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The Europol Encryption, Privacy and Cyber Crime Tightrope

Security is paramount, or is it? There has been a lot in the press recently about the delicate balance that technology companies need to strike between ensuring legitimate user privacy on the one hand and the use of this same security technology by terrorists to communicate privately on the other. The debate has been further fuelled on both sides of the pond firstly by James Comey (Director at FBI) and more recently by Rob Wainwright, Director at Europol. I must admit I didn’t about Europol, so in this post I will share a couple of things I have picked up in the last few days.

What is Europol?

From the Europol About Us page, “Europol is the European Union’s law enforcement agency whose main goal is to achieve a safer Europe for the benefit of all EU citizens”. In and amongst illegal drugs, trafficking, counterfeiting, organised crime, they also deal with cyber crime.

What are Europol doing about Cyber Crime?

In 2013 to spearhead the fight against cyber crime Europol created a European Cybercrime Centre (EC3). The European Cybercrime Centre (EC3) targets cyber crime in 3 keys areas:

  1. Cyber crime committed by organised groups
  2. Cyber crime that causes direct harm to individuals
  3. Cyber crime that impacts important infrastructure and information systems in the EU

What was the BBC Radio 5 Show all about?

Over the weekend during a BBC Radio show (5 Live) Rob Wainwright amongst others [David Omand (Former GCHQ Director), a TechUK bloke (cant remember his name) and Jamie Bartlett (The Dark Net)] shared their thoughts about encryption, security and user privacy:

What was Rob Wainwright, Europol Director, saying?

The Tightrope

Listeners to the radio show also offered their thoughts, and interestingly one shared that encryption is nothing new. Encryption has been widely available for ages and authorities should have been alert to the technology and the potential use of it by terrorist organisations. Another view described how virtually everything that is digital is encrypted from data on our mobile phones through to making a card payment at a local supermarket or online. There is no doubt that technology is yet again disrupting traditional ways of doing stuff, including law enforcement. As we start to do more online the tightrope lies in how to distinguish and subsequently police legitimate and innocent private online exchanges from those that are illegal and potentially dangerous to the general public. The debate continues…

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