Encryption & Key Management
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Security Operations
Swedish Prime Minister Proposed Fast-Tracking Bill to Surveil Minors

A proposal by the Swedish prime minister to fast track legislation allowing police to surveil minors could cause end-to-end encrypted chat app Signal to leave the country.
See Also: Cracking the Code: Securing Machine Identities
Conservative Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson faces rising criminal violence underscored by a January wave of bombings that involved on average one explosion per day during January, local media has reported. The violence is fueled by gang recruitment of teenagers over social media, especially Telegram. Kristersson told reporters on Jan. 30 the government will push to enact a law by Oct. 1 allowing it to wiretap the phones of children younger than 15 years. “It is quite obvious that we don’t have control over the wave of violence,” he said.
The government in effect is asking for backdoor access by Swedish police into the encryption safeguarding the content of messages, Signal President Meredith Whittaker told Swedish news outlet SVT on Monday.
“In practice, this means asking us to break the encryption that is the foundation of our entire business,” she said. “We would rather leave the Swedish market completely.”
Whittaker name checked Chinese nation-state hacking group tracked as Salt Typhoon, which penetrated U.S. telecom networks and surveilled high-level government and political figures. Hackers will exploit any network weakness, including backdoors putatively the domain of police only, she said.
Kristersson represents only the latest point of contention in a long-standing fight between law enforcement agencies on one side and tech companies and privacy advocates over encryption. Police say end-to-end encryption hinders evidence collection and surveillance, while encryption supporters say its protections are necessary for users to trust in digital communications and call attempts to weaken encryption tantamount to ushering in hackers.
Smartphone giant earlier this month deactivated end-to-end encryption for iCloud-stored backups in the United Kingdom after the British Home Office reportedly requested backdoor access. WhatsApp, Signal and Apple earlier threatened to exist the U.K. following a government proposal permitting the communications regulator to order online intermediaries to scan for child sexual exploitation and abuse material (see: WhatsApp, Signal Preview UK Exit Over Threat to Encryption).