On Sun, 2 Sep 2018, Paul Wilkins wrote: > The government is going to be able to enforce the Assistance and Access Bill, > because to operate a business in Australia, > requires a local presence. Your trade marks and intellectual property need > recognition, and you require a registered company to > conduct business and to hold bank accounts. If you won't comply with > assistance/capability notices, you won't be able to conduct > business in Australia.
Telegram and Signal have none of those and work fine here. Arguably neither is a business, certainly in the traditional sense of the word. And yet they offer precisely what the "worst of the worst" desire - end-to-end encryption that, as you so clearly point out, the Australian government has no power to prevent. Sure they will be able to enforce it against others, but their whole argument for these laws is to go after those actors when it is manifestly ineffective for that. -- # TRS-80 trs80(a)ucc.gu.uwa.edu.au #/ "Otherwise Bub here will do \ # UCC Wheel Member http://trs80.ucc.asn.au/ #| what squirrels do best | [ "There's nobody getting rich writing ]| -- Collect and hide your | [ software that I know of" -- Bill Gates, 1980 ]\ nuts." -- Acid Reflux #231 / _______________________________________________ AusNOG mailing list AusNOG@lists.ausnog.net http://lists.ausnog.net/mailman/listinfo/ausnog