Two Years After Snowden Leaks, Encryption Tools Are Gaining Users 69
Patrick O'Neill writes: It's not just DuckDuckGo — since the first Snowden articles were published in June 2013, the global public has increasingly adopted privacy tools that use technology like strong encryption to protect themselves from eavesdroppers as they surf the Web and use their phones. The Tor network has doubled in size, Tails has tripled in users, PGP has double the daily adoption rate, Off The Record messaging is more popular than ever before, and SecureDrop is used in some of the world's top newsrooms.
TrueCrypt (Score:4, Interesting)
....and not a word about TrueCrypt? is there any commonly used alternative or people just don't care?
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Veracrypt (Score:2)
https://veracrypt.codeplex.com... [codeplex.com]
Re:Veracrypt (Score:4, Interesting)
Odd Questions About TrueCrypt (Score:2)
I wonder... Schneier says:
Then, I used TrueCrypt. I used it because it was open source. But the anonymous developers weirdly abdicated in 2014 when Microsoft released Windows 8.
Is there a relationship between the release of Windows 8 and the abandonment of TrueCrypt? Is there a bug / back door / some other issue between Windows 8 and TrueCrypt? Do the developers for TrueCrypt now work in Redmond?
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I migrated to FreeOTFE right around the time that the TrueCrypt developers said people should stop using it, about a year ago. I haven't had much reason to migrate back (though TrueCrypt's hidden volume feature was nice to have).
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Encryption causes heart disease and high cholesterol.
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Secure Skype Replacement? (Score:2)
Can anyone recommend a secure Skype replacement? I've been using Telegraph for real time chat, which has a great mobile experience, but only one of my friends has transitioned to it, everyone else is still all over WhatsApp. Telegraph also doesn't do video data.
I saw Snowdon talk last week and whilst he didn't say anything that hadn't already been said and printed, his passion has definitely motivated me to take a bit more personal responsibility.
Several of my IRC channels have now also moved to Slack, whic
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In theory you could run a mumble server on a private VPS. When I did it I used a VPS of the most minimal specs I could purchase at the time (1cpu, 1GB ram, linux) for about $7/month. I ran a mumble server for a community of about 3000 users for a couple of years and we would have 200 concurrent users with no latency issues. Voice and chat go over TLS. Mumble does not offer video chat however.
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NaCl is also used by Threema (my messenger of choice), btw.
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I use OTR or Retroshare for text-only IM and messaging, but neither does voice - it's been a 'coming soon' feature on Retroshare for a very long time.
Re: Secure Skype Replacement? (Score:2, Interesting)
Look, I'll put it in very simple and very straightforward terms: there is no secure communications anymore if you intend "secure from the government". There is none, and there will be none. Because the moment someone develops it, they get a visit from law enforcement who will tell them in no uncertain terms to keep a backdoor open for them or else... No elses, really. You have to comply. And you will. So get over it, there is and there will never be anything secure from the government.
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That argument only works if you are a "person of interest". For 99.9999% of people, the point is to avoid mass surveillance, not targeted surveillance. Yes, if the government targets YOU, you are fucked. But that is not the threat model that applies to almost everyone, and it remains highly useful to frustrated the mass surveillance state.
Re: Secure Skype Replacement? (Score:3)
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You are a gov't shill trying to discourage secure computing!
The RSA algorithm (use wikipedia if you don't know it) is so simple a grade-schooler can understand it. And it is 100% not possible for a government to insert any kind of back door.
If you think that "the government" magically knows every time someone raises a number to an exponent, and does a modulo, then you really need a thicker tinfoil hat, the radiation has been impacting your wetware.
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... Jabber/XMPP (and hence Facebook and Google Talk)...
Google Talk hasn't been XMPP for years.
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"PGP has double the adoption rate...." (Score:2, Insightful)
Sadly, it could have 10 times the adoption rate, and to an excellent approximation, it would still be true that nobody uses it.
Slashdot's privacy tools are terrible (Score:3)
I don't want to live in a world where terrible user experience is an effective weapon to keep information private!
DNS Record public encryption key (Score:2)
I don't know why we don't change the DNS records to include a public key for every record.
Then every site would be able to add a public key for everyone to communicate with it.
Just add it to the existing zone record response
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Good point.
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DNS records can already be 'poisioned'....they just remove the record...boom, no more site.
Bingo: Good point & Kaminsky flaw too... apk (Score:1)
See here: A remedy that's more efficient & faster than remote DNS http://it.slashdot.org/comment... [slashdot.org]
* Using something you have NATIVELY already no less... & that actually COMPLIMENTS DNS nicely too!
APK
P.S.=> To quote Howard Stark from the film "Captain America"? Hosts = Capt. America's vibranium shield, DNS = steel (that's NOT 'stainless'):
"It's stronger than steel & 1/3rd the weight" - Howard Stark
As well as something less complex & prone to breakdown (DNS does go down, a LOT) + exploit,
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Ultimately, I expect a mix of pinned-certificates, DNSSEC/DANE, and cloud-based reputation for certificates (is everyone else seeing the same certificate?).
Key management is hard -- really hard. It's the weak link of modern encryption.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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Some banks already sign their mails, albeit with s/mime instead of pgp... PGP requires a plugin for most mail clients, while s/mime is usually supported by default.
I work in security, and always sign my emails... The majority of our clients simply ignore the signature and have no idea what it is.
Government Obstructionism (Score:3)
While we're on the subject though, what the fuck is up with mail client interfaces getting worse and worse? The UNIX text-based clients provide far better interfaces than any graphical client I've ever used, and they're currently falling into disrepair. Hell, I don't think anyone's actually touched the VM code in about half a decade, and it has the best threading and thread-handling options I've ever seen in any mail client. Kill-by-thread from any message in the thread makes keeping those useless IT notifications from the company a snap. It also had pretty decent integration with GPG, even if you did have to add it in yourself. Paired with the MIT remembrance agent, it did a great job of reminding you what you did to fix a problem six months ago when the exact same problem cropped up. I've never seen functionality like that in any other mail client.
The vast majority still don't care (Score:2)
Since the vast majority of people don't know or care and have done nothing different, we can only assume that those people that are adopting strong encryption tools must be terrorists. Because no one else would need to use weapons-grade encryption.
Re:The vast majority still don't care (Score:4, Interesting)
Because no one else would need to use weapons-grade encryption.
True, I don't need to use encryption everywhere, but I do just because I can. It amuses me that if anyone wants to snoop on my communications that they see the digital equivalent of an upraised middle finger, and not my plaintext.
I also enjoy the fantasy of someone spending an inordinate amount of resources to decrypt my emails only to discover that all I'm doing is sending LOLcat photos to my friends.
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Yeah, but... (Score:2)
"126 Years After Adolf Hitler's Birth, Encryption Tools Are Gaining Users" is also true.
For beginners... (Score:3)
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