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2021-06-11

Who can you trust?

tags: nosimpleanswer

So, FBI, Europol and who knows have arrested some 800 suspects over the planet. It has been in the press the last few days.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/akgkwj/operation-trojan-shield-anom-fbi-secret-phone-network

ew0k has some observations about this event.

What are privately owned corporations doing to us all using skills and tools like these, but more advanced and less regulated?

gemini://warmedal.se/~bjorn/posts/operation-trojan-shield.gmi

local copy

When I heard about this event it immediately reminded me of the keynote by Tim Pritlove and John Perry Barlow on the 23C3 Congress of the Chaos Computer Club in Berlin in 2006.

"Who can you trust?"

https://media.ccc.de/v/23C3-1256-en-who_can_you_trust

While I have little sympathy for people selling drugs, weapons, and worse, the question remains. Can I trust anyone providing telecommunication in whatever form? Letters? Parcels? FAX? Telex? Email? Messaging?

The short answer is "No".

Any communication produces a set of observable data (e.g. when, where and how the communication has occured). Any communication involving todays computing devices relies on an impressive pile of hardware, firmware, and software components and private/official/commercial actors --- any of which might be not trustworthy. So it's not a simple problem with simple answers.

Two more things that I find highly interesting:

https://eprint.iacr.org/2016/129.pdf

https://thehackernews.com/2016/02/hacking-air-gapped-computer.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erasure_code

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tahoe-LAFS

https://tahoe-lafs.org

Cheers,

~ew

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