Summary

  • The Marion County Record newsroom in Kansas was raided by police, who seized two cellphones, four computers, a backup hard drive, and reporting materials.

  • A computer seized was most likely unencrypted. Law enforcement officials hope that devices seized during a raid are unencrypted, as this makes them easier to examine.

  • Modern iPhones and Android phones are encrypted by default, but older devices may not be.

  • Desktop computers typically do not have encryption enabled by default, so it is important to turn this on manually.

  • Use strong random passwords and keep them in a password manager.

  • During the raid, police seized a single backup hard drive. It is important to have multiple backups of your data in case one is lost or stolen.

  • You can encrypt USB storage devices using BitLocker To Go on Windows, or Disk Utility on macOS.

  • All major desktop operating systems support Veracrypt, which can be used to encrypt entire drives.

Main Take-aways

  • Encrypt your devices, drives, and USBs.

  • Use strong random passwords and password manager.

  • Have multiple backups.

  • Gormadt
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    2 years ago

    And don’t forget to use encrypted messenging apps like Signal.

    And do your research into which apps, programs, etc have the best encryption.

    • Gamey
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      72 years ago

      I vouch for Veracryp, Signal, Matrix and your favorite Linux Distro, can’t beat those tools!

      • @blackstrat@lemmy.fwgx.uk
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        52 years ago

        If you’re not a world leading cryptographer and security expert then you vouching for something isn’t worth much. It’s just repeating others opinions without having done the work to verify these tools are as good as they claim. Any or all of these could have issues and weaknesses that you don’t know about.

        • Gamey
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          42 years ago

          Yes I don’t understand the exact mechanisms but I did my research and no one could verify all of those huge codebases, we have experts in public so normal people can do their research and no I don’t have to read every line and understand the mathematical formular to recommend secure tools…

        • RickRussell_CA
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          12 years ago

          Although you don’t have to be smarter than the experts, just smarter than police. Few local PDs can bring the kinds of resources to bear to do a decrypt on a properly encrypted data store.

          Obviously if you’re pissing off major state actors, all bets are off – they are probably already surveilling you and saw you type your password through a zoom lens pointed at your window, or worse.

  • r00ty
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    232 years ago

    Encrypted cloud backup! They can take my drives, but the data is encrypted on the cloud.

      • TheHalc
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        62 years ago

        Sure, but there’s not much they can do about it if things are properly encrypted, for example using DKE on M365.

        • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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          2 years ago

          properly encrypted, for example using DKE on M365.

          Wouldn’t call that properly encrypted… but either way, when they lock you out “pending an investigation”, that’s no longer a backup.

  • @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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    142 years ago

    If you encrypt your device, and dirty cops like these decide they want in, they’ll just toss you in the slammer and forget about you until you either cough up the password or die of dehydration. Either way works for them.

    • @marco@beehaw.org
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      172 years ago

      Similarly when you cross a border… you don’t have to give them you password, but they can just keep you for a few days. Also note:

      Currently, police officers have the authority to demand that you unlock your mobile phone using face recognition and fingerprint identification. When unlocking your phone, police officers have no right to demand that you disclose your passcode or pattern.

      https://esfandilawfirm.com/can-police-unlock-your-phone/

      • @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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        192 years ago

        They can also kill you where you stand with total impunity, so I’m not sure I see how these limitations of their supposed rights are at all meaningful.

          • @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org
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            2 years ago

            Law enforcement routinely makes demands that are intentionally impossible to comply with, such as the deadly game of Simon Says that was played by the officers who murdered Daniel Shaver.

            It’s like a cat playing with its prey. The prey is not intended to survive.

        • RickRussell_CA
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          22 years ago

          It’s layers on an onion. Every extralegal step they take provides a possible mitigation if you go to trial.

          Obviously, if they straight up murder somebody, that’s a whole different problem. But in general, you should invoke your rights at every step of the process, so that if they trample over those rights you’ll have an argument in court to get evidence or charges thrown out.

  • @Laitinlok@discuss.tchncs.de
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    132 years ago

    Bitlocker only support win 10/11 pro or above, most devices are shipped with win 10/11 home which doesn’t have the capability. Linux supports full drive encryption using LUKS.

    • Papamousse
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      22 years ago

      Yup, my win10 and win11 have bitlocker on. They dual boot with Linux, FDE on them too.

  • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    102 years ago

    So encryption really matters, totally agree. Protection at all times.

    But I’m also curious about this story. Why are the police raiding a newspaper and seizing computers? That is sketchy as hell.

    • RickRussell_CA
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      162 years ago

      Short version:

      • Police chief was accused of sexual impropriety, and the newspaper was investigating.

      • A prominent local restaurant owner got caught in a DUI and the newspaper got a tip and investigated. On investigation, they decided the story was not newsworthy.

      • Police raided the newspaper claiming that the DUI tip was the result of illegal computer hacking, and that they had to confiscate the computers to analyze for evidence of hacking.

      • The judge who signed the search warrant also had a history of DUI.

      • Critics believe that the police used this hacking claim as a thinly veiled excuse to cripple the newspaper and check to see what they really had on the chief.

      • Critics have also suggested that the police themselves may have leaked the information to set up the flimsy excuse for the search.

      • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        32 years ago

        Thanks for the summary.

        That is kind of what I suspected which is:

        • There was some conflict between the newspaper and local government
        • Government found some flimsy excuse to attack the newspaper

        Overall that’s bad news. It implies the government’s gloves are coming off.