Quote:
Originally Posted by tizmeinnit
that is not that new a law. You break the law if requested to decrypt information on your or other devices if you refuse
Its the key disclosure law dated 2006 ( good old google lol)[COLOR="Silver"]
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Time flys by so fast these days
Truecrypts file structure and encryption implementation is supposed to give plausible deniability. There can be another encrypted container inside another. You can give the keys to decrypt the container and it is not possible to know if there is another container inside or not. It is not possible to prove there is another encrypted volume in there although the cops will likely assume you do.
The guy above gave the authorities his truecrypt key in the end. He wished he hadn't. Encryption and the law are going to clash big time in the next 5 to 10 years.
---------- Post added at 13:12 ---------- Previous post was at 13:10 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by tizmeinnit
you have to give up the keys or else they wave the big book at you
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Sometimes the big book may be smaller than the sentence you could be facing.