Peter Swire, Future of Privacy Forum, November 10, 2014

鈥淚ssue Brief: A 鈥淏ackdoor鈥 to Encryption for Government Surveillance鈥
Center for Democracy & Technology, November 10, 2014

鈥淭he Law Needs To Keep Up With Technology But Not At The Expense of Civil Liberties鈥
Cameron Kerry, Forbes, November 6, 2014

“James Comey Again Demands Tech Companies Do As He Says And Grant The FBI Complete Access To Whatever It Wants鈥
Tim Cushing, TechDirt, November 6, 2014

鈥淔BI Holds Secret Meeting To Scare Congress Into Backdooring Phone Encryption鈥
Mike Masnick, TechDirt, October 31, 2014

鈥淭he 90s and Now: FBI and its Inability to Cope with Encryption鈥
Amul Kalia, Electronic Frontier Foundation, October 29, 2014

鈥淎pple and Google Are Right. The FBI Is Wrong. CHiPs Nude Photo Scandal Shows Why.鈥
Chris Weigant, Huffington Post, October 27, 2014

鈥淟ollipop or lockdown? Wha a secure mobile OS means for BYOD鈥
Brian Robinson, GCN, October 24, 2014

鈥淔BI Director Says Congress Will Fix Phone Encryption 鈥楶roblem;鈥 Congress Says 鈥楤ite Us鈥欌
Tim Cushing, TechDirt, October 23, 2014

鈥淚n Defense of Smart Phone Security by Default鈥
Annie Ant贸n, The Privacy Place, October 19, 2014

鈥淓verybody Knows FBI Director James Comey Is Wrong 国产视频 Encryption, Even The FBI鈥
Mike Masnick, TechDirt, October 20, 2014

鈥淔BI鈥檚 Comey Calls for Making Impenetrable Devices Unlawful鈥
Lauren Walker, Newsweek, October 18, 2014

鈥淓FF Response to FBI Director Comey鈥檚 Speech on Encryption鈥
Cindy Cohn, Electronic Frontier Foundation, October 17, 2014

鈥淒o FBI鈥檚 Examples Support Encryption Worries?鈥 (Answer: no.)
Jack Gillum and Eric Tucker, Associated Press, October 17, 2014

鈥淭he FBI Director鈥檚 Evidence Against Encryption is Pathetic鈥
Dan Froomkin and Nathas Vargas-Cooper, The Intercept, October 17, 2014

鈥淧rivacy Advocates Don’t Buy FBI’s Warning 国产视频 Encryption Practices鈥
Carrie Johnson, National Public Radio, October 17, 2014

鈥淔BI Director Comey calls on Congress to stop unlockable encryption. Good luck with that.鈥
Nancy Scola, Washington Post, October 17, 2014

(Notes Congressional wariness on issue, pro-crypto voices extensively quoted)

鈥淓ncryption Whiplash鈥
Tim Sparapani, Application Developers Alliance, October 17, 2014

鈥淭ales from Decrypt: FBI Wants Backdoors and Ability to Compel Access鈥
Jake Laperruque, Center for Democracy & Technology, October 17, 2014

鈥淭he FBI Is Dead Wrong: Apple鈥檚 Encryption Is Clearly in the Public Interest鈥
Ken Gude, Wired, October 17, 2014
Wired op-ed

鈥淣SA Surveillance Costs and the Crypto Debate: Tech Companies Compete on Privacy Post-Snowden鈥
Danielle Kehl and Kevin Bankston, 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute, October 17, 2014

鈥淭he government wants tech companies to give them a backdoor to your electronic life鈥
Trevor Timm, The Guardian, October 17, 2014

鈥淚n attack on encryption, FBI director ignores those who need protection鈥
Jon Healey, LA Times, October 17, 2014

鈥淔ool鈥檚 Gold: Data Security is Vital to End Users鈥
Amie Stepanovich, Access, October 16, 2014

鈥淔BI Director Continues His Attack On Technology, Privacy And Encryption鈥
Mike Masnick, TechDirt, October 16, 2014

鈥淓ven a Golden Key Can Be Stolen By Thieves: The Simple Facts of Apple鈥檚 Encryption Decision鈥
Jeremy Gillula, Electronic Frontier Foundation, October 10, 2014

鈥淐rypto Wars Redux: Why the FBI鈥檚 Desire to Unlock Your Private Life Must Be Resisted鈥
Cory Doctorow, The Guardian, October 9, 2014

鈥淎s Surveillance Reforms Languish, New Tools for Consumers to Protect Data Criticized by FBI鈥
Ed Black, Huffington Post, October 9, 2014

鈥淓ncryption Makes Us All Safer鈥
Nuala O鈥機onnor, Center for Democracy & Technology, October 8, 2014

鈥淲hat Default Phone Encryption Really Means for Law Enforcement鈥
Cohn, Cindy, Jeremy Gillula & Seth Schoen, Vice, October 8, 2014

鈥淎pple鈥檚 iPhone Encryption Is a Godsend, Even if Cops Hate It鈥
Kevin Poulson, Wired, October 8, 2014

鈥渋Phone Encryption and the Return of the Crypto Wars鈥
Bruce Schneier, Schneier on Security, October 6, 2014

鈥淓xperts Laud Changes to iPhone, Android Encryption鈥
Daniel Fisher, Threatpost, October 6, 2014

鈥淎merica鈥檚 huge iPhone lie: Why Apples is being accused of coddling child molesters鈥
Marcy Wheeler, Salon, October 6, 2014

鈥淪top the Hysteria Over Apple Encryption鈥
Bruce Schneier, CNN, October 4, 2014

鈥淎pple and Google are Helping to Protect our Privacy鈥
Nuala O鈥機onnor, The Washington Post, October 2, 2014

鈥淟aw Enforcement Has Declared War on Encryption It Can鈥檛 Break鈥
Dan Gillmor, Slate, October 1, 2014

Room for Debate: 鈥淎pple vs. The Law鈥
Multiple authors, The New York Times, September 30, 2014

鈥淪martphone Encryption Restores Public Trust in Technology鈥
Seeta Pena Gangadharan, 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute

鈥淪ecuring Our Data Should Come First鈥
Alex Abdo, ACLU

鈥淗olding On to a Small Measure of Privacy鈥
Faiza Patel, Brennan Center

鈥淭he Government Says iPhone Encryption Helps Criminals. They鈥檙e Wrong.鈥
Timothy B. Lee, Vox, September 29, 2014

鈥淣ine Epic Failures of Regulating Cryptography鈥
Cindy Cohn, Electronic Frontier Foundation, September 26, 2014

鈥淔BI Director Angry At Homebuilders For Putting Up Walls That Hide Any Crimes Therein鈥
Mike Masnick, TechDirt, September 26, 2014

鈥淎pple鈥檚 鈥榃arrant-Proof鈥 Encryption鈥
Steve Bellovin, SMBlog, September 23, 2014

鈥淥ld Technopanic in New iBottles鈥
Julian Sanchez, Cato Institute, September 23, 2014

Anti-crypto (or pro-backdoor) analyses & op-eds, or news articles with a strong negative angle


鈥淭ech companies are making it harder for the nation’s law enforcement鈥
Ellen Glasser, Baltimore Sun, November 6, 2014

鈥淭he web is a terrorist鈥檚 command-and-control network of choice鈥
Robert Hannigan, Financial Times, November 3, 2014

鈥淎pple, Boyd, and Going Dark鈥
Andrew Weissman, Just Security, October 20, 2014

鈥淪ilicon Valley Enables Terrorists and Criminals鈥
Jennifer Rubin, Washington Post, October 19, 2014

鈥淐ompromise Needed on Smartphone Encryption鈥
Editorial Board, The Washington Post, October 3, 2014

鈥淯.S. Law Enforcement Seeks to Halt Apple-Google Encryption of Mobile Data鈥
Del Quentin Wilber, September 30, 2014
(Not an op-ed but incredibly slanted, all pro-law enforcement, anti-encryption quotes)

Room for Debate: 鈥淎pple vs. The Law鈥
Multiple authors, The New York Times, September 30, 2014

鈥淒on鈥檛 Create Virtual Sanctuaries for Criminals鈥
Ronald T. Hosko, Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund

鈥淒ata Access Shouldn鈥檛 Be Up to Companies Alone鈥
Stewart Baker, Steptoe

鈥淎pple and Google threaten public safety with default smartphone encryption鈥
Cyrus Vance (Manhattan DA), The Washington Post, September 26, 2014

鈥淎pple and Google鈥檚 New Encryption Rules Will Make Law Enforcement鈥檚 Job Much Harder鈥
Ronald Hosko (Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund), The Washington Post, September 23, 2014

鈥淎pple鈥檚 Dangerous Game, part 3: Where Do You Draw the Line, and What鈥檚 the Privacy Tradeoff?鈥
Orin Kerr, The Washington Post, September 22, 2014

鈥淎pple鈥檚 Dangerous Game, part 2: The Strongest Counterargument鈥
Orin Kerr, The Washington Post, September 22, 2014

鈥淎pple鈥檚 Dangerous Game鈥
Orin Kerr, The Washington Post, September 19, 2014

More 国产视频 the Authors

danielle-kehl_person_image.jpeg
Danielle Kehl

Fellow, Open Technology Institute

Kevin Bankston
Kevin Bankston

Programs/Projects/Initiatives

The #CryptoDebate is Coming: Are You Prepared?