White House Apparently Not Necessarily In Agreement With FBI's Position On Encryption Backdoors
from the say-something-dammit dept
There is a (reasonable) tendency to argue that in this big fight over encryption backdoors and “going dark” and “should Apple help the FBI” to assume that the various DOJ/FBI efforts to force backdoors into encryption are the official position of the Obama administration. After all, the Justice Department is a part of the administration and the head of the DOJ, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, reports to President Obama. And the FBI is a part of the DOJ. But it’s also been quite clear for some time that there are a variety of opinions within the White House on these issues, with many outside of the DOJ not supporting backdooring encryption at all. In fact, many are actively opposed to such ideas. And now it’s reaching the stage where people are starting to push stories that the White House is not at all happy with FBI Director James Comey and his crusade on this issue.
With regards to the Apple standoff, “It’s just not clear [Comey] is speaking for the administration,” said Richard Clarke, a former White House counterterrorism and cybersecurity chief. “We know there have been administration meetings on this for months. The proposal that Comey had made on encryption was rejected by the administration.”
[….]
“I have been very surprised at how public and inflammatory, frankly, the FBI and the Justice Department?s approach has been on this,” said Chris Finan, a former National Security Council cybersecurity adviser.
“That doesn’t tend to be the administration?s preferred approach to handling things.”
There are a lot more quotes in the article suggesting similar things (and also discussing FBI issues beyond just the Apple/encryption debate).
Indeed, back last fall, we noted that leaked documents showed that many in the White House did not agree with Comey or the FBI on this issue — and some pushed for a public statement opposing backdooring encryption. Unfortunately, the administration later took the cowardly approach of agreeing not to push for legislation, but refusing to take a strong public stance on the issue, because they didn’t want to anger the law enforcement community. So, instead, you have the DOJ and FBI — representatives of the administration — now running wild, pushing dangerous legal theories that will undermine key elements of computer security, and lots of people think that’s the administration’s official position.
The White House failed badly in not taking a public stance on this months ago, and it should fix that now.
Filed Under: backdoors, doj, encryption, fbi, james comey, loretta lynch, white house
Comments on “White House Apparently Not Necessarily In Agreement With FBI's Position On Encryption Backdoors”
Telling silence
When it comes to more minor things, then I can understand standing on the side-lines and not wanting to get involved, but given how serious the fight over encryption is, and how wide-reaching the effects from it stand to be, silence really isn’t an option this time.
If those in the WH don’t agree with the anti-encryption stance various people and agencies in the government have taken, then they need to publicly make their disagreement heard, with no room for ‘mistakes’ or ‘interpretation’. Staying silent just makes it appear that while individual members of the administration may disagree with the anti-encryption stance, the majority do not, but don’t want to publicly admit it.
On this matter silence from the WH/administration is, and should be treated as, a show of support for those calling for undermining encryption.
Re: Telling silence
Deafening silence you mean. They cannot directly support it because they know it will backlash so they are letting lesser agencies take the beating while people get used with the idea. Sounds conspiracy enough to you?
Re: Telling silence
This is an election year. Silence in the matter is a show of support as T1G says. Coming out against the fervor gives the appearance of siding with Apple to the voters.
Given how much press coverage was had over when Obama first came into office and him having to jump through hoops to get his beloved Blackberry approved for use because of encryption reasons.. I can’t see how he would want to make it any easier for malicious actors to get into the Presidential Smartphone..
Maybe...
This whole thing is just reverse psychology and the FBI and DOJ are making such a big deal about it that there’s absolutely no way anyone could side with them in the end… Thus securing (pun intended) encryption’s place well into the future administrations.
No, that’s giving these guys too much credit.
re: Telling silence
Without even considering the issue involved, I have fired people for lying the way that Comey does.
And with consideration given to the Constitution destroying nature of Comey, I can only agree with @ThatOneGuy that silence is assent on an incredibly important issue. The President, and all those under him who speak to the press, have an obligation to make their position known. Failure to do so is rank cowardice.
They want to be the only ones to use encryption without backdoors.
If they do nothing, that is there official position.
Tired of Lying Politicians?
White House Apparently Not Necessarily In Agreement With FBI’s Position On Encryption Backdoors (Politics)
I believe the word “Apparently” is key to whatever is going on in that story’s title. Don’t be fooled.
Re: Tired of Lying Politicians?
Also, I have never trusted left-handed people by nature.
Government will Buy Out Apple
What’s to stop them from doing anything nowadays. I would not be surprised to see Apple gobbled up by Big Brother. Wouldn’t surprise me in the least.
Re: Government will Buy Out Apple
Couldn’t the government say it is a case of National Security?
I think the WH has just made the position a little more clear now. https://twitter.com/CSMPasscode/status/708409921490935812
Ru roh
Looks like sacrificing privacy for security is ok with the POTUS.
http://www.engadget.com/2016/03/11/president-obama-sxsw-privacy-encryption-debate/
Re: Ru roh
About what could be expected.
I like this bit: “Obama said we’ll have to figure out “how do we have encryption as strong as possible, the key as secure as possible and accessible by the smallest pool of people possible, for a subset of issues that we agree is important.””
From my point of view, we figured this out a long time ago. I use very strong encryption, and the key is accessible to the smallest pool possible: me. Done and done.