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  • Growing backlash to government surveillance

    Growing backlash to government surveillance
    By MARTHA MENDOZA


    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — From Silicon Valley to the South Pacific, counterattacks to revelations of widespread National Security Agency surveillance are taking shape, from a surge of new encrypted email programs to technology that sprinkles the Internet with red flag terms to confuse would-be snoops.

    Policy makers, privacy advocates and political leaders around the world have been outraged at the near weekly disclosures from former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden that expose sweeping U.S. government surveillance programs.

    "Until this summer, people didn't know anything about the NSA," said Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University co-director Amy Zegart. "Their own secrecy has come back to bite them."

    Activists are fighting back with high-tech civil disobedience, entrepreneurs want to cash in on privacy concerns, Internet users want to keep snoops out of their computers and lawmakers want to establish stricter parameters.

    Some of the tactics are more effective than others. For example, Flagger, a program that adds words like "blow up" and "pressure cooker" to web addresses that users visit, is probably more of a political statement than actually confounding intelligence agents.

    Developer Jeff Lyon in Santa Clara, Calif., said he's delighted if it generates social awareness, and that 2,000 users have installed it to date. He said, "The goal here is to get a critical mass of people flooding the Internet with noise and make a statement of civil disobedience."

    University of Auckland associate professor Gehan Gunasekara said he's received "overwhelming support" for his proposal to "lead the spooks in a merry dance," visiting radical websites, setting up multiple online identities and making up hypothetical "friends."

    And "pretty soon everyone in New Zealand will have to be under surveillance," he said.

    Electronic Frontier Foundation activist Parker Higgins in San Francisco has a more direct strategy: by using encrypted email and browsers, he creates more smoke screens for the NSA. "Encryption loses its' value as an indicator of possible malfeasance if everyone is using it," he said.

    And there are now plenty of encryption programs, many new, and of varying quality.

    "This whole field has been made exponentially more mainstream," said Cryptocat private instant messaging developer Nadim Kobeissi.

    This week, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University released a smartphone app called SafeSlinger they say encrypts text messages so they cannot be read by cell carriers, Internet providers, employers "or anyone else."

    CryptoParties are springing up around the world as well. They are small gatherings where hosts teach attendees, who bring their digital devices, how to download and use encrypted email and secure Internet browsers.

    "Honestly, it doesn't matter who you are or what you are doing, if the NSA wants to find information, they will," said organizer Joshua Smith. "But we don't have to make it easy for them."

    View gallery."
    Software engineer and entrepreneur Jeff Lyon sits next to a computer showing the "Flagger" program h …
    Apparently plenty agree, as encryption providers have seen a surge in interest.

    Pretty Good Privacy, or PGP, a free encryption service was being loaded about 600 times a day in the month before Snowden's revelations broke. Two months later, that had more than doubled to 1,380, according to a running tally maintained by programmer Kristian Fiskerstrand.

    Andrew Lewman, executive director of TOR, short for The Onion Router, said they don't track downloads of their program that helps make online traffic anonymous by bouncing it through a convoluted network of routers to protect the privacy of their users.

    But, he said, they have seen an uptick.

    "Our web servers seem more busy than normal," he said.

    Berlin-based email provider Posteo claims to have seen a 150 percent surge in paid subscribers due to the "Snowden effect."

    Posteo demands no personal information, doesn't store metadata, ensures server-to-server encryption of messages and even allows customers to pay anonymously — cash in brown envelopes-style.

    CEO Patrick Loehr, who responded to The Associated Press by encrypted email, said that subscriptions to the 1 euro ($1.36) per month program rose to 25,000 in the past four months. The company is hoping to offer an English-language service next year.

    Federation of American Scientists secrecy expert Steven Aftergood said it is crucial now for policymakers to clearly define limits.

    "Are we setting ourselves up for a total surveillance system that may be beyond the possibility of reversal once it is in place?" he asked. "We may be on a road where we don't want to go. I think people are correct to raise an alarm now and not when we're facing a fait accompli."

    U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, who introduced a bipartisan package of proposals to reform the surveillance programs last month, told a Cato Institute gathering Thursday that key parts of the debate are unfolding now.

    "It's going to take a groundswell of support from lots of Americans across the political spectrum," he said, "communicating that business as usual is no longer OK, and they won't buy the argument that liberty and security are mutually exclusive."

    ___

    Associated Press writers Frank Jordans in Berlin and Raphael Satter in London contributed to this story. Follow Martha Mendoza at https://twitter.com/mendozamartha .
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  • #2
    I hated Bush for the Patriot Act which is responsible for all this. And I was very disappointed that Obama didn't stop it. It's a terrible invasion of privacy and you can't hide from it. No encryption software will protect you because the NSA is in bed with all the encryption companies and your ISP. They're not hacking or cracking anything, they've had the backdoor key to everything from the get go. Snowden is a hero because he turned a flood light on the NSA and exposed that our phone providers, ISP's and software companies were in bed with the NSA spying on us.

    PS. Kudos to Lavabit !
    http://www.theguardian.com/technolog...edward-snowden

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    • #3
      Originally posted by John222 View Post
      I hated Bush for the Patriot Act which is responsible for all this. And I was very disappointed that Obama didn't stop it. It's a terrible invasion of privacy and you can't hide from it. No encryption software will protect you because the NSA is in bed with all the encryption companies and your ISP. They're not hacking or cracking anything, they've had the backdoor key to everything from the get go. Snowden is a hero because he turned a flood light on the NSA and exposed that our phone providers, ISP's and software companies were in bed with the NSA spying on us.

      PS. Kudos to Lavabit !
      http://www.theguardian.com/technolog...edward-snowden
      All correct, except for the fact that it started getting hot and heavy during the Clinton administration and before. During Clinton the back door into all our phone providers started. Bush did nothing to stop it, and Obummer will just expand it.

      You have to get off the grid which means giving up some things.
      The only thing better than having all the guns and ammo you'd ever need would be being able to shoot it all off the back porch.

      Want to see what will be the end of our country as we know it???
      Visit here:
      http://www.usdebtclock.org/

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      • #4
        I was pissed at Bush for the Patriot Act, too. I thought that it would be much better to have the terrorist kill Americans on our soil with abandon. Three thousand was a good start,
        but just a drop in the bucket. I enjoyed watching planes full of people crashing into buildings full of people and people jump to their deaths from that pair of burning buildings. If you note a bit of sarcasm, it was intended. I blame Obama for the bastardization of Bush's good program.
        Never trust anyone who doesn't trust you to own a gun.

        Life Member - NRA
        Colt Gold Cup 70 series
        Colt Woodsman
        Ruger Mark III .22-45
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        • #5
          Originally posted by muggsy View Post
          I was pissed at Bush for the Patriot Act, too. I thought that it would be much better to have the terrorist kill Americans on our soil with abandon. Three thousand was a good start,
          but just a drop in the bucket. I enjoyed watching planes full of people crashing into buildings full of people and people jump to their deaths from that pair of burning buildings. If you note a bit of sarcasm, it was intended. I blame Obama for the bastardization of Bush's good program.
          Really? All he did was renew the Bush program.

          Muggsie, your OK if a repub is stealing your freedom, but when Obama picks up where Bush left off you call it bastardization. I call it being a hypocrite!

          Comment


          • #6
            Obama had the NSA take the Bush program well past it's limits. The Bush program only monitored calls and e-mails to, or from, known terrorists. I have no objections to covert actions against our enemies, both foreign and domestic. Spying led to victory over Germany and Japan in WWII. The program isn't bad. Abuse of the program is bad.
            Last edited by muggsy; 10-13-2013, 08:49 PM.
            Never trust anyone who doesn't trust you to own a gun.

            Life Member - NRA
            Colt Gold Cup 70 series
            Colt Woodsman
            Ruger Mark III .22-45
            Kahr CM9
            Kahr P380

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