Government agencies trying to get access to user conversations on various platforms isn’t something entirely new, but last November, the British spies at GCHQ came up with a rather unique proposal.
The organization required tech companies building messaging solutions to create what was described as a ghost agent that would be silently added to every conversation.
The purpose, GCHQ said, was to catch the bad guys who rely on the strong encryption of these services to talk to each other without being exposed.
No more privacy
But in an open letter publish on Lawfare, a total of 47 organizations, including here tech companies like Microsoft, Google, and Apple, explain that the ghost member idea would substantially undermine user privacy, causing additional risks for those who connect to the platform.
“The GCHQ’s ghost proposal creates serious threats to digital security: if implemented, it will undermine the authentication process that enables users... (read more)
The organization required tech companies building messaging solutions to create what was described as a ghost agent that would be silently added to every conversation.
The purpose, GCHQ said, was to catch the bad guys who rely on the strong encryption of these services to talk to each other without being exposed.
No more privacy
But in an open letter publish on Lawfare, a total of 47 organizations, including here tech companies like Microsoft, Google, and Apple, explain that the ghost member idea would substantially undermine user privacy, causing additional risks for those who connect to the platform.
“The GCHQ’s ghost proposal creates serious threats to digital security: if implemented, it will undermine the authentication process that enables users... (read more)
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