A Quote by Jan Koum

The encryption genie is out of the bottle. — © Jan Koum
The encryption genie is out of the bottle.
The tech genie is out of the bottle; you can't put it back in.
Then it was like a genie out of the bottle and it began to walk all on its own and in directions I did not want.
I want to find a genie in a bottle that can grant me three wishes. I want to be able to speak, read, write, and understand any language ever written or spoken, just any language throughout the history of man. That would be one of my wishes from the genie, so I would have to put "multilingual" on the resume, should I ever find the genie.
The electron, as it leaves the atom, crystallises out of Schrodinger's mist like a genie emerging from his bottle.
Certainly we've seen the enormous changes across the whole of the Middle East. The democratic genie is out of the bottle.
I don't own encryption, Apple doesn't own encryption. Encryption, as you know, is everywhere. In fact some of encryption is funded by our government.
The strength of the genie comes from being in a bottle.
To approach the stranger is to invite the unexpected, release a new force, let the genie out of the bottle. It is to start a new train of events that is beyond your control.
It's too late by the way, with virtual reality. You can't put the genie back into the bottle.
I think the American people recognize that the world has shrunk. That it's interconnected. That you're not going to put that genie back in the bottle.
We should not be confident in our ability to keep a super-intelligent genie locked up in its bottle forever.
Young people in college were not even born when the Berlin Wall fell, and so they are not really cognizant of the Cold War and what that meant. Now, truly, the genie is out of the bottle and you have the possibility that terrorists ... could be stealing a bomb or buying a bomb
I have six-year-old fans that weren't even around for 'Genie in a Bottle' or even 'Fighter.'
I think it's interesting because the 1990s ended with the government pretty much giving up. There was a recognition that encryption was important. In 2000, the government considerably loosened the export controls on encryption technology and really went about actively encouraging the use of encryption rather than discouraging it.
Alcohol is a pervasive fact of life, but an extraordinary fact-pleasurable and destructive, anathematized and adulated, and deeply ambiguous ... the genie in the bottle.
The reality is that if you - let's say you just pulled encryption. Let's ban it. Let's you and I ban it tomorrow. And so we sit in Congress and we say, thou shalt not have encryption. What happens then? Well, I would argue that the bad guys will use encryption from non-American companies, because they're pretty smart.
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