from TorrentFreak Website
A VPN service provider says that concerns it may be forced to hand over its encryption keys to United States authorities have led it to take the decision to shut down its consumer services.
CryptoSeal says that information revealed as part of the Lavabit case has undermined its original understanding of United States law and made its position untenable.
Shutting down, the company says, is the only solution to protect customer privacy.
As the revelations of Edward Snowden roll on and on the notion that individuals in the United States, or indeed citizens of any country, have any real online privacy is being continually undermined.
As a result, interest in anonymity services such as Tor and VPNs has increased as even regular Internet users balk at the idea of being monitored.
While there are hundreds of providers to choose from, one particular US-based company has decided that the current environment on home soil makes it impossible to offer an effective consumer-focused service.
While it’s not unusual for a provider to leave the marketplace, CryptoSeal says that the ground has recently shifted beneath its feet, meaning that the legal basis on which the company was founded can no longer be relied upon.
The problem, CryptoSeal says, relates back to the recent Lavabit case.
The now-shuttered email service used by Edward Snowden closed down in August, with founder Ladar Levison saying that he had been,
Lavabit had been targeted by U.S. authorities but rather than compromise the privacy of his users, Levison decided to close the service down instead.
He is currently tied up in a legal battle with U.S. authorities and it’s a document from this case that has caused CryptoSeal to shut down its consumer service.
A pen register is a device originally created in the 1800′s for recording telegraph signals on paper but more recently the term has been used to describe devices that can monitor telephone lines and Internet communications.
Since VPN communications are encrypted, CryptoSeal believes that the only way it would be able to comply with a pen register order would be to do the unthinkable - hand over its encryption keys.
While encouraging customers to donate to Lavabit’s defense fund, CryptoSeal says it is currently investigating whether it will be able to provide a consumer VPN service in the future without compromising user privacy.
The company signs off with the following call.
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