From 3abc9e8048e831def5b9ee3c2daca93b7399a724 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nikhil Jha Date: Thu, 22 Nov 2018 19:43:13 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] Sort dropdown with the order that sections appear on page. --- _layouts/default.html | 9 ++- index.html | 127 +++++++++++++++++++++--------------------- 2 files changed, 69 insertions(+), 67 deletions(-) diff --git a/_layouts/default.html b/_layouts/default.html index cb0912e2..df1b2c97 100644 --- a/_layouts/default.html +++ b/_layouts/default.html @@ -117,13 +117,16 @@ Search Engines Instant Messenger Video & Voice Messenger + File Sharing + Encrypted Cloud Storage + Self-Hosted Cloud Server + Secure File Sync Password Manager Calendar and Contacts Sync File Encryption - File Sharing - Secure File Sync Self-contained Networks - Self-Hosted Cloud Server + Social Networks + DNS Digital Notebook Paste Services Productivity Tools diff --git a/index.html b/index.html index 50918e0c..bae005c9 100644 --- a/index.html +++ b/index.html @@ -97,6 +97,69 @@ layout: default + +

Key Disclosure Law

+ + +

Who is required to hand over the encryption keys to authorities?

+

Mandatory key disclosure laws require individuals to turn over encryption keys to law enforcement conducting a criminal investigation. How these laws are implemented (who may be legally compelled to assist) vary from nation to nation, but a warrant + is generally required. Defenses against key disclosure laws include steganography and encrypting data in a way that provides plausible deniability.

+ + +

Steganography involves hiding sensitive information (which may be encrypted) inside of ordinary data (for example, encrypting an image file and then hiding it in an audio file). With plausible deniability, data is encrypted in a way that prevents an + adversary from being able to prove that the information they are after exists (for example, one password may decrypt benign data and another password, used on the same file, could decrypt sensitive data).

+ + +
+ + {% include panel.html color="danger" + title="Key disclosure laws apply" + body=' +
    +
  1. Antigua and Barbuda
  2. +
  3. Australia
  4. +
  5. Canada
  6. +
  7. France
  8. +
  9. India
  10. +
  11. Ireland
  12. +
  13. Norway
  14. +
  15. Russia
  16. +
  17. South Africa
  18. +
  19. United Kingdom
  20. +
+ ' + %} + + {% include panel.html color="warning" + title="Key disclosure laws may apply" + body=' +
    +
  1. Belgium *
  2. +
  3. Finland *
  4. +
  5. New Zealand (unclear)
  6. +
  7. Sweden (proposed)
  8. +
  9. The Netherlands *
  10. +
  11. United States (see related information)
  12. +
+ ' + %} + + {% include panel.html color="success" + title="Key disclosure laws don't apply" + body=' +
    +
  1. Czech Republic
  2. +
  3. Germany
  4. +
  5. Poland
  6. +
+ ' + %} + +
+ +

* (people who know how to access a system may be ordered to share their knowledge, however, this doesn't apply to the suspect itself or family members.)

+ +

Why is it not recommended to choose a US-based service?

USA @@ -1550,70 +1613,6 @@ layout: default - - -

Key disclosure law

- - -

Who is required to hand over the encryption keys to authorities?

-

Mandatory key disclosure laws require individuals to turn over encryption keys to law enforcement conducting a criminal investigation. How these laws are implemented (who may be legally compelled to assist) vary from nation to nation, but a warrant - is generally required. Defenses against key disclosure laws include steganography and encrypting data in a way that provides plausible deniability.

- - -

Steganography involves hiding sensitive information (which may be encrypted) inside of ordinary data (for example, encrypting an image file and then hiding it in an audio file). With plausible deniability, data is encrypted in a way that prevents an - adversary from being able to prove that the information they are after exists (for example, one password may decrypt benign data and another password, used on the same file, could decrypt sensitive data).

- - -
- - {% include panel.html color="danger" - title="Key disclosure laws apply" - body=' -
    -
  1. Antigua and Barbuda
  2. -
  3. Australia
  4. -
  5. Canada
  6. -
  7. France
  8. -
  9. India
  10. -
  11. Ireland
  12. -
  13. Norway
  14. -
  15. Russia
  16. -
  17. South Africa
  18. -
  19. United Kingdom
  20. -
- ' - %} - - {% include panel.html color="warning" - title="Key disclosure laws may apply" - body=' -
    -
  1. Belgium *
  2. -
  3. Finland *
  4. -
  5. New Zealand (unclear)
  6. -
  7. Sweden (proposed)
  8. -
  9. The Netherlands *
  10. -
  11. United States (see related information)
  12. -
- ' - %} - - {% include panel.html color="success" - title="Key disclosure laws don't apply" - body=' -
    -
  1. Czech Republic
  2. -
  3. Germany
  4. -
  5. Poland
  6. -
- ' - %} - -
- - -

* (people who know how to access a system may be ordered to share their knowledge, however, this doesn't apply to the suspect itself or family members.)

-

Related Information