On Tue, Dec 31, 2013 at 14:13:11 +0000,
  Bill Oliver <ven...@billoblog.com> wrote:

In the US you *can* be ordered to provide a password. Though appeals are still 
working their way up to the Supreme Court, various courts have said you must, 
while others have said that you may not.  See, for instance:

http://privacycast.com/encryption-key-disclosure-ordered-federal-court-fifth-amendment-filevault-bitlocker-truecrypt/

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20130425/08171522834/judge-says-giving-up-your-password-may-be-5th-amendment-violation.shtml

Thus, it currently in the stage where it depends on what jurisdiction you are 
in.  I am not confident that the Supreme Court will side with privacy or 5th 
amendment rights.

While this isn't settled, the main theme where people were ordered to provide passwords have been where it was already known what was on the machine before hand. Either because customs saw what appered to be child porn and then couldn't get the data back afterwards or when someone stated they had some particular information on their machine.

And of course in civil cases (such as copyright suits), you might lose by default if you don't provide the requested data.
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