I favor strategies that encourage industry to include some sort of key recovery capability in their systems which would also address user requirements for access.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I think most organizations have an interest in key recovery, at least with respect to stored data.
Increasingly, the central question is becoming who will have access to the information these machines must have in storage to guarantee that the right decisions are made.
If you could utilize the resources of the end users' computers, you could do things much more efficiently.
It's important to be informed about issues like usability, reliability, security, privacy, and some of the inherent limitations of computers.
One of the things that has happened with technology is that it can only be helpful if it is useful, of course, but it can only be helpful too if it's accessible, and it can only be helpful if it's affordable.
Also note that invariably when we design something that can be used by those with disabilities, we often make it better for everyone.
Why would you codify a set of safeguards you might want to change as technology evolves and you face new risks of privacy, in addition to changing safeguards that might need to be relaxed in an emergency situation?
Customers have access to information that gives them much more control over their lives.
One common puzzle for the security-minded is how to work with confidential data on the road. Sometimes you can't bring your laptop, or don't want to. But working on somebody else's machine exposes you to malware and leaves behind all kinds of electronic trails.
We created the ability for people to insert enterprise or personal data.