Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Media Government United States

US Senate Amends EARN IT Act -- To Let States Restrict Encryption (engadget.com) 89

Long-time Slashdot reader stikves reminded us that a committee in the U.S. Senate passed an amended version of the "EARN IT" act on Thursday. And this new version could do more than just end personal end-to-end encryption, warns Engadget: The other major concern opponents of the EARN IT Act raise has to do with Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which says that companies are not liable for much of the content that users post. Originally, the EARN IT Act proposed requiring that companies "earn" Section 230 protections by following recommended practices outlined by a Department of Justice commission. Without those protections, companies like Twitter or Facebook might be compelled to remove anything that might prompt a legal challenge, which could threaten freedom of speech. The amendments passed Thursday strip the Department of Justice commission of any legal authority and will not require companies to earn Section 230 protections by following recommended practices.

But the amended bill would change Section 230 to allow lawsuits from states, and state legislatures could restrict or outlaw encryption technologies.

The senior policy counsel for Free Press Action, a media reform advocacy group, harshly criticized the legislation's new version.

"Even as amended today, it invites states to begin passing all sorts of laws under the guise of protecting against abuse, but replicating the problems with the original EARN IT Act's text."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

US Senate Amends EARN IT Act -- To Let States Restrict Encryption

Comments Filter:
  • This government keels over faster than the Weimar Republic. At least their legislators were properly educated.

  • So it's basically relieving restrictions on social media companies (unlike what we've been told, which would be to increase restrictions and regulation). Given Internet lawsuits are always federal, I'm not sure what the worry is that states may provide restrictions. Simply don't do business in that state then, the Feds regulate the Internet since it's nearly always crossing state lines.

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Saturday July 04, 2020 @07:40PM (#60262422) Journal
      It's a problem when NY state and CA start making regulations that conflict with each other.

      the Feds regulate the Internet since it's nearly always crossing state lines.

      The state can still make regulations for the part of commerce that happens within the state. The "Use Tax" is a common example of this.

      • It's not end to end encryption if it doesn't make it to the other end. Really, though, it's a very clear 1st amendment issue and doesn't stand a chance in a reasonable court.

        • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Saturday July 04, 2020 @08:02PM (#60262470) Journal

          it's a very clear 1st amendment issue and doesn't stand a chance in a reasonable court.

          I think you are probably correct that the government cannot force companies to break end-to-end encryption. So instead, the government is saying, "If you let us snoop, we will reward you with section 230 protections."

          Under the law, there is speech you can be sued for, such as saying lies that hurt other people (libel). Section 230 says, "the website hosting the content isn't responsible for that content, the person who posted it is." Without section 230, you could sue both the person who posted it, and the website that hosted it.

          It has a chilling effect because websites won't want to allow comments and risk being sued, but I don't see why it would fail in court.

        • We no longer have reasonable courts.

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        I still believe the Use Tax for Internet purchases would be unconstitutional. The fact that our lawmakers disagree because they need the income doesn't make it morally wrong.

        • The text reads "The Congress shall have Power...to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;" It doesn't say the states shall not have the power to charge a use tax (although congress presumably could pass a law preventing such taxes).
      • "tax" being the keyword ... some years ago a politician here openly proposed that in some cases you could just buy off a sentence to get it over with ... a bit like in medieval times when you could buy one from the pope to make sure your soul went to heaven.
        "in order to speed up the process and relieve the already clogged justice system" ofcourse
        im not sure (one never is here) but i dont think it passed ... it got treated right away like "no one ever said that" and actually how that happens is : no one
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Social media companies do require restrictions because people will be people. There should be a legal distinction between 'real name' social people, people using the actual name in public social interactions and pseudonym social media where people communicate through anonymising public social interactions.

      People using their real name with public statements, pushes it all into the more factual legal area, less about opinions and more about statements of fact. Using a pseudonym immediately puts in into the mo

      • You want my real name for your antisocial media? Screw you, that Russian/Chinese/Iranian site over there doesn't, I'm going there!

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        "Pseudonym based social media because of the anonymisation factor, create that barrier, keeping the silliness online where it is way more harmless than real world interactions, where that silliness often become real world violence."

        You are not paying any attention at all.

        "To quieten things down, real name social media, full legal liability for all statements made. Pseudonym social media than maintains anonymisation distance for it's participants, limited liability if the specific content breaks the law and

  • Dumbest idea ever (Score:5, Interesting)

    by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Saturday July 04, 2020 @07:18PM (#60262388)

    How, pray tell, are encrypted communications supposed to function as they pass through multiple points in varying States all of which will have different laws ?

    • That will be interstate commerce. Would require a Constitutional amendment to make that a state power.

    • As an outsider I have to ask: why are so many laws in the USA given such torturously tortuous acronyms?
      • Because if you don't support the PATRIOT act and the PROTECTKIDS act you are a terrorist pedophile who hates America.

      • by nagora ( 177841 )

        As an outsider I have to ask: why are so many laws in the USA given such torturously tortuous acronyms?

        It reflects the mental age of the drafters.

    • by dyfet ( 154716 )

      Indeed, at the very best you will be forced to follow the laws of the most regressive state of all nationally...

    • How, pray tell, are encrypted communications supposed to function as they pass through multiple points in varying States all of which will have different laws ?

      Precisely the way the government wants them to.

  • ...and only be allowed to collect once their records show they’ve always acted for the good of the public, and never against it.
    • Politicians should be paid fuck-all and any time they're not at work when needed for literally anything they should be arrested and dragged to their chair kicking and screaming.

      • Just make every politician a 24/7 reality tv star with their own channel, by law. They get monitored constantly so people can react every time they make a shady backroom deal that way.
  • Criminals are going to continue to use end-to-end encryption regardless of these laws, and in practice there isn't any actual way to know when and where end-to-end encryption is being used unless you just outlaw absolutely all communication that those in law enforcement simply don't happen to understand.

    Which means that the proposal is actually the same thing as making it illegal to communicate in any language that law enforcement doesn't happen to have any available means of translating.

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Saturday July 04, 2020 @07:43PM (#60262432)

    You can't restrict compromised encryption to a single state and they know it. This bill is garbage and any congress critter supporting it deserves all the ridicule they receive.

    • Ridicule is water off a duck's back when they're just reelected for the 5th, 6th, 7th time.

      Instead of "ridicule", think about replacement

      And blocking unauthorized encryption is quite trivial, even without deep packet inspection

    • Sure you can. Just look at how the US government stopped the spread of encryption technologies in the 90s. Remember how there were two software packages, one for the USA with strong encryption, and one for the rest of the world with weak encryption, and no one ever downloaded the one not intended for their jurisdiction?

      Yeah I don't remember that either, and yes my post was sarcastic. It seems the government has not learnt that global services don't follow arbitrary state/nation boundaries.

  • There will be more amendments and there would have to be a House version and then they go to a committee to reconcile the differences and then the potus can still veto it.

    As described this version sounds like crap but the final could be dramatically different.

    • Don't forget the unrelated bullshit both parties will cram in if they think the primary bill will pass.

  • The US Senate is broken on so many levels. They can't even get a vote on a police reform bill.

    • Of course they can't reform the police. If you want to reform the police then you'll have to fund the services that used to be done before budget cuts just transferred everything over to the police. Things like dealing with hyperactive kids in schools, responding to people in mental crisis, juvenile crime, domestic situations, etc. You need to hire extra teachers, mental health workers, youth workers, and social workers to deal with all of those problems. Public education, free mental health care, youth pro

    • It's because they can't figure out how to write one in a way that will win them more votes. When you understand that they don't care about the people, they only care about staying in power and enriching themselves, their behavior is more easily understood.

  • "There's no way to rule innocent men. The only power government has is the power to crack down on criminals. When there aren't enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws."
    -- Ayn Rand

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Saturday July 04, 2020 @08:11PM (#60262480)
    the super rich will use their legal might to crush everything. All dissenting opinions will either be buried under spam and trolls or sued into oblivion.

    It'll turn into cable TV. Only the wealthiest will have a voice. Which is exactly why they're attacking S230. Christ, can we, as a nation, really be this dumb? How can we not see this coming? It's not going to be the free speech paradise everybody thinks it is. It's the opposite. Money will be censorship. If you don't have money you'll censored.
  • #votethebumsout (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Saturday July 04, 2020 @08:15PM (#60262486)

    Seriously. I don't care if you're a Republican, or a Democrat, or Independent or Klingon.

    If you are 18 or older, register to vote, find the least worst candidate running in your local elections for Congress, and remove these people. If it's a tie for least worst, vote out all the incumbents.

    Eventually we may even find some CongressCritters who actually put their constituents interests ahead of their greed and power hunger. If not, lather, rinse, repeat.

     

    • by Z80a ( 971949 )

      A campaign to make people think there are more people to elect than the president would help quite a bit.

    • The obvious way to game that system is to just run against any incumbent and pretend to be better, which is clearly what happens. Rinsing and repeating will just get more of the same.

      Ideally (IMO) we would have some sort of merit-based qualification for federal office (just a basic reasoning test really), a multiparty system with ranked voting, and an effective recall system. Out of all of those, an effective recall system would probably be the most difficult thing to implement.

      • It will take a massive voter initiative to get those kinds of rules put into place. Some places are making baby steps, so anything is possible.

      • The obvious way to game that system is to just run against any incumbent and pretend to be better, which is clearly what happens. Rinsing and repeating will just get more of the same.

        Ideally (IMO) we would have some sort of merit-based qualification for federal office (just a basic reasoning test really), a multiparty system with ranked voting, and an effective recall system. Out of all of those, an effective recall system would probably be the most difficult thing to implement.

        Merit-based qualification? Isn't that like Science? With the current political climate, trying to use Science to get anything done means nothing will happen.

        The hardest part of an effective recall system would be getting anyone in Congress to vote in favor of it. And then probably they'd abrogate responsibility at the Federal level, and make each state implement it's own solution... kind of like the article that started this whole mess.

        • Merit-based qualification [for holding federal office]? Isn't that like Science?

          No, it's like literacy tests for voting.
          - It sounds like a good idea - that voting "ought to" be limited th those able to read the news and make informed decisions on the people and issues they vote on.
          - But as implemented, bogus tests were used to disqualify the voters who might have opposed the powers that be.

          In particular, it was used to disenfranchise the freedmen and poor farmers in the post-civil-war south,

          • - It sounds like a good idea - that voting "ought to" be limited th those able to read the news and make informed decisions on the people and issues they vote on.

            In particular, it was used to disenfranchise the freedmen and poor farmers in the post-civil-war south, which is what got it banned.

            And also used as the copy protection for Leisure Suit Larry!
            All politicians are
            a. hardworking.
            b. honest.
            c. ethical.
            d. on the public payroll.
            (Correct answer: d)

            Paul, John, Ringo and
            a. Fred.
            b. George.
            c. Harry.
            d. me.
            (Correct answer: b)

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        ...and that points to a greater problem. Everything is potentially gamed, and people have grown to believe that something should be gamed if it can be. By and large, people have become increasingly selfish and unethical; they lack an inherent intolerance for bad behavior, they accept it in their lives and exhibit it constantly online. It's not clear at all why we should look to voting as a solution to anything when voting is gamed like everything else. Democracy doesn't work when the people have no back

    • If you are 18 or older, register to vote, find the least worst candidate running in your local elections for Congress, and remove these people.

      The least worst candidate is one of those people. You've the choice between dog shit and horse shit for dinner. Which do you prefer?

    • The problem with the current American system is (many of) the politicians are bought and paid for employees of the rich and powerful. They have gamed the system so it doesn't matter who wins the elections, their policies are implemented. Step 1: Any politician who accepts donations from corporations/pacs/foreign money (anyone who can't legally vote for them) goes to jail, with a maximum limit on donation size per person.
  • The Left and the Right both want to control what you say and make it only what they want to hear. We will be left with nothing in the end.

  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Saturday July 04, 2020 @08:58PM (#60262574) Journal

    It should be unconstitutional to do anything with encryption because it protects freedom of speech. Since it is treated as a munition it can be regulated and controlled like a weapon.

    Encryption should enjoy constitutional protection under US law.

    my 2c

    • by Lehk228 ( 705449 )
      2A protects guns and encryption? interesting theory but i doubt the SCOTUS has the balls
      • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

        2A protects guns and encryption? interesting theory but i doubt the SCOTUS has the balls

        That's your theory. Encryption is subject to export control laws as a munition.

        In reality encryption should enjoy 1A protection.

  • "to allow lawsuits from states, and state legislatures could restrict or outlaw encryption technologies"

    Yea! Right!!!

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • Free Press Action, a media reform advocacy group, and you'll find that they want to do more than just "protect" encryption, they want to "transform Democracy" to their version of a "just society", i.e., Marxism. https://www.freepress.net/abou... [freepress.net]
  • I express myself in encrypted form, typically AES-512. You can't stop me. Since it's legal to shout "fuck it" in a crowded room, then I can say "shpx vg" whenever I want.

  • Raging viral outbreak all over the country, 1.8 million renters about to be evicted in the next 2 months, and they want to ban encryption and allow racist memes on Twitter. Great leadership.
  • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Saturday July 04, 2020 @10:36PM (#60262782)

    But the amended bill would change Section 230 to allow lawsuits from states, and state legislatures could restrict or outlaw encryption technologies

    I see what they're doing here - instead of the federal government mandating that E2E encryption is illegal/outlawed/must be circumventable, they'll force states to do that - by making it a condition for funding (or other such thing).

    • That's a fairly standard part of US politics. If the federal government lacks the power to do something that states can, it may force the hand of states by making funding conditional upon it. Often the area being funded is completely unrelated to the pressure desired. In one particularly amusing case, back in the 70s, funding for highway construction was conditional upon states having a religious exemption to child abuse laws. What's the connection between child abuse and highways? There isn't one: But if s

  • Why is it that most "news" platforms and even opinion spouters have an amazing inability to clearly list *which* highly respected overpaid dimwitted excuses for braindamaged houseplants in the Senate, House or Lunar orbit support the bill? They don't care about anything except money or things that might interfere with getting re-elected & a flood of irate emails about something they don't really care about does get their attention. Mean email = unhappy voter. Senator Gronk staff say they see many. Senat

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by GrahamJ ( 241784 )

    Sure glad my country is not this stupid.

  • These idiots are trying to hide their BS with last minute updates before a holiday. You can't force master keys on all of electronic communications, just like you can't force master keys on all safes and physical locks (and I'm not talking about the TSA and flying here).

    Vote these idiots out, its the only way. Taking away privacy needs to be a career ending move in politics or it will keep coming back.

  • Seems like we take a step forward and right after that they want to take a few steps backwards!

Suggest you just sit there and wait till life gets easier.

Working...