In my humble opinion, a law written in such a way would be impossible
to enforce, especially when talking about companies. I think they are
made just for the show.
On Wed, Apr 12, 2017 at 1:28 PM, Martin Eskdale Moen
<[email protected]> wrote:
Hi, I'm not trying to rock any boats or make noise and I'm not
interested in discussing politics either, but I just wanted to get a
general feel for what the rest of the tinc community felt in regards
to how the EU looks like it wants to completely break encryption and
make tools like tinc unfeasible.
Both Germany and France want this to happen and in the UK the
snoopers charter has provisions for this (although not tested in
court yet).
I think Netherlands, Norway and Finland are considering similar laws.
Not sure which country isn't doing this.
Any ideas on how we can keep tinc safe if for instance tomorrow the
majority of countries in Europe decided that encryption is no longer
allowed without government keys being used.
I think simply saying that tinc is open source isn't exactly an
answer, it would mean we individually have to read every line of
source, understand and continue to read every patch that is made
going forwards.
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