Back in the 1990s, security researchers and privacy watchdogs
were alarmed by government demands that hardware and software firms
build “backdoors” into their products, the millions of personal
computers and cell phones propelling communication flows along the
now-quaint “information superhighway.”
Never mind that the same factory-installed kit that allowed secret
state agencies to troll through private communications also served as a
discrete portal for criminal gangs to loot your bank account or steal
your identity.
To make matters worse, instead of the accountability promised the
American people by Congress in the wake of the Watergate scandal,
successive US administrations have worked assiduously to erect an
impenetrable secrecy regime backstopped by secret laws overseen by
secret courts which operate on the basis of secret administrative
subpoenas, latter day lettres de cachet.
But now that all their dirty secrets are popping out of Edward
Snowden’s “bottomless briefcase,” we also know the “Crypto Wars” of the
1990s never ended.
***Read article at Global Research***
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