ravengrim Moderator
Number of posts : 7192 Age : 52 Location : At The End Of Time : : The Fallen Angel : : More Numbers : 7859259 Registration date : 2008-07-21
| Subject: This Internet provider pledges to put your privacy first. Always. Wed Apr 11, 2012 11:36 am | |
| LinkHis recipe for Calyx was inspired by those six years of interminable legal wrangling with the Feds: Take wireless service like that offered by Clear, which began selling 4G WiMAX broadband in 2009. Inject end-to-end encryption for Web browsing. Add e-mail that's stored in encrypted form, so even Calyx can't read it after it arrives. Wrap all of this up into an easy-to-use package and sell it for competitive prices, ideally around $20 a month without data caps, though perhaps prepaid for a full year. "The idea that we are working on is to not be capable of complying" with requests from the FBI for stored e-mail and similar demands, Merrill says. A 1994 federal law called the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act was highly controversial when it was enacted because it required telecommunications carriers to configure their networks for easy wiretappability by the FBI. But even CALEA says that ISPs "shall not be responsible for decrypting" communications if they don't possess "the information necessary to decrypt." Translation: make sure your customers own their data and only they can decrypt it. | |
|