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Right to Secure Digital Communication
Category: Civil Rights | Strength: Significant
Proposed by: Greater Cesnica | Onsite Topic
Note: Only votes from TNP WA nations and NPA personnel will be counted. If you do not meet these requirements, please add (non-WA) or something of that effect to your vote.The General Assembly,
Believing that access to encryption and other secure communication methods in the digital age yields numerous benefits in areas such as personal privacy, consumer protection, and ensuring the integrity of data that is transmitted from one party to another,
Seeking to prevent governments from restricting, compromising or hindering the access and usage of encrypted communication protocols and other means of achieving secure data exchanges,
Hereby:
- Defines for the purposes of this resolution:
- Encryption as any method which utilizes ciphers to protect the integrity of communications or any other digital data by rendering unencrypted data known as 'plaintext' into an indecipherable form known as 'ciphertext'; which can then only be rendered legible by using a decryption key available to authorized parties, thus denying access to unauthorized parties, and
- A secure communication method as a relay, protocol, or standard other than an encryption method intended for communication or otherwise transmitting data and information between two or more digital devices that is intended to prevent the interception of this data or information by any unauthorized parties,
- Prohibits member states from:
- Banning or restricting user access to any encryption method or other secure communication method, and from enacting any prohibitions upon the implementation of encryption methods or secure communication methods, subject to Article 3, or
- Acting to reduce the strength of any encryption method or secure communication method, or
- Requiring the usage of insecure encryption methods, technologies, or standards, or
- Requiring the insertion of "backdoors" into technologies, tools, or standards that allow states access to private communications through compromised methods of secure communication, or
- Requiring third parties to implement methods that would grant an unauthorized party access to secure, private communications between authorized parties,
- Permits member states to restrict user access to secure communication methods provided that:
- These secure communication methods were originally intended for government or military use, and that
- A significant detriment upon the strength or reliability of such secure communication methods can be foreseen or observed as a result of removing restrictions on user access to those outside the government or military,
- Clarifies that:
- Encryption methods may not be banned or restricted under any circumstances,
- The foreseen or observed detriment upon the strength or reliability of secure communication methods required by Article 3(b) to restrict user access to secure communication methods originally intended for government or military use must be sufficient enough to render such secure communication methods either:
- Incapable of protecting the privacy and integrity of communications using this secure communication method, or
- Unreliable to the extent that communications using this secure communication method are unlikely to reach their intended recipient(s), and that
- Member states shall not use any form of coercion in order to bypass any prohibition under Article 2.
Voting Instructions:
- Vote For if you want the Delegate to vote For the resolution.
- Vote Against if you want the Delegate to vote Against the resolution.
- Vote Abstain if you want the Delegate to abstain from voting on this resolution.
- Vote Present if you are personally abstaining from this vote.
Right to Secure Digital Communication was passed 12,533 (84.6%) votes to 2,282 (15.4%).
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