It seems that the consequences of incidents in last week's attack on the French satirical newspaper ' Charlie sound "still interact in political circles but also the technical community, and it seems that the techniques of protection of personal
liberty of individuals on the Internet became seen as may be an aid to implementation of the schemes described as criminal.
And while describing espionage on the private life of users with leaks scandal uncovered by Edward Snowden and that showed the size of the US National Security Agency spy on users in all regions of the world, things overturned after the attacks last week on Charlie seem farfetched to the degree that it became blocked some applications encoded as whatsapp and snap chat possible.
British Prime Minister David Cameron announced his unequivocal rejection of encrypted applications and calling for a block where he said in his recent "do we want our country to continue to be allowed between persons where even in extreme cases and even a direct order from the Home Secretary cannot see the content? No, we should not do so. "
And it seems that the British statement was very clear of threatening multicast applications that support encryption technology as Watts and snap chat and other prohibitions as well as websites and networks known as respect for the private life of users.