Thomas de Maiziere |
Although this is clearly a step in the right direction, there are elements of De-Mail’s encryption that even David Cameron would support. According to The Associated Press, the Interior Ministry has already announced that, “When necessary to fight crime, German security services would aim to intercept messages before they are encrypted or after they have been decrypted.” Even if a message’s content remains hidden, there is no guarantee that the sender or receiver of an email would, given that De-Mail accounts require a verified ID at setup.
Despite these threats to privacy and anonymity, Thomas de
Maiziere, Germany’s Interior Minister, appears to believe that De-Mail’s
encryption will move Germany to the forefront of the digital world: “Germany
wants to take a leading role in the use of digital services. Encryption is an
important precondition for this.” De Maiziere’s statement proves that he is yet
another politician who simply doesn’t understand that privacy most of the time is
as good as no privacy at all—and, therefore, will not enable a country to build
the consumer trust necessary to provide reliable digital services.
Just days before Germany’s announcement, the BBC interviewed
the man behind PGP, Phil Zimmermann, at the 2015 Mobile World Congress. As if
in direct warning to de Maiziere, David Grossman’s interview
contrasted Zimmermann of the 1990s, a man who believed encryption equaled security,
with Zimmermann today, a man cognizant of the workarounds government has found
to encryption: “The NSA shifted their emphasis to being able to take over your
computer. They can inject malware into your computer. And, if they can do that,
it doesn’t matter how good the crypto is. They can exfiltrate the cryptographic
keys…They can do all kinds of things if they can take over your computer and
that’s where the intel companies are putting their energy now.”
The German government maintains that De-Mail’s end-to-end
encryption will make the nation a global leader in digital services. In the
1990s, it might have. Today, however, Germany’s simultaneous promise to use
malware—the very malware that Zimmermann warns renders encryption useless—to
fight unspecified crime, shifts Monday’s news to yet another shiny but
insubstantial announcement.
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