======Encryption Policy for the 21st Century a Future Without Government Prescribed Key Recovery====== This report examines the impact of government encryption policies on privacy, security, and the economy, arguing against mandatory key recovery and export controls on strong encryption technology. \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ ^ Quick Facts ^^ |Report location: |[[https://www.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/2021-02/research-brief-in-econ-policy-250.pdf|source]] | |Language: |English | |Publisher: |[[encyclopedia:cato_institute|CATO Institute]] | |Authors: | Solveig Singleton | |Geographic focus: |global | =====Methods===== The research method involved analyzing existing encryption technologies, government policies, and their implications for privacy, security, and commerce. It also considered historical precedents, legal frameworks, and technological capabilities to assess the feasibility and impact of government-prescribed key recovery systems and export controls. \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ =====Key Insights===== The report critiques U.S. encryption policy, highlighting the dangers of government-prescribed key recovery and export controls on strong encryption. It emphasizes the need for strong encryption to protect privacy and foster electronic commerce, while arguing that such controls are technically unfeasible, economically damaging, and a threat to civil liberties. The report advocates for the widespread use of strong encryption without government-imposed backdoors and calls for the liberalization of export controls to maintain the competitiveness of U.S. companies in global markets. \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ =====Additional Viewpoints===== Categories: {{tag>global_geographic_scope}} | {{tag>English_publication_language}} ~~DISCUSSION~~