DeepSec 2024 Press Release: Industrial Espionage – New old Attacks through Lawful Interception Interfaces

Sanna/ October 8, 2024/ Press/ 0 comments

Lawful interception backdoors are exploited by nation states for espionage. The Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) passed in 1994 forced telecoms providers and suppliers to equip all relevant components with backdoors that allow the recording of transported metadata and data. For over 30 years, information security experts have warned against the misuse of these accesses. The US-American telecommunication companies AT&T and Verizon have recently been the victims of an attack. The trail leads to China. Because of the legal abolition of security in networked systems, the attack comes as no surprise. The DeepSec conference therefore repeats its annual warning against deliberate weakening of information security. Fear of digitalisation CALEA began because the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was afraid of the failure of the interception technology of the time because of the

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Translated Article: US bill against Secure Encryption of Chats

Sanna/ July 17, 2020/ Internet, Security, Stories

US-Gesetzesentwurf gegen sichere Verschlüsselung von Chats by Erich Moechel for fm4.ORF.at A new US law on “Access by law enforcement officers to encrypted data” is intended to force chat providers such as Signal or WhatsApp to incorporate back doors into their security architectures. In the United States, a bill is on its way to the Senate that has stunned the IT industry. The planned law on “Access by law enforcement officers to encrypted data” turns upside down all the rules that have been in force on the WWW for 25 years. Encrypted chats and data backup for a wide audience should therefore only be offered if the provider has duplicate keys. That would be the end of end-to-end encryption (E2E) from Signal, WhatsApp and others. The same applies to hardware manufacturers who have to provide access

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