Those of you who who follow Irreal daily know that I recently migrated the email that was going to my Gmail account to Lavabit. All of that mail was from technical mailing lists so it didn’t really matter much except as a statement of principle. Now Ladar Levison, the owner and operator of Lavabit, shows us what principle is really about.
Levison announced Thursday that for reasons he is legally barred from disclosing he is shutting down Lavabit. He says that it was a hard decision to walk away from 10 years work but that he could not be complicit in crimes against the American people. In as much as Lavabit has previously complied with specific warrants issued with reasonable probable cause, it seems a safe inference that he was being asked to provide a more wide-ranging access to users’ accounts.
Because of the way Lavabit works, this would mean either monitoring users’ logins to capture their passwords or making copies of emails before they were encrypted. Either of these would break faith with Lavabit’s users so Levison apparently felt he had no choice but to close his business. A business, let me say again, that he spent 10 years building.
Friday brought the news that Silent Circle was closing its email service as well. Silent Circle says that they weren’t approached by the government but that in light of Lavabit’s experience they felt it was likely and rather than put their users at risk they preemptively closed the service and destroyed the server it ran on.
Years of hard work and doubtlessly many jobs were lost with the two closings. All this so that no Americans could keep their emails private. Google, Microsoft, Apple, and the others who have willingly collaborated with this illegal government spying may not care but they should. The Technology and Innovation Foundation reported this week that US cloud computing companies could lose between $21 billion and $35 billion because of their ties to the NSA. As Edward Snowden remarked about the Lavabit closing,
The President, Congress, and the Courts have forgotten that the costs
of bad policy are always borne by ordinary citizens, and it is our job
to remind them that there are limits to what we will pay.
Perhaps it’s time for one of the big boys to take a lesson on integrity from Lavabit. Imagine what would happen, for example, if Google threatened to shut down Gmail.
Update: Those who you → Those of you who