San Francisco Chronicle

FBI chief wants ‘adult conversati­on’ on encryption

-

WASHINGTON — FBI Director James Comey warned again Tuesday about the bureau’s inability to access digital devices because of encryption and said investigat­ors were collecting informatio­n about the challenge in preparatio­n for an “adult conversati­on” next year.

Widespread encryption built into smartphone­s is “making more and more of the room that we are charged to investigat­e dark,” Comey said in a cybersecur­ity symposium.

The remarks reiterated points that Comey has made repeatedly in the last two years, before Congress and in other settings, about the growing collision between electronic privacy and national security.

The Justice Department decided within the last year to not seek a legislativ­e resolution, and some of the public debate surroundin­g the FBI’s legal fight with Apple Inc. has subsided in the last few months since federal authoritie­s were able to access a locked phone in a terror case without the help of the technology giant. The FBI sought a court order to force Apple to help it hack into an iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters, a demand the tech giant and other privacy advocates said would dramatical­ly weaken security of its products.

The FBI ultimately got into the phone with the help of an unidentifi­ed third party, leaving the legal dispute unresolved. But Comey made clear Tuesday that he expects that dialogue to continue.

“The conversati­on we’ve been trying to have about this has dipped below public consciousn­ess now, and that’s fine,” Comey said at a symposium organized by Symantec, a Mountain View technology company. “Because what we want to do is collect informatio­n this year so that next year we can have an adult conversati­on in this country.”

The American people, he said, have a reasonable expectatio­n of privacy in private spaces — including houses, cars and electronic devices. But that right is not absolute when law enforcemen­t has probable cause to believe that there’s evidence of a crime in one of those places.

He said it’s not the role of the FBI or tech companies to tell the American people how to live and govern themselves.

“We need to understand in the FBI how is this exactly affecting our work, and then share that with folks,” Comey said, conceding that the American people might ultimately decide that privacy was more important than “that portion of the room being dark.”

He also stood by the Justice Department’s decision to bring indictment­s against Chinese and Iranian officials in major cyberattac­k cases in the last two years, rejecting criticism from those who have called the criminal charges meaningles­s gestures unlikely to result in a conviction.

Those actions can make a foreign defendant think twice before traveling overseas, and can deter government­s. He said there’s been progress with the Chinese government since 2014 indictment­s that accused five Chinese military officials of siphoning secrets from American corporatio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States