The federal government will continue to access Americans’ emails without a warrant, after the U.S. Senate dropped a key amendment to legislation now headed to the White House for approval. Currently, the government can collect emails and other cloud data without a warrant as long as the content has been stored on a third-party server for 180 days or more. Federal agents need only demonstrate that they have “reasonable grounds to believe” the information would be useful in an investigation.
Печальная картина. А виноват, конечно, как всегда, Буш.
Печальная картина. А виноват, конечно, как всегда, Буш.
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Если бы все это шло автоматически встроенным в системы....
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But I thought the data was always encrypted
When one Hushmail user sends an email to another Hushmail user, the body and attachments of that email are kept on our server in encrypted form, and under normal circumstances, we would have no access to that data. We can’t just pick an arbitrary encrypted email message off the server and read it. However, since Hushmail is a web-based service, the software that performs the encryption either resides on or is delivered by our servers. That means that there is no guarantee that we will not be compelled, under an order enforceable under the laws of British Columbia, Canada, to treat a user named in an order differently, and compromise that user’s privacy. (https://www.hushmail.com/about/technology/security/)
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Theoretically, one would need to download and verify source code, then compile it.
Practically, one downloads signed setup file, and verifies digital signature.
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in any case, they are right: it sounds too complicated for a layman (me, f.i.)
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Less convenient way but requiring no special software is to send encrypted attachments, say zip or Word documents. In anticipation, some free email providers already prohibit this.