90 percent of Tor keys can be broken by NSA: what does it mean?

The flip side of the fact that they can threaten you with imprisonment for failing to produce a password to an encrypted data set: strong encryption is indistinguishable from truly random data, so they can imprison you for failing (“refusing”) to hand over the password (“password”) to your set of random data (“encrypted file”).

It has become illegal in the UK to have the output of /dev/random.