Last Chance to fix eIDAS: Secret EU law threatens Internet security
Last Chance to fix eIDAS: Secret EU law threatens Internet security
EU law agreed behind closed doors threatens Internet security
These changes radically expand the capability of EU governments to surveil their citizens by ensuring cryptographic keys under government control can be used to intercept encrypted web traffic
This enables the government of any EU member state to issue website certificates for interception and surveillance
The browser ecosystem is global, not EU-bounded. Once a mechanism like QWACs is implemented in browsers, it is open to abuse
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EIDAS
The proposal would force internet companies to place a backdoor in web browsers to let them perform a man-in-the-middle attack, deceiving users into thinking that they were communicating with a server they requested, when, in fact, they would be communicating directly with the EU government. […] If passed, the EU would be able to hack into any internet-enabled device, reading any sensitive or encrypted contents without the user's knowledge