> If you can't figure out a way to satisfy your desire for your devices to be resistant to surveillance tools with legal means, well, then you can't satisfy that desire.
I fear this part of your argument is fallacious. A peaceful and hilarious response to an abuse is not illegal. An if it is, it should not be. This post just highlights how petty the means and methods used by "some companies" are. Moxie is rightfully mocking Cellebrite and its customers, and it's fantastic.
About the obstruction of justice... If governments around the world are having an appetite for abuses, we shall not fall for it. There are other ways to get to criminals. Tell state officers they can do their job without abusing the private sphere of citizens.
It's Cellebrite devices that should be made illegal, because "justice" should not depend on surveillance tools. Just days ago the same US IC shared a memo/report about the rise of authoritarianism and how western democracies are threatened by it. Let's stop this double standard.
I fear this part of your argument is fallacious. A peaceful and hilarious response to an abuse is not illegal. An if it is, it should not be. This post just highlights how petty the means and methods used by "some companies" are. Moxie is rightfully mocking Cellebrite and its customers, and it's fantastic.
About the obstruction of justice... If governments around the world are having an appetite for abuses, we shall not fall for it. There are other ways to get to criminals. Tell state officers they can do their job without abusing the private sphere of citizens.
It's Cellebrite devices that should be made illegal, because "justice" should not depend on surveillance tools. Just days ago the same US IC shared a memo/report about the rise of authoritarianism and how western democracies are threatened by it. Let's stop this double standard.