General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Guardian: "XKeyscore: NSA tool collects 'nearly everything a user does on the internet'" [View all]Silent3
(15,909 posts)And if so, not all of them are US companies, so the need for them (or their US offices) to comply, or keep such requests secret, isn't clear to me. Since giving away private keys is giving away a lot, I'd hope that a company issued such a warrant (and especially merely a non-warrant request) would fight it hard, as the scope of what a company gives away when surrendering its own, or a client company's, private keys is huge, much bigger than the scope of any particular suspected communications.
That would be like demanding an entire city allow every home in that city to be searched just because a few homes in the city are suspected of harboring stolen property.
Have things at the NSA (or any other US intelligence operations) gotten that far out of hand? Perhaps, but I'm not quite ready to set my hair on fire yet, as if somehow assuming the absolute worst based on a few accusations and PowerPoint slides is somehow the smart thing to do, so that "they" don't pull the wool over your eyes.