Lawyers must be able to have candid conversations with their clients to represent them in a court of law. The world of mass surveillance and targeted hacking raises the question whether attorney-client privilege can survive. In 2015, prison phone service Securus suffered a breach of 70 million phone calls, including 14,000 recorded voice calls between attorneys and their clients in prison. The Panama Papers scandal revealed widespread money laundering on a global scale, but also woeful information security practices at the Panama-based law firm of Mossack Fonseca.”]

