If only there were some sort of 'master key' that could decrypt all the traffic so "friendly neighborhood analysts" can inspect it. Those pesky developers and their insistence on having open protocols without backdoors.... The clean-up crews all want to design better mops and detect spills faster - not prevent the mess in the first place. "You can't make a spill-resistant cup - spend all your money on spill detection." "Irradiate the stuff so we can detect it as it splashes with our sensor arrays." -Travis On Mon, Feb 16, 2015 at 12:34 PM, John Young <[1]jya@pipeline.com> wrote: "The very encryption used to secure transports is used to hide data exfiltration." [2]http://46qasb3uw5yn639ko4bz2ptr8u.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/files/2 015/02/IMG_6926.jpg [3]http://blog.kaspersky.com/kaspersky-security-analyst-summit-2015- the-live-blog/ -- [4]Twitter | [5]LinkedIn | [6]GitHub | [7]TravisBiehn.com | [8]Google Plus References 1. mailto:jya@pipeline.com 2. http://46qasb3uw5yn639ko4bz2ptr8u.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/files/2015/02/IMG_6926.jpg 3. http://blog.kaspersky.com/kaspersky-security-analyst-summit-2015-the-live-blog/ 4. https://twitter.com/tbiehn 5. http://www.linkedin.com/in/travisbiehn 6. http://github.com/tbiehn 7. http://www.travisbiehn.com/ 8. https://plus.google.com/+TravisBiehn