Anonymous ID: 46df7e Dec. 10, 2018, 11:07 a.m. No.4242126   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2157

 

D1 - Relatively harmless awakening to cabal

D2 - Awakening which could, bury, injure cabal

D3 - Awakening whick could destroy small part of cabal

D4 - Awakening which could destroy large part of cabal

D5 - Unstoppable Awakening → End of WW cabal → PANIC

Anonymous ID: 46df7e Dec. 10, 2018, 11:19 a.m. No.4242400   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2422 >>2742 >>2778 >>2803

Australia anti-encryption law rushed to passage

 

A newly enacted law rushed through Australia’s parliament will compel technology companies such as Apple, Facebook and Google to disable encryption protections so police can better pursue terrorists and other criminals.

 

Cybersecurity experts say the law, the first of its kind globally, will instead be a boon to the criminal underworld by undermining the technical integrity of the internet, hurting digital security and user privacy.

 

“I think it’s detrimental to Australian and world security,” said Bruce Schneier, a tech security expert affiliated with Harvard University and IBM.

 

The law is also technically vague and seems contradictory because it doesn’t require systematic weaknesses – so-called “backdoors” – to be built in by tech providers. Such backdoors are unlikely to remain secret, meaning that hackers and criminals could easily exploit them.

 

Backdoors were central to a 1990s US effort to require manufacturers to install a so-called “Clipper chip“ into communications equipment so the government could listen in on voice and data transmissions. US law enforcement officials, including Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, are again pushing for legislation that would somehow give authorities access to secure communications.

 

The Australian bill is seen by many as a beachhead for those efforts because the nation belongs to the “Five Eyes” security alliance with the US, Britain, Canada and New Zealand.

 

“There is a lot here that doesn’t make any sense,” Schneier said of the Australian bill. “This is a technological law written by non-technologists and it’s not just bad policy. In many ways, I think it’s unworkable.”

 

https://www.thestar.com.my/tech/tech-news/2018/12/10/australia-antiencryption-law-rushed-to-passage/