Is everything alright over there? Why are you guys trying to model your telecom infrastructure off North Korea or the Peoples Republic of China?
Is everything alright over there? Why are you guys trying to model your telecom infrastructure off North Korea or the Peoples Republic of China?
Fun fact: they banned encryption on Amateur Radio frequencies.
The internet is our era’s version of Amateur Radio, so judging by historical trends, they will soon ban end-to-end encryption for internet communications.
They will never ban encryption, they may ban specific cyphers. It is too useful for them. What they will, and have done, is require platforms to either
A. use broken algorithms that they can break the key for.
B. Install application backdoors so they don’t have to mess with encryption.
Just set up your own Snikket client or Synapse server. They can’t get all of us.
Are you sure that this is recent?
https://www.reddit.com/r/amateurradio/comments/tge77a/is_it_illegal_to_encrypt_traffic_over_ham_radio/
There are probably ways available to everyone to transmit data in an encrypted form. It sounds like some non-amateur frequencies that aren’t that hard to get access to in the UK permit for encryption:
https://www.reddit.com/r/amateurradio/comments/tkbx8f/any_radio_with_encryption_that_is_legal_to_use_in/
I assume that given that WiFi exists and is usually encrypted, the unregulated spectrum permits for encryption, unless the UK deals with that range very differently than the US does.
Also, if you want a point-to-point link and can use lasers, I doubt that that’s regulated.
That’s right. In USA and Canada it’s AMATEUR radio. Commercial activity is prohibited. Various protocols are allowed for information transmission, but must be basically open source so anyone can play.
Encryption wasn’t ever legal for most hams. But, then, who can copy 30wpm Morse these days?
AIs probably can
They’d have trouble if the ‘fist’ is sloppy enough. Swing it
How will you guys get around it?