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> Pervasive, unbreakable encryption is a game-changer that requires rethinking the existing framework.

It is. But - I'm sure you've heard this better stated before, but - the first game-changer was the massive volume of everyday conversation and chatter that has moved from ephemeral speech to various digital forms, such as SMS, Facebook, messaging apps, or this very site, and thereby (usually inadvertently) preserved indefinitely, along with a ton of metadata such as location information. Digital message records are in theory the same type of information as, say, the result of a subpoena asking someone what they heard in a not particularly important conversation in a private space three years ago, but the former's volume and precision creates a significant qualitative difference. Using encryption to take that information out of the government's reach is in large part a return to the status quo.

Of course, for the case of stored information on a phone, an alternative to encrypting such data is just periodically wiping it - something which, if Snapchat is any indication, appeals to people at some level and should be more widespread.




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