Law enforcement agencies struggle with criminals using to end-to-end encryption (E2EE). A recent policy paper states: "while encryption is vital and privacy and cyber security must be protected, that should not come at the expense of wholly precluding law enforcement". The main argument is that E2EE hampers attribution and prosecution of criminals who rely on encrypted communication - ranging from drug syndicates to child sexual abuse material (CSAM) platforms. This statement - in policy circles dubbed 'going dark' - is not yet supported by empirical evidence. That is why, in our work, we analyse public court data from the Netherlands to show to what extent law enforcement agencies and the public prosecution service are impacted by the use of E2EE in bringing cases to court and their outcome. Our results show that Dutch courts appear to be as successful in convicting offenders who rely on E2EE as those who do not. Our data does not permit us to draw conclusions on the effect of E2EE on criminal investigations.
翻译:执法机构与使用终端到终端加密(E2EE)的罪犯斗争。最近的一份政策文件指出:“加密至关重要,隐私和网络安全必须受到保护,但不应以完全排除执法为代价”。 其主要论点是,E2EE阻碍对依赖加密通信的罪犯的归属和起诉——从毒品辛迪加到儿童性虐待材料(CAM)平台等——这一声明在政策圈子中被称作“暗黑”的说法没有得到经验证据的支持。 这就是为什么我们在工作中分析荷兰的公共法院数据,以表明利用E2EE向法院起诉案件及其结果对执法机构和公诉部门的影响程度。我们的结果表明,荷兰法院似乎对依赖E2EE的罪犯和不依赖E2E的罪犯的定罪是成功的。我们的数据不允许我们就E2E对刑事调查的影响得出结论。