Saturday, September 7, 2013

Another Hero

I wanted to write, 'this guy is my hero' but it seems that the world is quite full of heroes. I have linked to the article but I also pasted it below. Though I have a lot of research to do; what the heck is TPS (clueless I know). 

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Now that we have enough details about how the NSA eavesdrops on the internet, including today's disclosures of the NSA's deliberate weakening of cryptographic systems, we can finally start to figure out how to protect ourselves.

For the past two weeks, I have been working with the Guardian on NSA stories, and have read hundreds of top-secret NSA documents provided by whistleblower Edward Snowden. I wasn't part of today's story – it was in process well before I showed up – but everything I read confirms what the Guardian is reporting.
At this point, I feel I can provide some advice for keeping secure against such an adversary.

The primary way the NSA eavesdrops on internet communications is in the network. That's where their capabilities best scale. They have invested in enormous programs to automatically collect and analyze network traffic. Anything that requires them to attack individual endpoint computers is significantly more costly and risky for them, and they will do those things carefully and sparingly.

Leveraging its secret agreements with telecommunications companies – all the US and UK ones, and many other "partners" around the world – the NSA gets access to the communications trunks that move internet traffic. In cases where it doesn't have that sort of friendly access, it does its best to surreptitiously monitor communications channels: tapping undersea cables, intercepting satellite communications, and so on.
 
That's an enormous amount of data, and the NSA has equivalently enormous capabilities to quickly sift through it all, looking for interesting traffic. "Interesting" can be defined in many ways: by the source, the destination, the content, the individuals involved, and so on. This data is funneled into the vast NSA system for future analysis.

The NSA collects much more metadata about internet traffic: who is talking to whom, when, how much, and by what mode of communication. Metadata is a lot easier to store and analyze than content. It can be extremely personal to the individual, and is enormously valuable intelligence.

The Systems Intelligence Directorate is in charge of data collection, and the resources it devotes to this is staggering. I read status report after status report about these programs, discussing capabilities, operational details, planned upgrades, and so on. Each individual problem – recovering electronic signals from fiber, 5keeping up with the terabyte streams as they go by, filtering out the interesting stuff – has its own group dedicated to solving it. Its reach is global.

The NSA also attacks network devices directly: routers, switches, firewalls, etc. Most of these devices have surveillance capabilities already built in; the trick is to surreptitiously turn them on. This is an especially fruitful avenue of attack; routers are updated less frequently, tend not to have security software installed on them, and are generally ignored as a vulnerability.

The NSA also devotes considerable resources to attacking endpoint computers. This kind of thing is done by its TAO – Tailored Access Operations – group. TAO has a menu of exploits it can serve up against your computer – whether you're running Windows, Mac OS, Linux, iOS, or something else – and a variety of tricks to get them on to your computer. Your anti-virus software won't detect them, and you'd have trouble finding them even if you knew where to look. These are hacker tools designed by hackers with an essentially unlimited budget. What I took away from reading the Snowden documents was that if the NSA wants in to your computer, it's in. Period.

The NSA deals with any encrypted data it encounters more by subverting the underlying cryptography than by leveraging any secret mathematical breakthroughs. First, there's a lot of bad cryptography out there. If it finds an internet connection protected by MS-CHAP, for example, that's easy to break and recover the key. It exploits poorly chosen user passwords, using the same dictionary attacks hackers use in the unclassified world.

As was revealed today, the NSA also works with security product vendors to ensure that commercial encryption products are broken in secret ways that only it knows about. We know this has happened historically: CryptoAG and Lotus Notes are the most public examples, and there is evidence of a back door in Windows. A few people have told me some recent stories about their experiences, and I plan to write about them soon. Basically, the NSA asks companies to subtly change their products in undetectable ways: making the random number generator less random, leaking the key somehow, adding a common exponent to a public-key exchange protocol, and so on. If the back door is discovered, it's explained away as a mistake. And as we now know, the NSA has enjoyed enormous success from this program.

TAO also hacks into computers to recover long-term keys. So if you're running a VPN that uses a complex shared secret to protect your data and the NSA decides it cares, it might try to steal that secret. This kind of thing is only done against high-value targets.

How do you communicate securely against such an adversary? Snowden said it in an online Q&A soon after he made his first document public: "Encryption works. Properly implemented strong crypto systems are one of the few things that you can rely on."

I believe this is true, despite today's revelations and tantalizing hints of "groundbreaking cryptanalytic capabilities" made by James Clapper, the director of national intelligence in another top-secret document. Those capabilities involve deliberately weakening the cryptography.

Snowden's follow-on sentence is equally important: "Unfortunately, endpoint security is so terrifically weak that NSA can frequently find ways around it."

Endpoint means the software you're using, the computer you're using it on, and the local network you're using it in. If the NSA can modify the encryption algorithm or drop a Trojan on your computer, all the cryptography in the world doesn't matter at all. If you want to remain secure against the NSA, you need to do your best to ensure that the encryption can operate unimpeded.

With all this in mind, I have five pieces of advice:

1) Hide in the network. Implement hidden services. Use Tor to anonymize yourself. Yes, the NSA targets Tor users, but it's work for them. The less obvious you are, the safer you are.

2) Encrypt your communications. Use TLS. Use IPsec. Again, while it's true that the NSA targets encrypted connections – and it may have explicit exploits against these protocols – you're much better protected than if you communicate in the clear.

3) Assume that while your computer can be compromised, it would take work and risk on the part of the NSA – so it probably isn't. If you have something really important, use an air gap. Since I started working with the Snowden documents, I bought a new computer that has never been connected to the internet. If I want to transfer a file, I encrypt the file on the secure computer and walk it over to my internet computer, using a USB stick. To decrypt something, I reverse the process. This might not be bulletproof, but it's pretty good.

4) Be suspicious of commercial encryption software, especially from large vendors. My guess is that most encryption products from large US companies have NSA-friendly back doors, and many foreign ones probably do as well. It's prudent to assume that foreign products also have foreign-installed backdoors. Closed-source software is easier for the NSA to backdoor than open-source software. Systems relying on master secrets are vulnerable to the NSA, through either legal or more clandestine means.

5) Try to use public-domain encryption that has to be compatible with other implementations. For example, it's harder for the NSA to backdoor TLS than BitLocker, because any vendor's TLS has to be compatible with every other vendor's TLS, while BitLocker only has to be compatible with itself, giving the NSA a lot more freedom to make changes. And because BitLocker is proprietary, it's far less likely those changes will be discovered. Prefer symmetric cryptography over public-key cryptography. Prefer conventional discrete-log-based systems over elliptic-curve systems; the latter have constants that the NSA influences when they can.

Since I started working with Snowden's documents, I have been using GPG, Silent Circle, Tails, OTR, TrueCrypt, BleachBit, and a few other things I'm not going to write about. There's an undocumented encryption feature in my Password Safe program from the command line); I've been using that as well.

I understand that most of this is impossible for the typical internet user. Even I don't use all these tools for most everything I am working on. And I'm still primarily on Windows, unfortunately. Linux would be safer.

The NSA has turned the fabric of the internet into a vast surveillance platform, but they are not magical. They're limited by the same economic realities as the rest of us, and our best defense is to make surveillance of us as expensive as possible.

Trust the math. Encryption is your friend. Use it well, and do your best to ensure that nothing can compromise it. That's how you can remain secure even in the face of the NSA.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Loop Out

Been a while.  Lots to think about and be busy with.  Big changes personally.  But the story continues.  

Summer is here.  Floods.  Surveillance.  Welcome to the Long Emergency.  

Thank god there are still some amazing people out there.  Puts one to shame. 

That's it for now . . .  I wonder what Prism thinks of me?

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Fennel

I just got this email urging me to take action because Nestle is patenting the fennel flower (in fact another friend forwarded me the same email).  I can't say I'm surprised by this ridiculous attempt but I'm not really outraged.  At least not enough to write and forward and do all the things the email urges me to do. 

The sad thing is that until capitalism or civilization (since they aren't really separate) collapses we're going to writing a lot of emails and bothering our friends with forwards.  Nestle might give up on this one but in a few months Cargill will patent burdock roots and we'll do it all again.  And then Mitsubishi will patent rice and then we'll do it all again.  And again.  And again.

I just don't know what all this achieves.  How do you change a mindset that allows the owning of life?  Is this just more evidence that we are completely bonkers? 

I'd rather say fuck you and start growing fennel and giving away the seed to everyone I meet. 

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Irreplaceable

Life imitated Easter last weekend.  But up to now there has been no resurrection.  My life is lonelier because of it.  

We were away and a dear friend was looking after our house.  One might be tempted to say looking after the cats as well but in many ways they look after us.  But they would be pissed if they didn't get their food in time.  On Saturday, Buddy, our special cat, went out for the day as he has been since the days became less cold.  He never came back.  


Our friend discovered very large coyote tracks near our house (a little too close).  This is actually a desperate time for those unlucky to not have human benefactors.  Winter is ending sure but it's been a hard one.  I'm sure the creatures that inhabit the wild places groan in their own ways with minus 20 windchill.  When it's so cold you need to eat to keep yourself warm enough.  Even if spring is on the horizon you have to chance a trip close to the unnatural animals.  

 

I imagine that Bud acted as he always did when he met a dog many times his size.  He probably walked right up to that coyote and tried to claw his or her eyes out for daring to set foot on his territory.  We weren't there to interfere like we normally are.  I wonder if the coyote lost an eye or has a big scar to remember our ferocious (never to us, never) Bud.

I keep imagining the scene.  He has inspired me to write again actually.  Maybe the coyote just came to recruit him for the fight against clearcutting and other human crimes.  Maybe Bud saw the suffering of this coyote and realized he should give himself up so another might live.  I suppose that last one is more appropriate for Easter.  I wouldn't put it past him he was so wise.



All our days are numbered I guess.  Even the most wonderful of us.  One of the first blog pieces I wrote was about Buddy.  I'll miss you Buddy.  Thank you for sharing your life with me.  I'd give anything to have you sleep next to my head just one more time. 

Monday, March 25, 2013

Close Shave

A month or so ago we got Albert Nobbs out of the library.  A good movie, sad, but good.  I dread movies where someone works hard only to have their money (and sometimes their life) taken away from them by someone with more power or muscle.  Ever since the first scene where Nobbs opens the secret compartment where he has hidden his earnings over the years I knew what was coming.  I was so weary I actually couldn't watch. 

But this shit happens all the time.

So I was somewhat surprised to see the banksters and their politicians trying to fleece the people of Cyprus.  They wanted to go into everyone's account and take a percentage of the contents to fund, get this, a bailout of the banks.  So they'll take people's money and give it to the bank that was previously holding it for them?!  This economist stated it pretty plainly and clearly:



Now not only are they planning on cutting important social programs and handing tax cuts to corps and various rich folks but now they want to take money out of our accounts.  I say our accounts because the dumbass Dutch finance minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem says fleecing people will be the order of the day from now on when bailing out banks.  It won't be long before it's policy in Italy and then Spain and maybe one day the UK and even Canadia (after 2015 of course).  

Now I know that not everyone worked hard squirreling away their earnings.  Some folks who would be fleeced would be the crooks who usually steal from the hardworking.  But to steal from everyone is a bad idea.  But it's also a great idea if you get my meaning. . . 

Anyway they're only getting people's money over 100,000 euros but that's still a bad precedent.  I wonder what the price of gold will be tomorrow morning.  Maybe it's a good time to get our money out of our accounts?

Friday, March 22, 2013

Friday, March 15, 2013

Deptford Goth

His name makes me think of grade 12 and Fifth Business.

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Rational Pagans

There's a fellow who lives nearby (well nearby for around here).  He's very concerned about climate change.  And of course if we were rational and had any intelligence we would all feel the same way.  He writes lengthy letters to the editor on the subject warning us all of our imminent demise.  No one responds.  He calls up and yells at people who try and work for small change while mostly ignoring the big issue of climate change.  It's very uncomfortable for those of us who are yelled at.  He probably shouldn't waste his breath anymore and just start blowing up power lines and the other conveniences that ultimately won't be so convenient to our children and our children's children (provided we get that far).  But he can't and that's fine.  Life and climate change go on.  

His problem I think is that he assumes that we make thoughtful and rational decisions and don't act just based on our own habits and pleasure.  I recently read Heat by George Monbiot and there was a line from it that I can't shake.  He said, and I paraphrase, that he's worried that we'll all demand that our dear leaders do something about climate change while knowing and expecting that states will do nothing.  It's not probably conscious.  We all want to be good or more precisely to be seen to be good.  

Which brings me to a Christmas card I received last year.  More precisely it was a Solstice card.  Now a Christmas card is completely irrational.  Here's a card to celebrate the birth of some guy who lived 2,000 years ago thousands of kilometres away from here.  He said some good things so we need to remember him.  If we forgot about him the world would still spin, the grass would still grow, the snow would still fall. 

But the Winter Solstice is an essential point in time that should have a lot of meaning for us.  The days get longer from that point.  The sun returns to lengthen the day and (in the case of where I live) allows us to harvest and prepare for the next winter.  It's completely rational to celebrate the Solstice.  


But instead we wait until a couple of days after and talk about baby Jesus (or more commonly open presents). 

That card has helped me to realize that humans just may be becoming less rational as time goes on.  The good old Pagans had it right.  The sun is the centre of the world.  Everything depends on it.  So it makes sense to study and, yes, worship it's cyclical relationship with the earth.  Similarly if having kids and continuing on the species was central to us then we might like to consider whether those coal-fired power plants are really good for our species in the long run.  

I wonder what the Pagans would have thought.  Oh yeah, they would have never gotten into this mess in the first place.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Are you sure you want to delete?

Just spent some minutes deleting old contacts in my primary 'friends' email.  I've been meaning to do it for some time.  It's a pain when you are thinking of sending an invite out and you have so many contacts.  I sound like I'm bragging but I'm not.  These aren't really friends anymore.  We might have been friends once and if I saw them again I'd be very happy to embrace but really we aren't in touch.  Some people I haven't heard from in a decade.  And maybe that's partly my fault.  

Though I have tried though.  I write to people now and then on email but I have no way of knowing if they even received them.  I think email is almost done as a means of keeping in touch.  I think I'm the only person who isn't on facebook.  It's okay--I wonder how much those 'friends' are really friends.  I guess you can spy on them much more easily (and so can the cops).

It was an interesting exercise though deciding who to keep on and who to drop.  Some were old lovers.  Some were various school friends.  Some were people I only had in my email to invite them to rooftop hockey or other regular events. Some made it and some didn't.  Some people had a picture associated with their contact and it was nice to see their faces again though many were presumably out of date. 

So now I have a more manageable list.  Still realistically I only keep in regular touch with maybe ten people.  And that's wonderful.  Thank you!

PS - This is my 300th post on Museum Fremen.  How times flies . . .

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Sick

Been following this story for a while. I might have written about it. Anyway in the UK, the cops have been infiltrating peaceful organizations for decades. Not really news as this happens a lot. But the story of this pig (in this case I feel it's appropriate) is one for the ages. Infiltration is one thing, one could expect it from the neurotic and maniacal state, but this pig 'fell in love' and fathered a child with one of his activist buddies. Then he ditched her and the baby and disappeared; he said the cops were after him--for a promotion maybe. I think his son is now about 20 years old. No support, no word, no nothing--all that time. And he had another family the whole time. Of course the pig has been climbing the ladder ever since. But he must be totally psychotic to have done this. I guess ultimately the police system (and state) is psychotic but someone has to sign up with the right(?) credentials.

And, to boot, I keep hearing about Muslims in the US who the cops find and encourage them to blow something up, then provide them with all the equipment and training and then the bomb fails to go off and the sucker goes away forever as an evil terrorist.  But this guy without that police support, wouldn't have blown out a candle let alone leveled a building.  I guess their crime was a thought crime which they conflated to a real crime.

The world is so fucked.  Hard to know what's real.  I guess climate change is real . . . or is it?  Ha ha.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Challenging Thoughts

What a winter and it just keeps coming!  Storm after storm and now some rain and the groundwater is certainly filling up.  There is still so much snow on the ground.  It's both beautiful and a pain in the butt.  Next winter we're going to have to put up some snow fencing because trudging down the driveway is highly annoying.  

Lately I have been realizing that I will live with a lot.  The driveway full of snow is just one thing.  Thankfully I have someone to remind me that other options are available.  For instance, regarding this issue, I could buy a snow blower, put up a snow fence, ask a friend to plow the driveway.  But my default is to just accept things and park at the bottom of the drive.  I would probably just do this forever and accept it.

Lately I have been thinking a lot about my commitments in other areas.  A few years ago I decided to stop flying.  Flying, I've read, produces a lot of greenhouse gas emissions and has multipliers so water vapour is also released into the atmosphere which acts like a greenhouse gas.  I even had a friend who asked me to come to his wedding (in the UK) and I said no on principle.  

But what have I achieved by doing so?  I missed what might have been a fun wedding for one.  But does my principled position achieve anything?  I'm very happy to have not given the airlines any of my money.  But there are still thousands of airplanes flying everywhere.  Maybe all of us non-flyers have taken a few out of the air.  But it's still a pretty dismal prospect to realize that you are suffering (arguably) by not flying but nothing is really changing.  

Maybe it's okay to jet off somewhere.  Since it's looking like we're going to be at 500 ppm CO2 in probably a decade at this rate (and never forget we're supposedly in a recession).  If we're going to fuck up the planet we might as well have some fun right? 


Sunday, February 3, 2013

Fuck the NFL

Wow, what a sweet moment!  Like a stooge I too tuned in to the Super Bowl.  Just after half time.  I turned it on and Baltimore ran it back 109 yards for a touchdown.  Ouch, I thought the 49ers were going to walk away with it.  Anyway then the sweetest thing happened.  The power went out, no commentary, just cut to commercials.  I cheered loudly and pumped my fist like I had scored a touchdown.  How sweet!  Of course the power will come back.  I can only hope, around 4am.  Fuck the NFL and their military bullshit theme song.  

Friday, January 25, 2013

Small Places

Yukon Paul, this one is for you brother!  Found this video randomly and quite enjoyed it.  Love the title.  Perhaps you'll be inspired.  I'm generally inspired but now the question is whether I'm ready to get off my lazy ass.