NPR story: When A Dark Web Volunteer Gets Raided By The Police
http://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2016/04/04/472992023/when-a-da... He/they gave passwords and let govt search (and perhaps even index, hash, and copy, knowingly or not [1]) his (possibly then unencrypted) data. As opposed to having it confiscated pending potentially 2^128 time. Where is the principled stand there? [2][4] [1] This happened while he was detained outside / away from control of his systems. [2] He "may now have to get rid of his computers because he can't be sure what the police did to them [3]". For which giving passwords had no purpose but to nullify a potentially good test case, trample rights and replace "innocent till guilty" with "violated, chilled, innocent for now, while Cardinal Richelieu's database hums... ... If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, whether or not I find something in them which will hang him, I will database them and own his soul forever." [3] Already did: https://twitter.com/SeattlePrivacy/status/716460499106340864 [4] Due credit, thugs with guns at your door does tend to modify even the most well thought and prepared for principles. What doesn't kill you makes you stronger for next time.
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