FBI director warns Facebook could become platform of 'child
pornographers'
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[October 05, 2019] By
Raphael Satter and Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - FBI Director
Christopher Wray said on Friday that Facebook Inc's proposal to encrypt
its popular messaging program would turn the platform into a "dream come
true for predators and child pornographers."
Wray, who was one of several top Justice Department officials on Friday
to address a crowd of law enforcement and child protection officials in
Washington, said that Facebook's <FB.O> plan would produce "a lawless
space created not by the American people or their representatives but by
the owners of one big company."
Facebook intends to add encryption of wide swathes of communications on
its platform.
His speech ratchets up the pressure on Facebook as the U.S. and allied
governments renew their push to weaken the digital protections around
the billions of messages people exchange each day.
Wray steered clear of making any specific proposal, saying that
"companies themselves are best placed" to offer a way for law
enforcement to get around encryption.
"We're going to lose the ability to find those kids who need to be
rescued," Wray said. "We're going to lose the ability to find the bad
guys."
The Justice Department's No. 2 official, who spoke after Wray, took a
swipe at Apple Inc <AAPL.O>, which already uses end-to-end encryption on
its messenger, saying the company reported only 43 tips to law
enforcement last year about child exploitation.
Facebook, by contrast, reported globally 16 million child-exploitation
tips, a number that he said could drop by as much as 70 percent if
Facebook encrypts its messaging program the way Apple has done.
"Are we to assume that Apple magically ran platforms free of child
exploitation?" Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen asked. "Or is it that
companies with end-to-end encryption cannot see harmful illicit activity
that was occurring on these platforms and they choose to avert their
eyes by deploying end-to-end encryption?"
The Justice Department event is part of a renewed push by the American,
Australian, and British governments to force tech companies to help them
circumvent the encryption that helps keeps digital communications
secure.
[to top of second column] |
FBI Director Christopher Wray, testifies before a Senate Homeland
Security and Government Affairs Committee hearing on "Threats to the
Homeland" at the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, U.S.,
October 10, 2018. REUTERS/Alex Wroblewski
Debates over encryption have been rumbling for more than 25 years, but
officials' anxiety has increased as major tech companies move toward
automatically encrypting the messages on their platforms and the data held on
phones.
In the past, officials have cited the threat of terrorism to buttress their
campaigns again encryption. But as Islamic State and other extremist groups fade
from the headlines, governments are trying a different tack, invoking the threat
of child abuse to argue for "lawful access" to these devices.
Facebook's privacy-focused move, announced by founder and Chief Executive Mark
Zuckerberg this year, is causing particular consternation because the platform
is the source of millions of tips to authorities about child abuse images every
year.
Zuckerberg, speaking on the company's weekly internal Q&A livestream on
Thursday, defended the decision, saying he was "optimistic" Facebook would be
able to identify predators even in encrypted systems by using the same tools it
uses to fight election interference.
Many people have applauded Facebook's push for privacy and security. Academics,
experts, and privacy groups have long worried that circumventing the protections
around private communications would open dangerous vulnerabilities that could
make the entire internet less safe, and leave billions of users exposed to
abusive surveillance.
Attorney General William Barr, who also spoke at Friday's event, said the
Justice Department "would like to engage with the private sector in exploring
solutions," but he warned that time is running out because the deployment of
"warrant-proof encryption has accelerated."
"The status quo is exceptionally dangerous, unacceptable, and only getting
worse," he said.
Daniel Castro, the vice president of the Washington-based Information Technology
and Innovation Foundation, said in an interview ahead of Wray's speech that
government officials were framing the conversation around protecting children
because it's emotionally powerful.
"In the past they've really focused on terrorism," he said. "They've really
switched angles on that."
(Reporting by Raphael Satter and Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Steve Orlofsky,
David Gregorio and Daniel Wallis)
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