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We’ve seen plenty of bad tech bills in recent years, often cloaked in vague language about “online safety.” But Florida’s SB 868 doesn’t even pretend to be subtle: the state wants a backdoor into encrypted platforms if minors use them, and for law enforcement to have easy access to your messages.
This bill should set off serious alarm bells for anyone who cares about digital rights, secure communication, or simply the ability to message someone privately without the government listening. Florida lawmakers aren’t just chipping away at digital privacy—they’re aiming a wrecking ball straight at it.
SB 868 is a blatant attack on encrypted communication. Since we last wrote about the bill, the situation has gotten worse. The bill and its House companion have both sailed through their committees and are headed to a full vote. That means, if passed, SB 868 would:
- Force social media platforms to decrypt teens’ private messages, breaking end-to-end encryption
- Ban “disappearing” messages, a common privacy feature that helps users—especially teens—control their digital footprint
- Allow unrestricted parental access to private messages, overriding Florida’s own two-party consent laws for surveillance
- Likely pressure platforms to remove encryption for all minors, which also puts everyone they talk to at risk
In short: if your kid loses their right to encrypted communication, so does everyone they talk to.
There Is No Safe Backdoor
If this all sounds impossible to do safely, that’s because it is. There’s no way to create a “just for law enforcement” access
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