India’s BlackBerry Compromise Won’t Solve Anything
Countries from India to the UAE don’t like secrets, especially when they’re held by their own citizens, but banning BlackBerry is shortsighted and futile, says Wayne Rash
So even if the Indian government gains access to those users’ email messages, they won’t be able to read the messages. And while PGP isn’t yet available for the iPhone, I think it’s a pretty sure bet that if the demand surfaces, it will appear soon enough.
Of course, the Indian government may also decide to ban PGP and other encryption algorithms. But will that really work? Just think of all of those programmers in India already doing work for US firms. I don’t think that, given the talent pool, somebody somewhere won’t think of a way to secure their messages. What’s more important is that the Indian government won’t be able to do anything about it.
In fact, a heavy hand on the part of the government, coupled with a deep pool of good programmers, only ensures one outcome – a means of using secure messaging will emerge that the Indian government can’t detect and can’t crack. If India is really worried about security, I think there are better ways to go about it.
Compromise
But meanwhile, there’s another question. What, exactly, did RIM agree to? Obviously the company isn’t saying, and it’s equally obvious that the government isn’t either. One of the secrets to signals monitoring is to make sure that the person or thing being monitored doesn’t know for sure whether you’re doing it, and if you are, how you’re going about it.
Perhaps this is the real success in India’s misguided effort to monitor its citizens’ communications at will. Not that they can actually monitor anything, but that they can induce people to believe they are being monitored, and in the process not use their devices for communications that they care about being monitored. Sounds convoluted, I know, but this is how governments sometimes think. Just as is the case in Washington, it’s not the reality that matters so much as the perception of reality.
But if India really intends to hang its security on banning BlackBerries, then it’s an effort doomed to failure. Even if all BlackBerry devices were to disappear tomorrow, the means of secure communications exist on every other smartphone, every web page and every phone call. There’s nothing India can do to prevent it, and by forcing the issue, there’s every reason to believe that the government will simply force those that actually do want to keep secrets from the government into new, more creative and harder to detect ways of doing so.