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In these dark times, it's inspiring to see that a country as insignificant as Australia can demonstrate to us how things can always get worse.

By passing a law mandating that encryption must be broken, in secret (like the US's National Security Letters), at the demand of the Government, the two biggest parties have colluded to destroy Australia's tech sector.

This is the same government that has been whining endlessly about using Huawei LTE equipment in Australian infrastructure "because it might be secretly compromised". Now the same is true of Australian equipment, by law.

My favourite part of all this is how there will be firmware updates for devices sold in Australia, in order to comply with the new law. How well do you think those backdoors will be secured? How thoroughly do you expect them to be tested, given Australia's population of only 25 million?

How can any Australian company expect customers to trust them now?

Comments
  • 4
    I hate to see any country subjected to this, but I am glad there will be a real-world example of the disastrous effects of this action, to show nations and legislative constituents that the, "security measures" proposed by tech-ignorant politicians are entirely ineffective.

    I mean, nobody's safe. The PM's checking account will get hacked, like, right away.
  • 0
    Anyone who uses Octopus Deploy should be seriously considering another continuous delivery product right now. With a Brisbane-based development team, they're a high-value target for both state actors and third parties who would exploit any mandated backdoors.
  • 0
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