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It means that lawyers in the work of Rob Bankman-Fried, former CEO of FTX, have long been allowed to pay a security expert fee to help the federal judge who oversees its fraud take control of contemporary encryption algorithms and potentially change the bail provisions of Bankman-Fried.
Bankman-Fry lawyers Brad Everdell and Mark Vorster wrote to Judge Lewis Kaplan on Feb. 21, allowing him to ask a technical professional to assist with its proposal.
Based on this letter, the defense now begins to study and contact potential professionals and expects that one or more potential candidates can be sued in court by the end of the week.
Judge Kaplan said at a bail hearing last week that bail standards were tightened when it was found that Bankman-Fry had been using VPN (Virtual Private Network) to access the Internet.
VPN obscurity and data encryption customers' Internet traffic is often used to change Internet Technology (IP) detailed addresses, to provide a layer of security for communications, or to access specific content under a dictatorship.
Judges have been trying to strike a balance between allowing Bankman-Fried access to communications to lay the groundwork for defense and the potential for misuse of instant messaging and personal privacy mobile software.
Judge Kaplan temporarily banned Bankman-Fry from using VPN or other data encryption applications until its bail provisions were resolved in a timely manner.
Senior experts will help judges to encrypt data related to the navigation bar, respect privacy messaging applications and VPN issues.
Bankman-Fried and his trainer claim that he used VPN twice to watch the NFLNBA playoffs on January 29th and the Super Bowl on February 12th.
Prosecutors have strict bail standards that limit Bankman-Fry access to the mobile Internet instant messaging service platform. He also claimed that the use of VPN "caused a lot of potential anxiety", involving blocking potential access to foreign customers' login password service platforms.