Chris Betz: Forces often seek to undermine and disrupt technology and people, attempting to weaken the very devices and services people have come to depend on and trust.
Molly Wood: Think twice about what you connect to your network.
James Comey: My goal is to urge our fellow citizens to participate in a conversation as a country about where we are, and where we want to be, with respect to the authority of law enforcement.
David Cameron: In our country, do we want to allow a means of communication between people which ... we cannot read?
David Cole: It is disappointing, if not surprising, that they see a need for public debate only when new technologies may impair their ability to monitor us, and not when such technologies enhance their monitoring.
Poul-Henning Kamp: The reason HTTP/2.0 does not improve privacy is that the big corporate backers have built their business model on top of the lack of privacy.
Maciej Ceglowski: Surveillance as a business model is the only thing that makes a site like Facebook possible.
Metafilter Wisdom: If you are not paying for it, you're not the customer; you're the product being sold.
Steven Johns: Gogo Inflight Internet seems to believe that they are justified in performing a man-in-the-middle attack on their users. It was [recently] revealed through the FCC that Gogo partnered with government officials to produce "capabilities to accommodate law enforcement interests" that go beyond those outlined under federal law.
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