«This piece marks the third installment in our ongoing series analyzing compelled decryption laws. As digital evidence continues to play a central role in modern investigations, legal systems worldwide are actively addressing the friction between encrypted devices and law enforcement access. For this chapter, our geographic focus shifts to East Asia. The region provides a […]»
3 April, 2026Oleg Afonin
«The first part of this series examined jurisdictions that have adopted a coercive approach to cryptographic barriers. Nations such as the United Kingdom, Australia, and France navigate the practical hurdles of end-to-end encryption through statutory workarounds. Rather than attempting to break the encryption itself, these legal systems apply pressure directly to the device owner – […]»
1 April, 2026Oleg Afonin
«On March 23, 2026, the Hong Kong government amended the rules of its National Security Law, making it a criminal offense to refuse police passwords or decryption assistance for personal devices. When I read the security alert, my initial plan was simply to compile a list of jurisdictions with similar laws. That catalog quickly outgrew […]»
31 March, 2026Oleg Afonin