everything wrote:Similar story on the radio this morning. This is why some of the encryption technology is open source. Anyone can review how the technology works and look for problems. Various law enforcement bodies have been complaining about encryption and that there should be holes for the government to catch the bad guys. The argument against that is that if there are known holes by design, the "bad guys" can also hack their way into the encryption.
you may misunderstand about "holes" in the design.
Not so much about bad guys hacking into, more about bad guys
having secure technology for their use....In what are called "free" societies the safety of the society
is weighed against its freedom.
The encryption battles of the early 1990s focused primarily on two issues: restrictions on the export of encryption technologies and the National Security Agency’s (NSA) attempts to introduce a chipset called the Clipper chip to network technology
The first was the result of Cold War era laws designed to control the diffusion of sensitive technologies, including encryption software. This became an issue in the early 1990s when encryption software became commonplace in web browsers. In 1996, President Clinton signed an executive order that loosened restrictions after technology companies claimed that the export controls on encrypted products hurt their sales.
The FBI’s demands for backdoor access and the recent bill drafted by Senators Diane Feinstein and Richard Burr attempt to accomplish the same goal as the Clipper chip and the Bullrun program. Rather than gaining access through technical means, however, the government is now using legal means. Manufacturers have responded in the same way as the export battle: selling a product with compromised encryption standards would reduce their ability to compete in the international market.
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/techtank ... on-policy/With whats called 5g it's even more important to be able to trust the companies that make the tech.
Over the yrs the US has lost a lot of its capability to make and develop its own chips...even for military.