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this post was submitted on 02 Mar 2025
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Privacy
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Bolt cutters are not a key, they are a method of bypassing the lock. they still need a warrant to do that, which is the point.
Lol...
In fascism, if you have the biggest gun, you do what you want. And Trump has the biggest "gun"
I'm talking about legally, and as much as I don't like trump we are not in a fascist country (yet).
What do you think the line is? When will it cross over and become acceptable to call it "fascism"? Because we've embodied Eco's 14 features of Ur-Fascism for like 20 years. We now have a de facto dictator who is using that framework to do explicitly fascist things... Where is the line?
The laws don't exist though because they're so easily circumvented. If you AES256 encrypt something today, there's an extremely lonely chance they can't crack it. For years.
With a padlock they can just pull out the cutters and they're done.
I'm just referring to your point on why there are no laws against padlocks in this context.
fair enough, padlock was the wrong type of lock for the analogy. how about a vault door? sure that may not be as common, but you don't have to support a government master key for those either.
Same thing goes for vaults, or all physical locks. It may take a little longer than a padlock but nothing comparable to the amount of time it would take to brute force good encryption. We’re talking maybe a couple of hours or days for a vault vs. millions of years.
so? does the quality of my lock change whether or not I should be allowed to have it?