Comment by waterTanuki

9 days ago

I understand data sovereignty in the case where a foreign entity might cut off access to your data, but this paranoia that storing info under your bed is the safest bet is straight up false. We have post-quantum encryption widely available already. If your fear is that a foreign entity will access your data, you're technologically illiterate.

Obviously no person in a lawmaking position will ever have the patience or foresight to learn about this, but the fact they won't even try is all the more infuriating.

Encryption only makes sense if "the cloud" is just a data storage bucket to you. If you run applications in the cloud, you can't have all the data encrypted, especially not all the time. There are some technologies that make this possible, but none are mature enough to run even a small business, let alone a country on.

It sounds technologically illiterate to you because when people say "we can't safely use a foreign cloud" you think they're saying "to store data" and everyone else is thinking at the very least "to store and process data".

Sure, they could have used a cloud provider for encrypted backups, but if they knew how to do proper backups, they wouldn't be in this mess to begin with.