On 03/24/2016 12:05 PM, jdd wrote:
Le 24/03/2016 18:54, John Andersen a écrit :
Its also a good indication that it is, defacto, a public document. Which may not be what is desired.
not at all. the uploader is a trustee (is that the english word? "tiers de confiance" en français), if it makes the document public, it may be prosecuted.
at least it should. do not trust anybody :-)
jdd
You've made it public. By virtue of handing it to a third party, you've burned your own right to privacy. And there is no reason to do so simply to sign a PDF. The service vendor just follows the law. Which means its available to just about any law enforcement organization, government entity, purchaser of the corporation, or hacker. Most if not all of those don't even need warrants in this day and age. Oh, Swiss law, or EU law protects you? Fine, the German police will just ask some American TLA for the document. I signed up with this little company that supplied home monitoring camera services. Small little company no one would notice. Sincere promises of encrypted storage and confidentiality. I wake up on morning to find out in the news that Google now had a camera in my house, and the stuff that company promised to keep absolutely confidential was sold to Google. All of it. Including my credit card information. So now I'm no longer a customer, and the device is unplugged. And I'm looking for another home monitoring solution, and I'll just hide a NAS somewhere on the network for camera storage where any thieves won't find it. -- After all is said and done, more is said than done. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org