On 9/27/2013 10:20 AM, Hauke Laging wrote: > Is that your interpretation or in any way official? My respective > search engige efforts were not successful.
Nothing is official until the jury comes back. RIPA prohibits someone who is under a key-divulging order from telling other people about the order. That much is official. It's within the realm of possibility that a prosecutor would tell the Court, "Milord, Mr. Laging revoked his certificate immediately after divulging to us the passphrase. This had the effect of tipping off his correspondents that the certificate was compromised. We ask that you deem this to be a violation of RIPA's provisions prohibiting affected persons from telling others about the forced disclosure of their key." A lot of armchair lawyers (on this list and others) will say that this argument would never fly. I'm not so certain. I'm not saying it would certainly work; I'm also not saying it certainly wouldn't. It would depend a lot on the judge hearing the case. Notice how I said "revoking your key *could* be seen as". :) > This point of view would have quite strange consequences: For how > long shall you be forced to keep a key? Even longer than before (if > you change subkeys regularly)? Why should you have to accept that > police can read future data of yours, data which they do not have a > warrant for? These are legal questions. Ask a lawyer. (Or, given that it's a matter of United Kingdom law, ask a solicitor.) _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
