this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2025
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While we have problems here in Europe and they're concerning, the US really has this shit on a whole 'nother level. The NSA more or less has ALL the data that enters or exits the country and probably most of what goes around public networks (so just about any ISP) within the country. Your Lemmy instance is hosted in France and from your comment I infer that you're American (so likely situated in the US), so most likely the communication between you and the instance is all recorded and stored at 33 Thomas Street. They're just storing everything so they can decrypt it if quantum computing breaks existing algorithms. Then there's all the tooling the CIA and NSA have built to spy on everyone who has any even somewhat insecure smart device.
Denmark is trying to legislate all this into happening, the US just ignores legislation when something actually disagrees with their spying
Barring civilians from using encryption and software deemed dangerous is a new level imo. These are the tools we have to fight this stuff, maintaining those rights is a big deal.
Oh I agree. If encryption becomes illegal I may actually move to another freaking continent. I have nothing to hide, but I am still not willing to compromise on privacy and security.
it's not that they're ignoring it; is that the legistlation doesn't address buying it from non-government agencies and probably on purpose.