EU Article 45 requires that browsers trust certificate authorities appointed by governments::The EU is poised to pass a sweeping new regulation, eIDAS 2.0. Buried deep in the text is Article 45, which returns us to the dark ages of 2011, when certificate authorities (CAs) could collaborate with governments to spy on encrypted traffic—and get away with it. Article 45 forbids browsers from…

    • I_like_cats@lemmy.one
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      1 year ago

      They wouldn’t get banned. That’s the problem. The article mandates that these certificates are exempt from the usual repercussions for acting out

        • serial_crusher@lemmy.basedcount.com
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          1 year ago

          You just went from complaining about having to manually trust certificates, to acting like you’d be ok having to install a browser plugin that tells you which certs to trust….

          Why did you need government regulation to solve the original problem? Couldn’t you have just installed a plugin for it?

    • silencioso@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’m not saying they are definitely not stupid enough to try it but they would only be able to do it once.

      They will the be caught and they will do it again and again. Normies they don’t give a fuck about privacy or certificates.

    • Slotos@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      When it comes to regulations, intent doesn’t matter when they enable abuse of power.

      I don’t give a fuck if this is not aimed at spying. It trivially allows it, and that’s what matters.

    • vimdiesel@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Whatever their “intent” it fucking dumb and an invasion of privacy with no real justification. Governments don’t need to see what I’m doing on the internet.

    • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It should be every country in EU and those looking to join to have certificates on their id cards. Am thinking they are just trying to expedite the process. EU could easily create their own regulatory body and get approved by other root certificate holders to establish path of trust, but most likely it complicates things and/or takes too long.

      Not to sound too pessimistic but making a browser trust another certificate is not that difficult. If they wanted to MITM attack anyone it would be fairly easy given that people usually install software from any source let alone government without thinking twice. During that installation another certificate can be added to the list of trusted roots and problem solved. It wouldn’t be harder to achieve and it would be much harder to detect.