The sales office to data localization pipeline for mass surveillance.
Some bad ideas never die. Since the late 1980s, spy agencies and cops have argued that the public should not have access to working cryptography, because this would mean that terrorists, mafiosi, drug dealers and pedophiles will be able to communicate in perfect, unbreakable secrecy.
The problem is that working cryptography protects everyone, not just the Four Horsemen of the Infocalypse: the same cryptographic tools that protect instant messages and โDarknetโ sites also protect your communications with your bank, your Zoom therapy session, and the over-the-air updates for your pacemaker and your carโs anti-lock braking system.