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Hong Kong police can now demand phone passwords under new security rules

126 pointsby vidyeshtoday at 1:57 PM129 commentsview on HN

Comments

tyhotoday at 2:20 PM

Wow, what a free society! In the UK if you refuse to unlock your device you can be imprisoned indefinitely! In HK it's just one year!

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jonextoday at 2:41 PM

Feature request: Make it default behavior on phones that you can have multiple passwords, connected to different profiles. With no way to determine how many profiles a phone have.

I'm sure there's some people here working on mobile operating systems, might be worth considering?

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kevincloudsectoday at 3:01 PM

I think everyone's glossing over that this extends to anyone who knows the password. Your sysadmin, your business partner, your spouse. Hong Kong just turned your company's entire key management chain into a legal liability.

kleibatoday at 2:42 PM

It would be nice if phones had a feature where you can define more than one pin, but only one is for your actual phone contents - the other ones leave you to a completely harmless but otherwise indistinguishable looking smartphone interface that contains no or only completely bogus data.

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mmsctoday at 2:22 PM

Ah, finally catching up to ... The UK, Australia, Ireland, France, the Netherlands, and probably a lot more.

everdrivetoday at 2:51 PM

No one likes when I say this but it's really past time to stop doing anything interesting on your phone. Delete all your apps, set it as minimally as possible. Leave it home when you go for walks, and power it off when you go driving or to the store, or whatever.

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vrganjtoday at 2:33 PM

The horrible bastion of despotism that is China-run Hong Kong has now caught up to the rule of law utopias of enlightened thought in the US and UK.

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embedding-shapetoday at 2:43 PM

"Featured" on HN just a week ago, seems GrapheneOS' "Duress pin" would be very helpful in these cases: https://grapheneos.org/features#duress (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47445931).

Now we just have to wait N years for Android and iOS to get approval from the government to build something similar, that they can market yet somehow screw up enough to not actually help.

anonymousiamtoday at 5:10 PM

I wonder what would happen if HK tried to force somebody to unlock their business phone. It's typically a violation of corporate policy to allow a third party to access the encrypted, confidential information on corporate mobile devices.

The poor device user would be faced with a choice of losing their job and being held criminally liable for breaching their company's systems, or going to jail in Hong Kong.

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dev_l1x_betoday at 3:06 PM

Ohh no, so they caught up with US border patrol?

firefaxtoday at 3:36 PM

These kinds of laws worry me since I have forgotten several old passwords. Being disorganized shouldn't be a criminal offense.

chirautoday at 4:21 PM

What happens if you just say "I don't know it, only answer calls on it."

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3yr-i-frew-uptoday at 3:29 PM

>The US is evil

>China makes you give phone passwords, China makes Apple give user data

>The US wiretaps 1 person

"OMG THIS IS AN OUTRAGE!"

We forget because a Republikan is in charge how good we have it in the west. We forget how bad it is elsewhere.

davidfekketoday at 5:28 PM

Wow, it sounds like they are becomming a bunch of commies.

maplanttoday at 3:30 PM

The cops from the John Woo HK action flicks I've seen would love this

xvectortoday at 2:18 PM

This shit is why I don't visit China.

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october8140today at 2:35 PM

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