When push comes to shove (and push will come to shove at some point), encryption will only be legally available for designated parties such as the police, security services and large businesses or for specific services such as banking etc. For ordinary people using it for their personal correspondence or for personal internet usage, it will be made illegal.
The usual bollocks will be turned up to the max by way of justification along the lines of "protecting the public from terrorism" and how the only people who should be worried are those that have "something to hide" etc.
Of course, none of the above will stop determined people from using encryption anyway. But what it will do is dissuade the vast majority of people from doing so. This will be more than sufficient since having the majority tracked and traced is all that is necessary to keep large scale dissent under control.
The latest MS Windows 10, by far the most common personal OS in the world, I believe to be a quite deliberate part of the above move towards an unadulterated surveillance state. Its data policy is quite simply staggering in its intrusiveness and overt spying as the default settings. Default settings which are, from everything I have read, incredibly difficult to change.
https://www.rt.com/usa/311304-new-windo ... cy-issues/