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US Tech Giants Ask Obama Not To Compromise Encryption

An anonymous reader writes: Two industry bodies which represent Microsoft, Apple, Facebook, IBM, and others, have written to President Obama urging that the U.S. government not seek to legislate "official back doors" into encryption techniques. The Software and Information Industry Association and the Information Technology Industry Council sent the "strongly worded" letter on Monday, saying, "Consumer trust in digital products and services is an essential component enabling continued economic growth of the online marketplace. Accordingly, we urge you not to pursue any policy or proposal that would require or encourage companies to weaken these technologies, including the weakening of encryption or creating encryption 'work-arounds.'" The letter is the latest salvo in a public battle for secure communications, one that has reached the public eye in a way that few security stories do.

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  1. I remember storys like this about USSR ... by rbgnr111 · · Score: 4, Informative

    when I was a kid, this is the sort of thing I would expect to hear of the USSR... now it's here...
    it seems to me that if they force backdoors or weak security, wouldn't that hurt most us based IT security vendors?... wouldn't that force any that wanted to sell internationally to relocate outside the US?
    what is the point of any encryption at all if there is a backdoor built in, or it's weak to begin with....