Archive | Anonymity

Edward Snowden building safe communication tools for reporters

Since early last year, Snowden has quietly served as president of a small San Francisco–based nonprofit called the Freedom of the Press Foundation. Its mission: to equip the media to do its job at a time when state-­sponsored hackers and government surveillance threaten investigative reporting in ways Woodward and Bernstein never imagined. “Newsrooms don’t have the bud­get, the sophistication, or the skills to defend them­selves in the current environment,” says Snowden, who spoke to WIRED via encrypted video-chat from his home in Moscow. “We’re trying to provide a few niche tools to make the game a little more fair.”

Wired » Edward Snowden’s New Job: Protecting Reporters From Spies »

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Camera surveillance now more advanced – and scarier

Smile to pay. Customer recognition. Airport screening. These are some of the functionalities that face recognition brings to camera surveillance nowadays.

It will also allow for tracking people, building sociograms, can be integrated with different databases, behavioral analytics, and mass surveillance networks.

BBC: Smile, you’re on camera, and it knows who you are »

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China striking down on VPN-services

China is reinforcing its censorship of the internet with a campaign to crack down on unauthorized connections, including virtual private network (VPN) services, that allow users to bypass restrictions known as the Great Firewall. (…)

The ministry said it was forbidden to create or rent communication channels, including VPNs, without governmental approval, to run cross-border operations.

Reuters: China cracks down on unauthorized internet connections »

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The Dark Web going even darker

Sites on the so-called dark web, or darknet, typically operate under what seems like a privacy paradox: While anyone who knows a dark web site’s address can visit it, no one can figure out who hosts that site, or where. It hides in plain sight. But changes coming to the anonymity tools underlying the darknet promise to make a new kind of online privacy possible. Soon anyone will be able to create their own corner of the internet that’s not just anonymous and untraceable, but entirely undiscoverable without an invite.

Wired: It’s About To Get Even Easier to Hide on the Dark Web »

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Proton Mail strikes back

ProtonMail, the privacy-focused email business, has launched a Tor hidden service to combat the censorship and surveillance of its users.

The move is designed to counter actions “by totalitarian governments around the world to cut off access to privacy tools” and the Swiss company specifically cited “recent events such as the Egyptian government’s move to block encrypted chat app Signal, and the passage of the Investigatory Powers Act in the UK that mandates tracking all web browsing activity”.

The Register: ProtonMail launches Tor hidden service to dodge totalitarian censorship »

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TED will let you speak to the world – anonymously

Ideas are powerful things. So powerful, in fact, that regardless of the messenger or medium an idea can stand on its own and change the world. That’s the theory behind a new creative initiative from TED—and its significance can’t be overstated. (…)

TED is teaming with Audible, the podcasts and audiobook company, to produce audio content for TED. The twist: The presenter will be completely anonymous. (…)

As TED President Chris Anderson wrote in his Medium post about this new project, “What matters is only what can be shared: an idea that matters.” Explaining further why some might choose to anonymously share their ideas, he asked: “How many people have an important message but refrain from ‘going public’ out of fear of losing their jobs or hurting loved ones? How many ideas worth spreading remain hidden because some speakers simply can’t publicly be associated with the very thing the world needs to hear?”

Wired: Anonymous Speech Is More Important Than Ever. TED Proves It »

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WOT: Your surf history for sale

The browser plug-in WOT (Web of Trust) is supposed to warn users about unsafe web pages. But now it turns out that it puts users privacy at serious risk.

From the WOT web page “Secure a simple and safe browsing experience. Our add-on doesn’t slow your browser, it’s easy to use and free.”

As per usual when something is free, it is likely to turn out that you are the product.

WOT collects data from your web sessions (like your surf history) and sends it – allegedly anonymized – to their server. Then this data is sold to e.g. the advertising industry.

Today, German media have more or less exploded with reports of such data for sale not being properly anonymized.

Investigative reporters have gained access to a WOT database where individual users can be identified. In the reports, there are mentions of police officers, judges, journalists, business leaders, and others – and their surf history e.g. when it comes to medical matters, prostitutes, drugs and esoteric erotic pleasures.

On Chrome alone, WOT has some 1.5 million users.

NDR: Nackt im Netz: Millionen Nutzer ausgespäht »

/ HAX

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Open WiFi hotspots, city-WiFi and anonymity

Last week European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker proposed open city WiFi networks. This left us with some unanswered questions, e.g. about the rules for liability when it comes to copyright infringements. (Link»)

The very next day a ruling in the European Court of Justice (ECJ) brought some clarity. And raised some new questions.

The court finds that a measure consisting in password-protecting an Internet connection may dissuade the users of that connection from infringing copyright or related rights, provided that those users are required to reveal their identity in order to obtain the required password and may not therefore act anonymously, a matter which it is for the referring court to ascertain.

Ars Technica wrote…

Businesses such as coffee shops that offer a wireless network free of charge to their customers aren’t liable for copyright infringements committed by users of that network, the ruling states—which, in part, chimes with an earlier advocate general’s opinion. But hotspot operators may be required, following a court injunction, to password-protect their Wi-Fi networks to stop or prevent such violations. (…)

The implications are obvious: no more free and anonymous Wi-Fi access in bars, cafes, or hotels in countries within the 28-member-state bloc that can now use existing law to demand that users hand over their ID first.

Pirate Party MEP Julia Reda commented…

Juncker’s free Wi-Fi plan is aimed at travellers, refugees, and other groups that could not possibly be expected to identify themselves before using a public Wi-Fi. The commission is even advertising its new initiative as password-free. This ruling means that copyright holders will be able to foil that plan and require free Wi-Fi providers to restrict access to their networks.

Let me add to the confusion.

First, let’s have a look at the situation for traditional hotspot operators such as cafés.

It is not reasonable to expect a café owner to keep a database of all local WiF users. That would require an extensive and very privacy sensitive register that cannot be tampered with and that can stand up to legal procedures. And still, it would do nothing to identify an individual user on the cafés single IP address. At least not with the relatively cheap and simple WiFi equipment normally used in such places.

It all quickly gets complicated and expensive. This would effectively kill free WiFi with your coffee.

The same general questions can be raised when it comes to Juncker’s free city WiFi. But there is a difference. Public sector operated WiFi will have more money and can apply common technical standards. As the number of users in a city-WiFi can be expected to be substantially higher that at a single café – there would not only need to be some sort of password protection but also individual user names, linked to personal identity. At least if you want to meet with the ECJ ambition to be able to identify single users.

In both cases, anonymity will be more or less impossible.

And when it comes to city-WiFi, we can expect various law enforcement and intelligence agencies to show a keen interest.

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Ars Technica: Wi-Fi providers not liable for copyright infringements, rules top EU court »

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EU: Mixed signals on open Wi-Fi networks

Europe’s top court has ruled that Wi-Fi providers aren’t liable for any copyright infringements that take place on their network—it has also created uncertainty about users’ anonymity.

Businesses such as coffee shops that offer a wireless network free of charge to their customers aren’t liable for copyright infringements committed by users of that network, the ruling states—which, in part, chimes with an earlier advocate general’s opinion. But hotspot operators may be required, following a court injunction, to password-protect their Wi-Fi networks to stop or prevent such violations. (…)

The implications are obvious: no more free and anonymous Wi-Fi access in bars, cafes, or hotels in countries within the 28-member-state bloc that can now use existing law to demand that users hand over their ID first.

Ars Technica: Wi-Fi providers not liable for copyright infringements, rules top EU court »

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