The story behind that little padlock in your browser – Horizon magazine

Behind that little padlock is cryptographic code that guarantees the security of data passing between you and, for example, the website you are looking at.

In fact, TLS guarantees security on three fronts: authentication, encryption and integrity. Authentication, so that your data goes where you think it is going; encryption, so that it does not go anywhere else; and integrity, so that it is not tampered with en route.

Its the most popular security protocol on the internet, securing essentially every e-commerce transaction, Eric Rescorla, chief technology officer at US technology company Mozilla, told Horizon over email.

In the two decades leading up to 2018, there were five overhauls of TLS to keep pace with the sophistication of online attacks. After that, many experts believed that the latest incarnation, TLS1.2, was safe enough for the foreseeable future,until researchers such as Dr Karthikeyan Bhargavan and his colleagues at the French National Institute for Research in Digital Science and Technology (INRIA) in Paris came along.

Scaffold

As part of a project called CRYSP, the researchers had been working on ways to improve the security of software applications. Usually, software developers rely on TLS like a builder relies on a scaffold in other words, they take its safety for granted.

To improve security at the software level, however, Dr Bhargavan and colleagues had to thoroughly check that the underlying assumptions about TLS1.2 that it had no serious flaws were justified.

At some point, we realised they werent, he said.

After discovering some shaky lines of code, the researchers worked with Microsoft Research and took on the role of hackers, performing some simulated attacks on the protocol to test the extent of its vulnerability. The attacks revealed that it was possible to be a man in the middle between an internet user and a service provider, such as Google, and thereby steal that users data.

It would have to be a fairly complex sequence of actions, explained Dr Bhargavan. Typically, the person in the middle would have to send weird messages to each actor to lure them into a buggy part of the code.

If, as the person in the middle, I was successful, I could potentially steal someones payment details, he continued. Or I could pretend to be Apple or Google, and download (insert) malware via a software update to get access to peoples computers.

Serious threat

Such a hacker would need great expertise and computational power, that of a government agency, for example, as well as access to some of the physical infrastructure close to the key actors. Nevertheless, the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), an international organisation promoting internet standards, judged the threat to be sufficiently serious to warrant a new version of the cryptographic protocol.

Dr Bhargavan points out that he was far from the only computer scientist to prompt the revision. There were four or five other research groups unearthing problems with the current protocol, pushing one another along, he says, in a healthy rivalry.

Still, he says that his group discovered some of the most surprising flaws in TLS1.2, which he believes may have been the final nails in the coffin for the protocol.

His group was also part of a broad collaboration within the internet community, overseen by an IETF working group, to construct the more secure, and man-in-the-middle-proof successor that is TLS 1.3, using modern algorithms and techniques. Dr Bhargavan was a key player in that effort, said Rescorla who oversaw TLS at the IETF at the time of the work.

TLS 1.3 was officially launched in August 2018. Since then it has been implemented by major internet browsers such as Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome.

So long as you click that padlock you have some confidence about safety.

Dr Karthikeyan Bhargavan, INRIA, France

So how much safer are internet users as a result?

Human error

It is true that for most online security breaches, TLS is not to blame. Usually, personal data gets into the wrong hands because of bugs in software what Dr Bhargavans group was working on to begin with or human error.

But Dr Bhargavan believes there is reassurance in knowing that the underlying protocol is secure. Its not everything, but so long as you click that padlock you have some confidence about safety its the most basic thing, he said.

Besides, internet users are not only worried about hackers. Since 2013, and the leaks of Edward Snowden, a former employee of a US National Security Agency contractor, many people are concerned about the amount of personal data amassed by state intelligence and large enterprises.

Designed with the Snowden revelations in mind, TLS 1.3 closes the door to some types of this pervasive network-based monitoring through its encryption of both user data and metadata. It also prevents retrospective decryption one of the previous versions weaknesses.

There was a long discussion in the IETF working group about whether preventing surveillance was one of the goals of TLS, says Dr Bhargavan. And the answer was ultimately in the positive, he said.

Now Dr Bhargavan is returning to the issue of software security. He believes the majority of remaining vulnerabilities can be eliminated at the design stage.

Verified

To do this, he and his colleagues are constructing a library, HACL*, of fully verified cryptographic code, which other developers can draw on when building new software. In this project, known as CIRCUS, they are also creating an easy-to-follow reference paradigm that tells developers how to put software together without introducing security glitches.

The resultant high-assurance software has already been taken up by developers at Mozilla and Microsoft, among others. We want everyone to be following these techniques, Dr Bhargavan said.

Ultimately, his goal is not to secure everything online, but to find the safest spots within our highly complex computer systems. I dont think we will ever get to a point where everything is verified, he said, but we can find the most secure basket in which we can put our keys and passwords and financial data.

The research in this article was funded by the European Research Council. Dr Bhargavan is a recipient of a 2019 Horizon Impact Award for societal impact across Europe and beyond.

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The story behind that little padlock in your browser - Horizon magazine

Classic Review: The Prescient Spy Antics of Sneakers – Fordham Ram

Erica Weidner, Copy ChiefMarch 25, 2020

I watched Sneakers with my parents when I was about 11 or 12 years old. I absolutely loved it: the action sequences, the humorous tone, the clever tricks. The movie, which came out in 1992, immediately shot to the top of my favorites list. Although Sneakers has been shaken from the number one spot, its remained on my top ten list ever since.

This spring break, I decided to rewatch Sneakers to answer the question: Does my childhood favorite movie stand the test of time?

The answer: Yes, it absolutely does.

Sneakers opens in a flashback to 1969. Two college students, Martin Brice (Robert Redford) and Cosmo (Ben Kingsley), are using their hacking skills to play pranks. Despite their humorous attitude, these pranks such as transferring every cent in Richard Nixons bank account to the National Association to Legalize Marijuana are extremely illegal. The police catch Cosmo, but Martin avoids the cops by sheer dumb luck.

Fast-forward to the present day (1992, that is). Martin Brice has rebranded himself as Martin Bishop. Hes built a new life for himself as a security specialist: someone who breaks into banks so that those banks can improve their defenses. Martin leads an all-star team of hackers and sneakers.

Crease (Sidney Poitier) is a former CIA agent whos never quite lost his sense of paranoia or his sense of national duty. Creases foil is Mother (Dan Aykroyd) who will ramble about conspiracy theories to anyone who will listen. Theres also Carl (River Phoenix), a young hacker more interested in girls than in money, and Liz (Mary McDonnell), an ex-girlfriend of Martin who finds herself back in the madness. Rounding out the team is Whistler (David Strathairn). Whistler is blind, but his keen sense of hearing makes him invaluable to any mission.

However, no matter how well this team does, Martins past still comes back to haunt him. His college crimes become blackmail material, and the team gets embroiled in a conspiracy of epic proportions, involving the Russians, the NSA and other spooks.

The movie came out almost 30 years ago, and I still cant bring myself to spoil it for you. Like every spy movie, Sneakers has its fair share of twists and crosses, and like every heist movie, it has its own uniquely convoluted plans. Itd be wrong to ruin those moments, even if were well after the two-week spoiler grace period.

Calling Sneakers a simple spy movie or a heist movie seems like an injustice. Its wildly funny, which is both due to its writing and its cast. The wisecracks that the characters bounce off one another are not only wittily worded but beautifully executed. Some of the funniest moments in this movie focus on the tension between Mother, who believes every conspiracy theory, and Crease, who believes none of them. Aykroyds Mother is lovably petulant in sharing his conspiracies, while Poitiers Crease is amusingly annoyed by his antics; together, they are on fire. Comedy also adds in some more subtle touches, such as Whistler reading a Playboy magazine written in Braille.

Sneakers also has its moments of clarity, where a fun, silly spy movie hits on a deep vein of truth. In a way, the film seems to be ahead of its time. For instance, throughout the movie, theres a direct implication that the NSA is spying on American citizens. Everyone on the sneakers team believes this, and even the NSA agents dont deny it. Edward Snowden confirmed this implication just over 20 years later.

This isnt the only time that the movie looks toward the future. Near the end of Sneakers, the films ultimate antagonist tries to explain how technology has transformed the way we think of the world. As he puts it, Its not about whos got the most bullets. Its about who controls the information. These words rang true when the movie premiered, but today they seem more relevant than ever. Our world is run by data.

Sure, there are times that Sneakers shows its age. Characters laugh at the concept of meeting a date online, which they call compu-dating and in 1992, that concept was laughable. (Today, its one of the most popular ways that couples meet.) The campy soundtrack, characterized by melodramatic piano music, also dates this movie in the 90s.

However, these are small complaints that shouldnt negate how well Sneakers stands the test of time. The movie hasnt lost its excitement or its sense of humor its just as fun to watch now as it was in the past. Amazingly, it also hasnt lost its relevance. For better or for worse, hackers and spies are just as important in 2020 as they were in 1992. The technology they use may have changed, but the reasons have not.

Sneakers holds up, and its cemented its place on my favorites list.

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Classic Review: The Prescient Spy Antics of Sneakers - Fordham Ram

CPH:DOX Goes Live (and Virtual): Online Talks and Debates – Filmmaker Magazine

CPH:DOX, having already established itself as one of the most cutting-edge festivals on the circuit, can now take the prize for the ballsiest fest around. As a global pandemic causes cancellations and postponements from SXSW to Tribeca on these shores, the feisty Copenhagen International Documentary Festival has nevertheless refused to concede defeat. Within hours of the Danish government announcing restrictions on public gatherings, the festival made an announcement of its own. CPH:DOX 2020 would keep calm, carry on, and simply pivot to the virtual world. And as manmade natural disasters are primed to become the new normal, it might also be ushering in a brand new festival world.

And while the new virtual cinema (an eclectic selection of 40 films from the program, with more to come) is only accessible to those based in Denmark (though at 6 euros per film its a socially-isolating family bargain if you are), and live broadcasts from the five-day CPH:CONFERENCE strictly for accredited guests, the festival has decided to make its first-ever digital debate programme something for everyone. CPH:DOX Live is comprised of 15 debates that can be experienced for free and live throughout the festival at 4pm and 8pm daily. You can follow the debate either through a link on our website or on Facebook, where the debates will be broadcast live. (Though the talks are paired with specific docs, no film watching is required.)

So at the festivals urging to Make yourself comfortable on the couch, while enjoying these important conversations of a world that keeps on revolving, even when we need to stay at home, Ive picked out a handful of mind-engaging debates I cant wait to tune in on in order to tune out that head-spinning world.

Black Holes

At 8PM on March 20th, I hope to learn the answer to the question, What can black holes tell us about humanity? Harvard professor Peter Galison, the director of The Edge of All We Know an exploration of the black hole pursuit by both the Event Horizon Telescope and Stephen Hawking and his team == will be in conversation with astrophysicists Marianne Vestergaard and Brooke Simmons. The event will also serve as the online virtual opening night of the CPH:SCIENCE program. A fitting start for the unknown future of humanity, too.

Crazy, Not Insane

Alex Gibneys latest delves into the world of murderers through the lifes work of forensic psychiatrist Dorothy Otnow Lewis, whos interviewed everyone from Ted Bundy, to Arthur Shawcross to Joel Rifkin. And at 4PM on March 21st, the doc will serve as a launching pad for Copenhagen University senior physician and senior researcher Anne Mette Brandt-Christensen and Janni Pedersen, a crime reporter and journalist, to challenge the conventional wisdom surrounding the brains of those who choose to kill.

Citizen K

While a Gibney double feature will only be a possibility for those in Denmark, the chance to hear from this films oligarch star is available to all. At 8PM on March 22nd the Russian dissident Mikhail Khodorkovsky, sentenced to nearly a decade in prison after publicly challenging the corrupt Russian government back in 2003, will be chatting with Leif Daviden, a Russia expert and author, about what else? Putins Russia. Though also, one hopes, about how exactly a 90s gangster capitalist became a current champion of democracy and human rights.

Citizenfour and AI

Though Laura Poitrass 2015 Oscar-winner wont be screened, on March 23rd at 8PM another dissident and champion of democracy and human rights with (forced) ties to Russia can be beamed in via live-stream to a smartphone near you. Yes, the iconic whistleblower Edward Snowden is set to discuss how AI is impacting the global surveillance state with science and tech correspondent Henrik Moltke. And if you happen to be in Denmark, you can pair this potentially Orwellian talk with Tonje Hessen Scheis 2019 film iHuman, which explores how artificial intelligence might curb climate change and save the world or end society as we know it.

Oliver Sacks

Finally, Ric Burnss Oliver Sacks: His Own Life, an exhaustive cinematic dissection of the famed neurologist and author, forms the basis of this conversation scheduled for March 24th at 8PM. The University of Copenhagens associate professor of psychology Signe Allerup Vangkilde and neuroscientist Troels W. Kjr will fill us in on how Sacks changed the way we see the brain and possibly humankind itself. (A true meeting of the minds to be sure.)

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CPH:DOX Goes Live (and Virtual): Online Talks and Debates - Filmmaker Magazine

A battle with the NSA, and Netflix subscribers flock to pandemic classic: This week’s best and biggest on Netflix – HalifaxToday.ca

Check out Jordan Parker's 'The week's best and biggest on Netflix' every Friday on HalifaxToday.ca.

Escape From Alcatraz

Before he was a crackerjack director, Clint Eastwood was a stoic, incredible actor with a penchant for being the litmus test for a good film.

If Eastwood was in it, it was worth the price of admission. Escape From Alcatraz based on a real-life prison escape is no different.

This slick, engrossing adventure film features Eastwood in a trademark tough guy role, as one of three men who attempts escape from the infamous Alcatraz.

Featuring a young Fred Ward, this movie has a committed ensemble cast and will keep you entirely entertained.

Its an Eastwood classic and a great title to check out.

4/5 Stars

The Last Stand

When Arnold Schwarzenegger decided to make a comeback, some relished the idea. Others groaned. I was the latter.

The former California governor, 1980s action star and king of one-liners took a break after the disappointing Terminator 3 in 2003. Seven years later, he decided to pop up in Sly Stallone comeback vehicle The Expendables.

But here in The Last Stand Schwarzenegger cant rely on an ensemble. He is the star. But for all the misfires hes had since 2010, this is one of his better efforts.

Completely underappreciated upon arrival, this story of a sheriff who must staff off a cartel kingpin at the Mexican border is a lot of fun.

Far below his classic titles, Arnie still manages to wrangle laughs and huge action along with Forest Whitaker and Johnny Knoxville.

It wont change your life, but this is more than enough to give you a nostalgic kick.

3.5/5 Stars

United 93

This real-time film about the foiled terrorist plot aboard United Flight 93 on September 11, 2001, is one of the most comprehensive, emotional films about the topic.

Written and directed by Bourne maestro Paul Greengrass, this is an evocative film that doesnt lean on some celebrity cast to get performances.

To see the heroics of the passengers against certain death is a really beautiful thing, and this is one of those movies that will stay with you.

Its a crowning achievement for Greengrass, and must-see viewing for all of you.

4/5 Stars

Contagion

I know I just featured this flick a few months back, but given COVID-19, the people have spoken.

This movie has catapulted back into Netflixs Top 10 most-viewed films of the week, and while its timely, its also an incredible achievement.

The story of health professionals, government and citizens working through a deadly pandemic rings so true right now, and though the film wasnt as appreciated on release, people are responding right now.

Steven Soderberghs direction is enviable, and he creates tension, suspense and terror like youve never seen.

With Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Jude Law and more incredible actors on board, its a heck of an acting ensemble, but itll also make the germophobe in everyone wince at every sneeze for days.

4/5 Stars

Snowden

This film about agency employee and whistleblower Edward Snowden is one of the most provocative of the last 10 years.

The story of the man who leaked the NSAs surveillance techniques to the public paints him in so many lights.

Snowden is considered two different things, depending on who you ask: traitor or patriot, hero or villain. The man has been in hiding from extradition for years, and its perfect this subject matter is handled by Oliver Stone.

Its great directing, and one of the best films Stone known for JFK and Natural Born Killers has done in years. With Melissa Leo, Nicolas Cage, a disappointing Shailene Woodley and Zachary Quinto on board, its a heck of a cast.

But make no mistake, Joseph Gordon-Levitt is the star here. His idiosyncrasies as Snowden are incredible, and this is one of the best performances of his career so far.

4/5 Stars

Jordan Parker's weekly film reviews can be found on his blog, Parker & The Picture Shows.

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A battle with the NSA, and Netflix subscribers flock to pandemic classic: This week's best and biggest on Netflix - HalifaxToday.ca

What is the USA PATRIOT Act? – IT PRO

Next year will mark the 20th anniversary of one of the most controversial laws in U.S. history. The USA PATRIOT Act was a direct response to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the U.S.

Signed into law less than two after 9/11, it expanded the rights of law enforcement and intelligence agencies in the U.S., leading to an unprecedented level of data collection on American citizens and laying the groundwork for Edward Snowden's revelations 12 years later. What did the PATRIOT Act do and why is March 15, 2020 such an important date for the legislation?

The Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act began as H.R 2975 in the House of Representatives and S.1510 in the Senate. It modified existing law to grant new powers in what lawmakers saw as an emerging battle against terrorism.

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While the Act's author has said publicly that it was never intended for bulk data collection, it nevertheless made it easier for law enforcement to cast the net.

"Companies hold a lot of information that can be considered 'tangible things' that they collect from their users," explains James Mariani, an associate at law firm Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz PC. "This information is undeniably useful for investigation, especially at the inception of an investigation when you are casting a wide net and looking for leads.

The legislation amended a swathe of prior laws including the 1986 the Electronic Communications Privacy Act. The ECPA had locked down eavesdropping on electronic communications and telephone calls by the U.S. government, carving out specific conditions in which it would be allowed.

Sections 201 and 202 of the PATRIOT Act expanded the list of serious crimes that would warrant government eavesdropping to include computer and terrorist crimes. Under the Act, intentional access to protected government computers is now a crime that can trigger a wiretap application.

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Section 209 made it easier to collect voicemail by putting it in the same category as email rather than treating it as a phone call when it came to surveillance. This lowered its standard of protection, making it easier to gather.

Section 210 of the Act added to the kinds of records authorities could subpoena from a communication services provider. It now included records of session times and duration, temporarily assigned network addresses and credit card or bank account numbers.

Section 216 extended pen register and trap and trace orders for electronic communications covering "dialing, routing, addressing, or signalling information". That expanded its coverage to internet communications including email and web surfing. Along with section 219, this section also expands the application of pen register surveillance warrants so any district court could issue them for anywhere else in the country.

Under section 217, the Act also allowed law enforcement agencies to intercept communications with a trespasser in a protected computer system (assuming the system's owner agreed). The definition of a protected computer is one used in interstate or foreign commerce or communication, which really means any internet-connected computer. This hides the surveillance from judicial oversight while, according to the Electronic Privacy Information Center, allowing even file sharers to be watched.

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One of the most controversial sections of the PATRIOT Act was section 215, also known as the "tangible things" or "business records" section of the law. This amended the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), expanding the kinds of records the FBI could ask a business to provide. These now included books, records and documents. The list was wide enough that it applies to any records relevant to an individual, according to EPIC, including medical and educational records.

The American Library Association criticised this section, warning it allowed the authorities to collect information about peoples' borrowing habits en masse without any reason to believe that they were engaged in illegal activity. It also introduced a gag order that stopped businesses from mentioning these requests, so if the FBI asked an ISP for a customer's email, it wasn't allowed to let that customer know.

The US government relied on section 215 of the PATRIOT Act when it instigated a mass-surveillance program that hoovered up records of U.S. citizens' phone calls under President Bush in 2002.

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According to a class-action lawsuit in 2006, the NSA conspired with AT&T, BellSouth and Verizon to collect and hand over the records. It was followed by an ongoing bulk telephone-metadata collection program authorized by the FISA Court in 2006, which came to light in 2013.

The new measures that the PATRIOT Act introduced were supposed to expire -- U.S. lawmakers called it 'sunsetting -- in 2005. It was renewed then and again in 2011 and then again in the USA Freedom Act on June 2, 2015. That Act was passed in a hurry after the PATRIOT Act provisions sunsetted the day before, crippling the NSA's information-gathering capabilities.

The USA Freedom Act extended section 215's sunset period to December 2019, but to win that concession, supporters of the NSA's surveillance program had to compromise by curtailing the mass collection of phone and internet metadata and limiting the government's data collection to the "greatest extent reasonably practical."

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Now, instead of handing over to the NSA, the phone companies would have to hold onto the call metadata. Government agencies could only query it using specific sectors to limit the number of records gathered.

It was a start, but there's still a long way to go, says Marc Rotenburg, president at EPIC. "[There was] some progress after the Freedom Act, but still 215 requires reforms," he warns.

The EFF and some senators agree. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) wrote to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in 2019 asking whether the intelligence community is using section 215 to collect location-based data from citizens' phones or carriers. He said, If Congress is to reauthorize Section 215 before it expires in December, it needs to know how this law is being interpreted now, as well as how it could be interpreted in the future. The DNI responded that it hasn't used section 215 in this way yet and hadn't decided if it was appropriate to do so.

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The situation is even more complex. In April 2019 the NSA asked the White House for permission to end its mass phone-surveillance program because of the technical complexity involved. The new restrictions seemed to make the program not worth the effort, and the extra-careful handling now required made errors more likely.

The NSA admitted in June 2018 that "technical irregularities" meant it had collected some call data records that it wasn't supposed to.

Nevertheless, the NSA is still arguing for the right to reintroduce the program at a future time, against fierce opposition from lawmakers.

"They are likely hoping that the promise of only using it within tighter and more publicly acceptable constraints (e.g. more clearly linked and relevant to detecting international terrorism) will keep it on the table rather than ending their 'business records' power altogether," says Mariani.

Lawmakers will vote on whether to extend section 215 on March 15, after putting off the decision for 90 days in December. It'll be another landmark date in the USA's long and stormy history of domestic surveillance.

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What is the USA PATRIOT Act? - IT PRO

Trump Isn’t the First President to Attack the Press – The Nation

Donald Trump at the NBC Universal 2015 Winter TCA Press Tour. (Joe Seer / Shutterstock)

EDITORS NOTE: This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To stay on top of important articles like these, sign up to receive the latest updates from TomDispatch.

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Every month, it seems, brings a new act in the Trump administrations war on the media. In January, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo exploded at National Public Radio reporter Mary Louise Kelly when he didnt like questions she askedand then banned a colleague of hers from the plane on which he was leaving for a trip to Europe and Asia. In February, the Trump staff booted a Bloomberg News reporter out of an Iowa election campaign event.Ad Policy

The president has repeatedly called the press an enemy of the peoplethe very phrase that, in Russian (vrag naroda),was applied by Joseph Stalins prosecutors to the millions of people they sent to the gulag or to execution chambers. In that context, Trumps term for BuzzFeed, a failing pile of garbage, sounds comparatively benign. Last year, Axios revealed that some of the presidents supporters were trying to raise a fund of more than $2 million to gather damaging information on journalists at The New York Times, The Washington Post, and other media outfits. In 2018, it took a court order to force the White House to restore CNN reporter Jim Acostas press pass. And the list goes on.

Yet it remains deceptively easy to watch all the furor over the media with the feeling that its still intact and safely protected. After all, didnt Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan rail against the press in their presidencies? And dont we have the First Amendment? In my copy of Samuel Eliot Morisons 1,150-page Oxford History of the American People, the word censorship doesnt even appear in the index; while, in an article on The History of Publishing, the Encyclopedia Britannica reassures us that in the United States, no formal censorship has ever been established.

So how bad could it get? The answer to that question, given the actual history of this country, is: much worse.

Though few remember it today, exactly 100 years ago, this countrys media was laboring under the kind of official censorship that would undoubtedly thrill both Donald Trump and Mike Pompeo. And yet the name of the man who zestfully banned magazines and newspapers of all sorts doesnt even appear in either Morisons history, that Britannica article, or just about anywhere else either.

The story begins in the spring of 1917, when the United States entered the First World War. Despite his reputation as a liberal internationalist, the president at that moment, Woodrow Wilson, cared little for civil liberties. After calling for war, he quickly pushed Congress to pass what became known as the Espionage Act, which, in amended form, is still in effect. Nearly a century later, National Security Agency whistle-blower Edward Snowden would be charged under it, and in these years he would hardly be alone.

Despite its name, the act was not really motivated by fears of wartime espionage. By 1917, there were few German spies left in the United States. Most of them had been caught two years earlier when their paymaster got off a New York City elevated train leaving behind a briefcase quickly seized by the American agent tailing him.Current Issue

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Rather, the new law allowed the government to define any opposition to the war as criminal. And since many of those who spoke out most strongly against entry into the conflict came from the ranks of the Socialist Party, the Industrial Workers of the World (famously known as the Wobblies), or the followers of the charismatic anarchist Emma Goldman, this in effect allowed the government to criminalize much of the Left. (My new book, Rebel Cinderella, follows the career of Rose Pastor Stokes, a famed radical orator who was prosecuted under the Espionage Act.)

Censorship was central to that repressive era. As the Washington Evening Star reported in May 1917, President Wilson today renewed his efforts to put an enforced newspaper censorship section into the espionage bill. The Act was then being debated in Congress. I have every confidence, he wrote to the chair of the House Judiciary Committee, that the great majority of the newspapers of the country will observe a patriotic reticence about everything whose publication could be of injury, but in every country there are some persons in a position to do mischief in this field.

Subject to punishment under the Espionage Act of 1917, among others, would be anyone who shall willfully utter, print, write or publish any disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language about the form of government of the United States, or the Constitution of the United States, or the military or naval forces of the United States.

Who was it who would determine what was disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive? When it came to anything in print, the Act gave that power to the postmaster general, former Texas Congressman Albert Sidney Burleson. He has been called the worst postmaster general in American history, writes the historian G. J. Meyer, but that is unfair; he introduced parcel post and airmail and improved rural service. It is fair to say, however, that he may have been the worst human being ever to serve as postmaster general.

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Burleson was the son and grandson of Confederate veterans. When he was born, his family still owned more than 20 slaves. The first Texan to serve in a cabinet, he remained a staunch segregationist. In the Railway Mail Service (where clerks sorted mail on board trains), for instance, he considered it intolerable that whites and blacks not only had to work together but use the same toilets and towels. He pushed to segregate Post Office lavatories and lunchrooms.

He saw to it that screens were erected so blacks and whites working in the same space would not have to see each other. Nearly all Negro clerks of long-standing service have been dropped, the anguished son of a black postal worker wrote to the New Republic, adding,Every Negro clerk eliminated means a white clerk appointed. Targeted for dismissal from Burlesons Post Office, the writer claimed, was any Negro clerk in the South who fails to say Sir promptly to any white person.

One scholar described Burleson as having a round, almost chubby face, a hook nose, gray and rather cold eyes and short side whiskers. With his conservative black suit and eccentric round-brim hat, he closely resembled an English cleric. From President Wilson and other cabinet members, he quickly acquired the nickname The Cardinal. He typically wore a high wing collar and, rain or shine, carried a black umbrella. Embarrassed that he suffered from gout, he refused to use a cane.

Like most previous occupants of his office, Burleson lent a political hand to the president by artfully dispensing patronage to members of Congress. One Kansas senator, for example, got five postmasterships to distribute in return for voting the way Wilson wanted on a tariff law.

When the striking new powers the Espionage Act gave him went into effect, Burleson quickly refocused his energies on the suppression of dissenting publications of any sort. Within a day of its passage, he instructed postmasters throughout the country to immediately send him newspapers or magazines that looked in any way suspicious.

And what exactly were postmasters to look for? Anything, Burleson told them, calculated tocause insubordination, disloyalty, mutinyor otherwise to embarrass or hamper the Government in conducting the war. What did embarrass mean? In a later statement, he would list a broad array of possibilities, from saying that the government is controlled by Wall Street or munition manufacturers or any other special interests to attacking improperly our allies. Improperly?

He knew that vague threats could inspire the most fear and so, when a delegation of prominent lawyers, including the famous defense attorney Clarence Darrow, came to see him, he refused to spell out his prohibitions in any more detail. When members of Congress asked the same question, he declared that disclosing such information was incompatible with the public interest.

One of Burlesons most prominent targets would be the New York City monthly The Masses. Named after the workers that radicals were then convinced would determine the revolutionary course of history, the magazine was never actually read by them. It did, however, become one of the liveliest publications this country has ever known and something of a precursor to the New Yorker. It published a mix of political commentary, fiction, poetry, and reportage, while pioneering the style of cartoons captioned by a single line of dialogue for which the New Yorker would later become so well known.

From Sherwood Anderson and Carl Sandburg to Edna St. Vincent Millay and the young future columnist Walter Lippmann, its writers were among the best of its day. Its star reporter was John Reed, future author of Ten Days That Shook the World, a classic eyewitness account of the Russian Revolution. His zest for being at the center of the action, whether in jail with striking workers in New Jersey or on the road with revolutionaries in Mexico, made him one of the finest journalists in the English-speaking world.

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A slapdash gathering of energy, youth, hope, the critic Irving Howe later wrote, The Masses was the rallying centerfor almost everything that was then alive and irreverent in American culture. But that was no protection. On July 17, 1917, just a month after the Espionage Act passed, the Post Office notified the magazines editor by letter that the August issue of the Masses is unmailable. The offending items, the editors were told, were four passages of text and four cartoons, one of which showed the Liberty Bell falling apart.

Soon after, Burleson revoked the publications second-class mailing permit. (And not to be delivered by the Post Office in 1917 meant not to be read.) A personal appeal from the editor to President Wilson proved unsuccessful. Half a dozenMassesstaff members including Reed would be put on trialtwicefor violating the Espionage Act. Both trials resulted in hung juries, but whatever the frustration for prosecutors, the countrys best magazine had been closed for good. Many more would soon follow.

When editors tried to figure out the principles that lay behind the new regime of censorship, the results were vague and bizarre. William Lamar, the solicitor of the Post Office (the departments chief legal officer), told the journalist Oswald Garrison Villard, You know I am not working in the dark on this censorship thing. I know exactly what I am after. I am after three things and only three thingspro-Germanism, pacifism, and high-browism.

Within a week of the Espionage Act going into effect, the issues of at least a dozen socialist newspapers and magazines had been barred from the mail. Less than a year later, more than 400 different issues of American periodicals had been deemed unmailable. The Nation was targeted, for instance, for criticizing Wilsons ally, the conservative labor leader Samuel Gompers; the Public, a progressive Chicago magazine, for urging that the government raise money by taxes instead of loans; and the Freemans Journal and Catholic Register for reminding its readers that Thomas Jefferson had backed independence for Ireland. (That land, of course, was then under the rule of wartime ally Great Britain.) Six hundred copies of a pamphlet distributed by the Intercollegiate Socialist Society, Why Freedom Matters, were seized and banned for criticizing censorship itself. After two years under the Espionage Act, the second-class mailing privileges of 75 periodicals had been canceled entirely.

From such a ban, there was no appeal, though a newspaper or magazine could file a lawsuit (none of which succeeded during Burlesons tenure). In Kafkaesque fashion, it often proved impossible even to learn why something had been banned. When the publisher of one forbidden pamphlet asked, the Post Office responded: If the reasons are not obvious to you or anyone else having the welfare of this country at heart, it will be uselessto present them. When he inquired again, regarding some banned books, the reply took 13 months to arrive and merely granted him permission to submit a statement to the postal authorities for future consideration.

In those years, thanks to millions of recent immigrants, the United States had an enormous foreign-language press written in dozens of tongues, from Serbo-Croatian to Greek, frustratingly incomprehensible to Burleson and his minions. In the fall of 1917, however, Congress solved the problem by requiring foreign-language periodicals to submit translations of any articles that had anything whatever to do with the war to the Post Office before publication.

Censorship had supposedly been imposed only because the country was at war. The Armistice of November 11, 1918 ended the fighting and on the 27th of that month, Woodrow Wilson announced that censorship would be halted as well. But with the president distracted by the Paris peace conference and then his campaign to sell his plan for a League of Nations to the American public, Burleson simply ignored his order.

Until he left office in March 1921more than two years after the war endedthe postmaster general continued to refuse second-class mailing privileges to publications he disliked. When a U.S. District Court found in favor of several magazines that had challenged him, Burleson (with Wilsons approval) appealed the verdict and the Supreme Court rendered a timidly mixed decision only after the administration was out of power. Paradoxically, it was conservative Republican President Warren Harding who finally brought political censorship of the American press to a halt.

Could it all happen again?

In some ways, we seem better off today. Despite Donald Trumps ferocity toward the media, we haventyetseen the equivalent of Burleson barring publications from the mail. And partly because he has attacked them directly, the presidents blasts have gotten strong pushback from mainstream pillars like The New York Times, The Washington Post, and CNN, as well as from civil society organizations of all kinds.

A century ago, except for a few brave and lonely voices, there was no equivalent. In 1917, the American Bar Association was typical in issuing a statement saying, We condemn all attemptsto hinder and embarrass the Government of the United States in carrying on the war. We deem them to be pro-German, and in effect giving aid and comfort to the enemy. In the fall of that year, even the Times declared that the country must protect itself against its enemies at home. The Government has made a good beginning.

In other ways, however, things are more dangerous today. Social media is dominated by a few companies wary of offending the administration, and has already been cleverly manipulated by forces ranging from Cambridge Analytica to Russian military intelligence. Outright lies, false rumors, and more can be spread by millions of bots and people cant even tell where theyre coming from.

This torrent of untruth flooding in through the back door may be far more powerful than what comes through the front door of the recognized news media. And even at that front door, in Fox News, Trump has a vast media empire to amplify his attacks on his enemies, a mouthpiece far more powerful than the largest newspaper chain of Woodrow Wilsons day. With such tools, does a demagogue who loves strongmen the world over and who jokes about staying in power indefinitely even need censorship?

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Trump Isn't the First President to Attack the Press - The Nation

Edward Snowden: This is the first time in a while I’ve felt like buying bitcoin. – FXStreet

The infamous whistleblower, Edward Snowden, has recently tweeted that he is considering buying Bitcoin. Snowden is a former Central Intelligence Agency employee who is now a fugitive after leaking highly classified National Security Agency documents. He believes that there isnt any particular reason behind the recent crypto sell-off that saw BTC lose 50% of its value in two days.

This is the first time in a while Ive felt like buying bitcoin. That drop was too much panic and too little reason.

In addition to Snowden, several others believe in something similar about BTC. Barry Silbert, CEO of Digital Currency Group, tweeted:

I'm buying. This is why bitcoin was invented

The founder and CEO of cryptocurrency and blockchain recruitment firm Crypto Capital Venture, Dan Gambardello, says Bitcoin is a good buy after the plummet but warns that it might not be a wise move considering that the market is gripped by fear.

Id say buy the Bitcoin dip, but I feel like that would be irresponsible. Markets are operating out of complete fear and panic and technical analysis is next to useless until things settle down.

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Edward Snowden: This is the first time in a while I've felt like buying bitcoin. - FXStreet

BTC: further to fall? or buy on the dip? Snowden says: BUY! – Warrior Trading News

Bitcoin is back under $5000, which has a lot of short-term investors flummoxed.

Others, though, are seeing an opportunity.

This is the first time in a while Ive felt like buying bitcoin. That drop was too much panic and too little reason, tweeted Edward Snowden, that famous whistleblower whose book, Permanent Record, is now revealing lots of inside information about American NSA activities, in the wake of the crash.

Although $5000 in change might look like a great entry point for someone who has seen Bitcoin soar over $10,000 just in recent weeks, some suggest the coin has further to fall, with Peter Brandt as quoted in a Cointelegraph story today by Marie Huillet predicting a floor around $1000 per coin.

However, some with a window into BTC markets suggest that mining will prevail even if the down market goes into the March miner reward halving event planned for May.

Some miners will drop out, tweets Mati Greenspan of eToro fame in a relevant scenario prediction. The hashrate goes down. Difficulty adjusts, making it easier for new miners to enter the market. Bitcoin continues producing blocks uninterrupted.

As for exchange leaders, Anatol Antonovici, in a story today at Bitcoinist, cites remarks by BitMex CEO Arthur Hayes.

Bitcoin has never ceased to surprise us, even though it had previously shown wild spasms of volatility here and there, Antonovici writes. Giving a short-term prediction in such circumstances is ridiculous, but the coin should eventually revive when or if the global economy gets back on track.Yesterday, ( Hayes) said that he didnt believe that Bitcoin would revisit the $3,000 territory and that the max pain probably resides somewhere between $6,000 to $7,000.

Stay tuned.

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BTC: further to fall? or buy on the dip? Snowden says: BUY! - Warrior Trading News

Big B and Priyanka Gandhis corona advice, Italy gets freebies & WHO let the dogs out – ThePrint

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New Delhi: Crashing stock markets, free porn and lots of advisories Twitter captures the global rollercoaster that coronavirus has caused.

First, another high profile coronavirus case: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau informed Twitter that his wife had tested positive for and is now in quarantine.

Former Congress president Rahul Gandhi slams the Modi government, again and its not the economy

His sister Priyanka, meanwhile, lectures us on keeping safe in these challenged times.

While Twitter talks about globalisations role in the spread of coronavirus, author Kavitha Rao shares a different, witty perspective.

Actions speak louder than words, and superstar Amitabh Bachchan is doing just that. Check out his advice

Theres good news from WHO for our best friend on COVID-19 and author Liam Hackett has something delightful to say about that.

Writer Rupa Gulab finds something funny in these pandemic times.

Actor Tom Hanks offers a thank you note to all those who wished his wife and him a speedy recovery from coronavirus.

Dont worry, Hanks, we know whos the stronger one in this battle!

Amidst all the conspiracy theories about which country might have engineered COVID-19 and why, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian offers his version

The world might be facing a massive shutdown but at least the Italians are being granted some interesting freebies Ahem.

Discover why US whistleblower Edward Snowden contemplates investing in cryto-currency.

Finally, Farooq Abdullahs daughter Safia Abdullah Khan took to Twitter to celebrate her fathers release from detention in the Valley today.

-Inputs by Yimkumla Longkumer

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Big B and Priyanka Gandhis corona advice, Italy gets freebies & WHO let the dogs out - ThePrint

What is social distancing? And what does it have to do with COVID-19? – Deseret News

SALT LAKE CITY Just a couple of months ago, few people outside of science and emergency preparedness had ever used the term social distancing. But Americans were doing it already, in an incremental yet revolutionary change enabled by technology.

We distanced ourselves from other people when we checked ourselves in at an airport kiosk or checked ourselves out at the grocery store. We became a little more socially distant once we stopped pulling over and asking for directions because we had GPS in our cars. We began eating restaurant food without going to restaurants (thanks to DoorDash and Uber Eats), and we watch movies on big screens at home, instead of seeing them with our neighbors in crowded theaters.

In short, even before COVID-19, America had been preparing for coronavirus-driven social distancing for years.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg famously said that his companys goal was to bring people closer together. British economist Frances Cairncross said technology promised the death of distance.

But the togetherness of technology, which allows an increasing number of Americans to work remotely as the new coronavirus spreads, is a different kind of togetherness than what families enjoy at the dinner table, or the banter shared at an office or coffee shop. It also comes at a cost.

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As author John Horvat wrote, Commerce is based on more than just transactions. It has always relied upon organic relationships.

The pleasantries exchanged at the cash register do more than pass time, Horvat said. These seemingly minor exchanges help knit communities together. They tend to produce what sociologists call social capital.

As Americans retreat even further from each other out of fear of contracting COVID-19, we will likely experience more of the negative effects of the social distancing weve already been doing, including loneliness and depression, sociologists and other experts say.

But in this case, there could be a benefit once the pandemic has passed: This mandatory social distancing might be the catalyst that brings us closer together again.

The rapid spread of the new coronavirus, which emerged in Wuhan, China, in late 2019, is enabled, in part, because of how long it takes for symptoms to occur (five days or longer) and because it can be transmitted from one person to another within a space of about six feet, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While people are most contagious when they are sick, medical experts believe that transmission can also occur before symptoms emerge, which is why governments across the world were calling for social distancing measures weeks before the World Health Organization on March 11 declared the coronavirus to be a pandemic.

The term social distancing itself isnt new.

A report prepared 10 years ago by the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, in conjunction with the CDC, deemed social distancing an effective nonpharmaceutical intervention to combat pandemics and argued that the practice was effective during the flu pandemic of 1918-19.

Then, the social distancing ordered by the city of St. Louis, Missouri, stood in stark contrast to that of Philadelphia, which held a parade and became the U.S. city with the greatest number of deaths, 16,000 in six months.

More than a century later, Philadelphia is still being punished for this on Twitter, where people are writing Dont be Philadelphia; be St. Louis.

To be St. Louis nationwide, health officials are urging Americans to take a drastic and unsettling step: to stay home as much as possible. Cancel everything. Now, Yascha Mounk, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University, wrote in The Atlantic.

For introverts, the overly stressed and people who are uncomfortable in crowds, remote work and widespread cancellations may sound like a vacation, government permission to do what they yearn to do anyway. Ive been ahead of the curve. Ive been socially-distancing myself for the past 20 years, Fox News personality and comedian Greg Gutfeld posted on Twitter. And National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden, now living in Russia, posted on Wednesday, Social distancing is underrated.

The idea of social distancing can seem like an anomaly in an age of hyper-connectivity, said Dan Rothwell, professor emeritus of communication at Cabrillo University in Aptos, California.

But as Rothwell points out in his book In Mixed Company: Communicating in Small Groups and Teams, virtual connection has resulted in a society-wide erosion of civility.

Research has shown that virtual interaction is more likely to be negative and disapproving than when people communicate face to face, and social distance can promote misunderstandings, Rothwell said.

Moreover, the ease with which technology allows us to retreat, even from our own family members, is troubling, he added.

My next-door neighbor is my daughter, her husband and our four grandkids. Its wonderful, but I cant tell you the number of times weve texted to see if theyre there, or picked up the phone to ask one of the grandkids to send some milk over to us, when what would have happened before is we would have had to wander over there and knock on the door.

That has happened in offices, as well, as researchers have found that people who work near each other will text instead of getting up and walking over to anothers desk to ask a question. And one study has shown that nearly 7 in 10 millennials have been told via text or Facebook that a romantic relationship was over, Rothwell said.

That said, technology is also making social distancing and quarantine more bearable than it was in centuries past, when being banished from a community, as for leprosy, meant you might never see your family again.

We can quarantine ourselves and still be connected. And thats an interesting contradiction, Rothwell said.

Some people arent bothered by health officials recommendation that we keep close to our homes like the person who responded to Snowden on Twitter, Its times like these I appreciate my social anxiety and hermit-like tendencies.

Although social distancing may be easier for introverted people than extroverts, the response to COVID-19 will expose the myth that introverts dont like being around people, said Susan Cain, author of Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Cant Stop Talking.

While introverted people are energized by quiet, theyre not antisocial. They just want to interact quietly and with fewer people at a time, Cain said.

But at a time like this, anyones preferred way of being around people is going to be difficult right now.

And for both introverts and extroverts, too much solitude can morph into loneliness, which is increasing among all age groups in the U.S.

As Claire Pomeroy reported for Scientific American last year, nearly half of Americans say that they frequently feel alone and with no meaningful connection with other people. Loneliness itself has been described as an epidemic.

Biologists have shown that feelings of loneliness trigger the release of stress hormones that in turn are associated with higher blood pressure, decreased resistance to infection and increased risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer, Pomeroy wrote, adding that theres even some evidence that loneliness accelerates cognitive decline.

Although Cain thrives on quiet, she said she likes to write in a busy coffeeshop near her home in the Northeast. She didnt go there on Wednesday, however, because of the coronavirus warnings, and she noticed on Tuesday that it was much less crowded than usual.

I feel like were at a tipping point kind of moment, she said. It has been striking me how much it affects us all, even though it affects us in different ways.

Georganne Bender, a consultant and speaker with Kizer & Bender in St. Charles, Illinois, calls herself a consumer anthropologist because she researches consumer behavior in their natural environment which she still considers to be brick-and-mortar stores. Even though online shopping and speedy delivery was keeping many people at home even before they were told to practice social distancing, she sees pockets of hope.

For example, she cited Wegmans, a chain of grocery stores in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states, that offers cafes in some locations, as well as live music, and is creating a sense of community for people who might otherwise be lonely. The first time I went was on a Friday night, and I saw a band playing and people dancing, I was blown away. I saw young couples there, and also men and women there with their elderly parents. When stores do things like that, it does bring people together, and they start making friendships, she said.

Similarly, Matthew Stern reported for RetailWire that a Dutch chain, Jumbo Supermarkets, now has a chatter checkout line for people who want to talk, and a coffee area where lonely shoppers can socialize with volunteers.

Such measures could help combat the isolation of technology-driven societies, Bender said, as well as the negative side effects of social distance, both culturally and government-imposed.

We are growing generations of people who dont know how to communicate, Bender said. Were losing a lot of camaraderie, and knowing your neighbors, how to talk to people, how to make eye contact. But the yearning for interaction still exists even as we retreat into our homes, she said.

You watch people at a conference or trade show, and the interaction is off the charts because were hungry for that, she said.

My hope is that when this is all over and were feeling safe again, we all start coming out of houses and going back to the malls and sporting events and concerts, and having friends over and interacting with each other again. I think were going to be starving for that. And hopefully, the coronavirus isolating us will be a catalyst for people getting back together.

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What is social distancing? And what does it have to do with COVID-19? - Deseret News