The U.K. Government Is Very Close To Eroding Encryption Worldwide

"The U.K. Parliament is pushing ahead with a sprawling internet regulation bill that will, among other things, undermine the privacy of people around the world. The Online Safety Bill, now at the final stage before passage in the House of Lords, gives the British government the ability to force backdoors into messaging services, which will destroy end-to-end encryption. No amendments have been accepted that would mitigate the bill’s most dangerous elements. "

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2023/07/uk-government-very-close-eroding-encryption-worldwide

#UK #Privacy #encryption #Data #Antireport

The U.K. Government Is Very Close To Eroding Encryption Worldwide 

The U.K. Parliament is pushing ahead with a sprawling internet regulation bill that will, among other things, undermine the privacy of people around the world. The Online Safety Bill, now at the final stage before passage in the House of Lords, gives the British government the ability to force backdoors into messaging services, which will destroy end-to-end encryption. No amendments have been accepted that would mitigate the bill’s most dangerous elements. If it passes, the Online Safety Bill will be a huge step backwards for global privacy, and democracy itself.

Electronic Frontier Foundation
@autonomysolidarity If you think this doesn't affect you please bear in mind that WhatsApp, Signal & Wikipedia have all publicly declared that they will remove service if the bill passes.

@sentient_water @autonomysolidarity

Matrix could easily replace Signal and WhatsApp, and it's decentralised so should be harder to ruin, I think. I wish Matrix would become a bit more mainstream, it's kind of like the messaging equivalent of Fedi.

I wonder if there could ever be a decentralized Wiki equiv... Not even sure what that would look like..

@dan @autonomysolidarity I've been trying to download Wikipedia for some time now. It's very doable. Then we can have offline or P2P versions of it.

@sentient_water @autonomysolidarity

Yeah copies are good as a backup to make sure the data doesn't just vanish... but imagine if Wikis could actually *run* decentralised, allowing edits and for the data to continue evolving...