Archive for the ‘Anonymity’ Category

Cypherpunk retrospective at 20th anniversary CFP conference

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

This year the “Computers Freedom and Privacy” (CFP) conference is taking place in San Jose from June 15-18. This year is the 20th anniversary of the conference which helped shape my thinking about Internet Privacy and introduced me to many of the key players in this space.

Around the same time in 1992 an email mailing list started called “Cypherpunks”. Members were devoted discussions of Internet freedom and to creating and distributing privacy and security tools. Best known of these are the various flavors of Anonymous Remailers following the original anon.penen.fi.

This seems like a good time to stop and take stock of what has been achieved, lost, and abandoned in the evolution of privacy and anonymity on the Internet. I have organized a panel at CFP of some of the key Cypherpunks from the early days to talk about those early days, and share their vision and insight about where we are and where we should / are likely to end up.

I hope I will see many of you there.

IntelFusion – Use a proxy server. Feed an Intel service.

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Read this post fromĀ IntelFusion. It makes a very strong case for why I worry about any privacy system run by operators you can’t really trust, investigate, and verify. In this case it is an investigation of Glype servers. They can be configured to do significant logging, and the author has been able to remotely retrieve the logs from many of the Glype servers. The results show many users from within sensitive US Government organizations and would provide the ability for an attacker to gather all kinds of useful intelligence to find soft targets to exploit.

On the personal privacy side, it is an easy way for attackers to intercept usernames, passwords, travel plans, personal information and more for use in, identity theft, burglary, and hacking among other things.

Saving Internet Anonymity — The Struggle is Joined

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Lauren Weinstein’s Blog: Saving Internet Anonymity — The Struggle is Joined

I strongly encourage anyone with a commitment to Internet anonymity to read this blog post. An organized opposition to the existence of such anonymity is growing. Of course, like attempt to clamp down on cryptography, it will only impact the law abiding while criminals use bots and other tools to circumvent the restrictions.

Between this and the push to remove the expectation of privacy from all stored emails, I am very concerned.

Pseudonyms: The Natural State of Online Identity | Privacy Digest

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Pseudonyms: The Natural State of Online Identity | Privacy Digest

This article does a nice job of making a point I have been talking around for some time. The Internet naturally supports pseudonymity, and that is really what we want most of the time. When I talk to someone on-line, I am most interested that I am still talking today with the person I started talking to last month. Whether the name actually corresponds to their birth certificate is not important (and I would not have any idea in a real world encounter either).

Tor partially blocked in China

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Tor partially blocked in China | The Tor Blog

That last article lead me to this post on the TOR blog from September 15, 2009 (I am a bit late to this party). China is now blocking about 80% of the public TOR nodes.

This mostly ends a rather baffling situation where for some reason the Chinese were failing to block TOR even though it was being used effectively for censorship circumvention, the list of nodes is publicly available, and they are no more difficult to block than any other server.