• Neato@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      100%? Impossible. But they can effectively ban it.

      Pass a law that makes any US company, or company doing business in the US, not allowed to host E2EE-enabled apps. This now bans them from the App Store and Play Store. 99% of users won’t find or choose to side-load for android users. Then they can make E2EE actually illegal to distribute in the US. They’ll almost never bother going after individuals, but this effectively makes hosting a US-based website unable to distribute E2EE programs. So people will need to use foreign sites. Which the US can force ISPs to block via a whack-a-mole on individual sites.

      This isn’t very likely, but hell Congress was decently close to banning TikTok for no real reason so who knows?

      • FrankTheHealer
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        2 years ago

        I’m confused though. Don’t banking/ finance apps require E2EE ?

        Also Password Managers, VPNs? Do these apps not need E2EE by default?

        • Neato@kbin.social
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          2 years ago

          Oh yeah. There’d either be carve-outs or congress would just knee-jerk against encryption (like they’ve nearly done before) and deal with the consequences later.

          • CabrioBanned
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            2 years ago

            Why do Americans say carve-out, is it because illiterate TV media personalities couldn’t pronounce caveat?

              • CabrioBanned
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                2 years ago

                Care to explain the difference? Google is struggling to bring up adequate definitions for carve-out, or why it’s different to caveat, and I see multiple sources using both, sometimes interchangeably.

                • Roboticide
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                  2 years ago

                  I mean, you’re the one claiming dumb Americans can’t pronounce English.

                  Caveat is a noun. It’s a really old word, literally from ancient Latin meaning “let him beware.” Basically a warning, often noting that while something may seem great, there is often a notable problem.

                  A carve out is a simple compound, and typically a verb, but can be used as a noun as seen above. It notes an exception (typically to a policy, practice, or law), often one specifically framed to benefit a specific group, at the expense of others.

                  For example: “Congress’ new law creates strong regulations for CO2 emissions, but before you get excited, there’s one caveat: there are carve outs for automotive manufacturers, who won’t have to abide by those regulations until 2030.”

        • MasterBlaster
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          2 years ago

          All the government needs is copies of the keys. Encryption remains in place for everybody else, so it is … Plausible.

          All these encryption bans are specifically encryptions thee governments cannot decrypt.

    • Dasnap
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      2 years ago

      Tories are just trying to kick up as much shit as possible before they’re kicked out so they can blame the next party for the fallout.

    • odium@programming.dev
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      2 years ago

      Cloudflare has human checks before you can access some sites. Some apps and screenreaders no longer work with those sites.

      • DacoTaco
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        2 years ago

        Not only apps and screenreaders. Some legit browsers too.

        I have a browser that basically does not let the website know what or who it is ( user agent is a random number ) and cloudflare just flat out refuses me from viewing websites.

        Fine cloudflare hosted website, keep your secrets!

    • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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      2 years ago

      They’re all uppity that to use cloudflare proxy they have to terminate the ssl connection there. So technically cloudflare can sniff all the traffic. But that’s kind of the point of WAFs and Reverse Proxies.

      I would argue that the sheer amount of data throughput that Cloudflare has, you’d have to really be on a list to be monitored… and they certainly cannot just log all data willy nilly.

      • r00ty@kbin.life
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        2 years ago

        I suppose this one is quite simple. How can they cache, if they don’t MitM the connection? I don’t think it would be technically possible. If you want the cache/CDN you just need to use a company you trust. If you don’t trust them then you don’t get the cache/CDN.

        • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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          2 years ago

          Correct. But people are viewing the DDOS protection, Cache, WAF, etc… functions as evidence that Cloudflare is obviously malicious and storing 100% of all data traversing them.

          I’ve seen no evidence of that yet, and will certainly discontinue use of them if they show such tendencies. Until then, I will absolutely leverage their platform for my use as a paying customer.

          I do understand the fear with their free platform though… They’ve gotta make money somehow, and I feel there’s probably a fear that is data collection.

      • Reliant1087
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        2 years ago

        I think my issue with cloudflare is not that I think they will compromise my data through their proxy to steal my passwords or go through my data, but that it seems quite likely given their ubiquity that the three letter agencies or similar have backdoor.

        It’s similar with say Google, i.e. I probably trust cybersecurity at Google more than at bitwarden. Unfortunately Google mines the shit out of my data (shitty but not dangerous) and will probably hand over stuff to some authoritarian government if they asked for it (physically dangerous).

      • droans
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        2 years ago

        You can also turn off all the features with a single click and Cloudflare will just be your nameserver.

  • Larvitar@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    Guess I’ll just have to touch grass.

    Google, try pulling data from me being at the park when my phone gets left at home!

  • Spudwart
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    2 years ago

    It’s the ultimate showdown of ultimate destiny

  • PrefersAwkward
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    2 years ago

    Great stuff but isnt this nsfw? Should we be seeing a tag?