British Teen Jailed Over Encryption Password
An anonymous reader writes "Oliver Drage, 19, of Liverpool has been convicted of 'failing to disclose an encryption key,' which is an offense under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 and as a result has been jailed for 16 weeks. Police seized his computer but could not get past the 50-character encrypted password that he refused to give up. And just to get it out of the way, obligatory XKCD."
That's the typical British response. The reason England is in the position it's in.
Oliver Drage, 19, of Liverpool, was arrested in May 2009 by police tackling child sexual exploitation.
Well, I guess that makes it okay, then. After all, we can't allow people accused of child sexual exploitation to be free, can we?
On a more serious note, this sucks.
Det Sgt Neil Fowler, of Lancashire police, said: "Drage was previously of good character so the immediate custodial sentence handed down by the judge in this case shows just how seriously the courts take this kind of offence.
"Computer systems are constantly advancing and the legislation used here was specifically brought in to deal with those who are using the internet to commit crime.
"It sends a robust message out to those intent on trying to mask their online criminal activities that they will be taken before the courts with the ultimate sanction, as in this case, being a custodial sentence."
I guess insisting on your privacy is taboo now. Even if you're a good kid, if you refuse to let the police into your private files just on principle, you're boned.
Actually, everyone has it everywhere. What varies from place to place is whether the government recognizes the right and refrains from violating it. This is true of all human rights.
Considering what he's charged with if they can't prove their case without what's on his computer and if they can't get past his crypto he'll have gotten off light.
I can see how it's easy to miss, as it is the first sentence in TFA:
They can cut the safe open, you can say you forgot the combination. Forgetting is legally great, Reagen forgot iran-contra and look how that turnout for him.
Which is why you never refuse. You simply forget it. It is not illegal to forget something 50 chars long, it could easily happen.
Is this the whole 5th amendment thing?
"nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself"
If my laptop is full of trade secrets, and kitty porn, I'm not going to tell you my password... Because it would incriminate me.
Shaved Cat porn is HAWT!
(Ironically, my pass-phrase was decrypt for this message!)
Maybe the wrench made him figure out he would probably get less jail time, by not telling them the key, if the crypted materials are that bad. If the case falls apart without the key then he only gets 16 weeks of jail vs who knows how many years if he did. They wont spend years cracking the key either. He obviously knows how guilty he actually is and he probably knows what they have on him by now.
downloaded music? games? movies? software?
16 years
Pfft, Britan. Glad my ancestors were smart enough to split that dive and setup someplace safe for me to live....
What makes you think it would be any different in the USA?
Computer crime + Contempt of court = jail until hand over the password.
Maybe some cops see it that way... but videos such as http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i8z7NC5sgik would have me believe that it's always a good idea to plead the 5th and refuse to say anything. It's related to the idea that refusing to consent to a search without a warrant shouldn't be allowed as evidence that a warrant is necessary ("If he has nothing to hide, then he wouldn't mind us looking around..."). What's the precedent where pleading the 5th has been considered a crime? I can see how refusing to talk would get cops to find something to charge you with and arrest you, since it's annoying for them, but when has it been used as the actual charge for an arrest?
Or, he really does care about his rights and truly believes that he should not be compelled to divulge this password. You're probably right, but it is possible.
This one's tricky. You have to use imaginary numbers, like eleventeen... --Hobbes
Of course, the UK is not unique in much of this. But what makes these examples so sad for me is how the UK was the foundation for much of what one might consider Western freedom. It fought the good fight against totalitarianism (let's not Godwin this). I don't think those who struggled back then would consider all this to be what they were struggling *for*.
Will this constant erosion of freedom ever stop?
You have the right to not provide the combination, which would result in them getting a safe cracking team in and adding that onto your legal fee's should you lose your case. You have the right to not provide your passwords, which will result in them getting a crypto team in to crack the password and adding THAT to your legal fee's WHEN you lose your case.
Noone writes jokes in base 13!
Link up one citation to this happening in the U.S. Sure, you can be abductd off to parts unknown, tried under a military court and executed, but in a US court we still have a Constitution and the Fifth Amendment.
So only rich people have privacy?
Seems like that could be improved, why not just make being poor a crime?
Not only that, but is that XKCD reference implying that British police are beating the teen with a wrench to get his encryption password?!? Geez, I know we waterboard suspected terrorists and sympathizers, but hopefully it will be a few months before we start torture for computer access. At least reserve that shit for evil, job killing bittorrent files.
(/s)
"Which is why you never refuse. You simply forget it."
This is why we need destructive encryption. Enter the wrong passphrase, and the data is locked (and preferably damaged or wiped).
"This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
Anyone who enters a password to decrypt a disk they haven't already imaged belongs on a prime time cop tv show.
How we know is more important than what we know.
Even if a judge ruled that wasn't you testifying against yourself, you could still protect yourself if you simply said "I don't recall that password." You may notice that not being able to recall is used a lot when under oath. The reason is that there really isn't any way to challenge it. We forget shit all the time (hell everyone seems to forget their passwords if my job is any indication). You can't prove someone hasn't. So they say "What is the password and the 5th amendment doesn't protect you," you say "Sorry, I can't recall that password."
See this doesn't work in Britain because they made it a crime not to provide the password period. If you fail to provide it, regardless of the reason, that's illegal. It was a specific law made for passwords. So can't remember? You are boned. The US has no such similar law. Thus the only way they could get you is if you said you knew the password, but refused to give it up, and it was ruled that wasn't protected under the 5th.
However if you look in to it you discover that while there's little case law, indeed it HAS been ruled that that the 5th prevents you from having to give up a password. As such that will probably stay, in general courts abide by the rulings of other courts of competent jurisdiction.
How do you know the encrypted data is related to the case?
How do you know the encrypted data is not something that is, at least to the 19 year old suspect, even worse?
What if he's secretly gay, his entire family are raging homophobes, and he KNOWS beyond the shadow of doubt that revealing his encryption password will get him disowned?
If this was you, would YOU reveal the password?
-=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
UK is easier to spell, anyway.
So... what would it cost to break, say a 4096 bit RSA key? Oh, they can bill my grandkid's estate.
You know it's bad when you need to post as AC just to even speak such 'blasphemy'. The additional effect that has happened is anyone defending an accused 'pedophile', for any reason, is assumed to be a pedophile themselves and attacked accordingly. We may actually be watching the end of the age of reason.
"Be particularly skeptical when presented with evidence confirming what you already believe." -
Lower crime rate than the US?
I'm guessing bragging, which is why they're giving him the full tar and feathering. It doesn't really get better than your name, picture and location in the paper saying you were arrested by police "tackling child sexual exploitation" so that absolutely everybody gets the message what the police think is on that computer. Could you possibly be any more publicly brandished without any actual conviction to that fact?
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
So having encryption software installed is now evidence of guilt?
You are one sick person.
If you're so committed to the truth, then you should give them the password and the truth shall set you free.
Erm, maybe not so much Doc, if that collection of Bugs Bunny cartoons on your hard drive, some of which featuring Bugs in "drag", are declared to be "kiddy porn" at some point in the near future.
Th-th-th-that's all, folks!
Strat
Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
"Your Honor (or however they say it on that side of the pond), how can I possibly remember a 50 character long passphrase while under all this stress of unfounded charges?"
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
But I don't think it's a problem that the state can, with good reason, compel you to decrypt it.
And who gets to decide if the reason is good? The police?
Oliver.
Yeah, why waste the time on pesky stuff like search warrants? If you have nothing to hide, you won't mind the police searching you house anytime they want, right? Make police work much easier, that's good, right?
Oliver.
Most people's understanding of how a computer works is essentially, "by magic." By the time you finished explaining this setup, they would already have concluded you are either a terrorist or some kind of evil wizard. Probably both.
Imagine that you have some photos and videos of yourself and your girlfriend/boyfriend(Both over 18! Or 21... or whatever your stupid countrie counts as "not be able to have sex whitout beeing rapped")
And now some nice gentleman come around to have a look at them... no, not this files specific just your WHOLE FUCKING HARDDISK.
But because you are a cautious and dont want other people to see your girlfriend/boyfriend and yourself you encrypted all files. Not to forget all the other secrets... like your diary, your love emails (That you sended and recived encrypted as well)...
Your computer (memory) can become a vital part of your most private life... yet you have no right to protect it... no it is even worse... Protecting it even became a CRIME!
If you copy some stupid music files you can be sentenced to financial death, but if they are after your files... maybe your most private information... defending this by passive messures becomes A FUCKING CRIME!
you could still protect yourself if you simply said "I don't recall that password." You may notice that not being able to recall is used a lot when under oath. The reason is that there really isn't any way to challenge it. We forget shit all the time (hell everyone seems to forget their passwords if my job is any indication). You can't prove someone hasn't. So they say "What is the password and the 5th amendment doesn't protect you," you say "Sorry, I can't recall that password."
You can say it.
But a judge isn't obliged to believe it.
In the real world, "plausible deniability" translates to six months in pink undies, tenting out in the desert sun with a bunk mate named Big Mike --- with no end in sight.
Geek solutions to legal problems don't work.
A court would find that you set up this scenario specificially so you could escape the issue, and jail you anyways. There is only one thing that judges like less than guilty people and that is guilty people who try to play with them.
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
"Good stuff. You're assistance in this inquiry will go in your favour. Now, I noticed when the computer booted up that the system you used was called TrueCrypt. We happen to know that this has a "hidden volume" functionality. We didn't find anything on your main volume, so we'd like the password to the hidden encrypted volume."
"I don't have a hidden volume."
"Ah, now you're not being helpful again. This won't look good."
Plausible deniability, in this case, isn't enough. You'd need proof you didn't have a hidden volume, or you'd spend your life in contempt of court. I know it sucks, but that's how it's worded.
Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
ok sir, here is your keyboard, a copy of your hard drive and a mouse.
please 'play' your password at the prompt.
great way to generate a secure password, but I don't think it gets you around the requirement to give up your password when required to do so.
VLC Remote for iPhone and Android
Nope. This wouldn't work as a defence.
The act requires you to 'provide the data in readable form' from any system that you have control over. If you do not provide the readable data, then you commit an offence.
If the system is rigged such that it destroys keys, or requires continuous maintenance to preserve the keys - then that is your problem. The crime is 'failure to provide' access not 'refusal to provide' access. In other words, the onus is on anyone using an encryption system to ensure that they can always provide access to law enforcement.
The only loophole I can see, is sending the data to a trusted 3rd party in another country, where it is held in encrypted form. If that 3rd party refuses or is unable to hand over the keys, then there is nothing the local police can do about it (unless they have an agreement with the police in the remote country).
This makes no sense in British terms - Parliament is sovereign and cannot be bound.
That said, the centuries old common law presumption of innocence was enshrined in positive law in the Human Rights Act, 1998.
I can't figure out if you are American with a Blair fixation, or British but enamoured of the concept of a written constitution. In either case I think you are misguided:
A written constitution is not "fundamental, nonrevocable and unalienable" since it can be amended, the procedure is just a little more involved than normal legislation. And you only need to look at Prohibition in the US to see that this is no bar to stupid laws that restrict freedom. It also makes them a lot harder to get rid of. Ultimately the cost of freedom is eternal vigilance either way; a citizenry that is either complacent or uncaring of their liberties will lose them in any system, whether or not you have the speed bump of a written constitution or not.
This sig all sigs devours