SmarterthanYou
rebel
Imagine buying a safe to protect your valuables from criminals
then imagine watching government agents come in and easily open it up because the safe manufacturer programmed a back door code and gave it to the government.
https://notthebee.com/article/liber...licy-after-handing-backdoor-access-to-the-fbi
then imagine watching government agents come in and easily open it up because the safe manufacturer programmed a back door code and gave it to the government.
https://notthebee.com/article/liber...licy-after-handing-backdoor-access-to-the-fbi
Do you own things you want to keep safe? Maybe guns, valuables, or important documents? If so, there is a good chance you own a safe to keep those items in. You might also believe you are the only one that has access to the safe. Sadly, you might be wrong.
For charges related to the January 6th attack on the United States Capitol Building, the FBI obtained warrants to arrest and search Arkansas resident Nathan Hughes's person and property. On August 30th, Liberty Safe was contacted by the FBI and requested that Liberty Safe provide the FBI with access codes needed to complete their search of Hughes’s property.
Liberty Safe complied. The codes were provided, and the FBI gained access to the Liberty Safes in question.
Hughes's charges are irrelevant. What is deeply concerning is Liberty Safe’s willingness to assist the FBI in accessing his safe. While the FBI seems to have had full right by law to search his safe because it had a valid warrant, the actual act of doing so is on them. The choice of cooperation in accessing the safe should be held only by Hughes. Instead, Liberty Safe provided access codes the public didn’t even know existed.
To be clear, Liberty was not the target of the warrant or of a subpoena. From what is known, the company was not legally obligated to provide the FBI with the ordered code. It did so merely at the request of the FBI and because the agency provided a copy of the warrant for Mr. Hughes.
