Jacob Appelbaum Interview – Discusses Edward Snowden, The NSA, TOR, WikiLeaks – Video


Jacob Appelbaum Interview - Discusses Edward Snowden, The NSA, TOR, WikiLeaks
Jacob Appelbaum Interview - Discusses Edward Snowden, The NSA, TOR, WikiLeaks. In this interview we see Jacob Appelbaum discuss some of the recent developmen...

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Jacob Appelbaum Interview - Discusses Edward Snowden, The NSA, TOR, WikiLeaks - Video

The Economics Of Edward Snowden, Laura Poitras’s …

But I dont think of you. Howard Roark, The Fountainhead

Without minimizing the countless human rights abuses that Cuban dictator Fidel Castro visited on his own people, Cato Institute senior fellow Bandow has long argued that neither Castro nor Cuba ever represented a military threat to the United States. Yet in constantly demonizing the Cuban dictator, top American foreign policy officials needlessly elevated an individual who would have quickly slipped into irrelevancy had the American political and foreign policy establishment simply ignored him.

Castros highly valuable global currency, currency that made him the darling of the portion of the global ruling elite known to look askance at the U.S., was the United States dislike of him. Absent the attention bestowed on Castro by the worlds richest and most powerful country, its not a reach to assume that even the old Soviet Unions leaders would have dismissed Cubas dictator. But the United States doesnt think of you perhaps could have saved us from the botched Bay of Pigs invasion, the Cuban missile crisis, and lots of time wasted since.

Watching the lengthy interview of Edward Snowden in Citizenfour, Laura Poitrass highly regarded documentary, thoughts of Castro regularly entered my mind. In Snowdens case, the question I kept asking was why the U.S. political class needlessly demonized such a mediocrity. Why didnt Republicans, Democrats and President Obama simply say But Mr. Snowden, we dont think of you.

To watch Cizenfour is to witness an overly paranoid crank. Snowden went through all sorts of hurdles to contact the documentarian in Poitras without being detected by U.S. intelligence, clearly traveled to Hong Kong (where Poitras and Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald interviewed him) under deep cover, but not explained enough was why? Its entirely possible that Snowdens every action was being tracked ahead of him becoming a national news story, but the idea seems far-fetched.

Viewers of Citizenfour are treated to Snowden logging onto one of his computers, but doing so with a red pillowcase over his head so fearful was he of exposure. When he did this the camera turned to a bemused GreenwaldThis viewer muttered, We took this nut seriously?

Up front, it should be said that any NSA-sponsored spying on the citizenry of the U.S. is an affront to a free society, and that the NSAs actions unearthed by Snowden are shameful. No doubt its the federal governments constitutional obligation to maintain a common defense meant to protect us from foreign intruders, but sometimes governments cross the line.

Its often pointed out that war is the health of the state, and the NSAs actions whereby the U.S. intelligence agency tracked the communications of U.S. citizens without regard to their role in terrorist activities gave life to the famous saying. Government is ultimately paralysis, errors by those in government have killed far more people than terrorists ever have, so its reasonable to say that Snowden did all Americans a favor when he exposed the doings of the NSA through Poitras and Greenwald.

Debates will continue about how much the NSAs actions amount to overreach on the part of the feds, but at the very least it should be asked how much liberty were willing to give up for the false security offered by our federal government? Indeed, leaving aside the constitutionality of the NSAs doings, do readers truly feel safer from a terrorist attack thanks to the NSAs spying activities?

To answer in the affirmative would be a reach if looked at through an economic lens. As Snowden makes plain in the Citizenfour interviews, the NSA was tracking voluminous amounts of U.S. communications in its efforts to unearth existing or looming terrorist activities. Defenders of the NSA would say its analysts were merely looking for patterns without listening in on specific conversations, but assuming the latter is true, does anyone really think the NSAs analysts are in possession of otherworldly skills that would enable them to find the proverbial needle in the haystack based on Google searches, calls on Verizon, e-mails, etc.?

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The Economics Of Edward Snowden, Laura Poitras's ...

Is online privacy a lost cause?

Edward Snowden brought to the fore concerns about online privacy.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

Nine in 10 Americans believe they have no control over their personal information, how it is collected and how it is used by companies, according to a new Pew Research Center survey.

And they're more concerned about corporate America than the government.

Of those who use social networking sites -- like Facebook (FB, Tech30), Instagram, Twitter (TWTR, Tech30), LinkedIn (LNKD, Tech30) and Tumblr -- 80% said they're concerned about businesses and advertisers accessing their information. Fewer -- 70% -- said they're concerned about the feds doing the same.

The survey is part of a series testing public perception in the wake of the NSA leaker Edward Snowden's revelations about government surveillance.

Related: In response to Kardashian, Chelsea Handler Instagrams nudie pic

The survey appears to show frustration. While 61% of respondents told Pew they "would like to do more" to be anonymous online, only 24% said it is "easy" to do so.

Also, 88% of respondents said it is difficult to delete inaccurate information about themselves once it gets on the Internet.

Most respondents said old-fashioned communication -- a landline phone -- is the most secure way to contact people. About half of Americans think that about their cell phones, and only 15% say the same for social media.

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Is online privacy a lost cause?

Microsoft fixes critical crypto flaw, strengthens encryption for older systems

Microsoft fixed a critical vulnerability Tuesday in the Windows cryptographic library that could expose Windows servers to remote code execution attacks. The update also adds support for stronger and more modern cryptographic ciphers to older Windows versions.

"The vulnerability could allow remote code execution if an attacker sends specially crafted packets to a Windows server," Microsoft's said in a security bulletin called MS14-066. However, the flaw is in the Microsoft Secure Channel (SChannel) component that exists in all Windows versions and implements the SSL and TLS cryptographic protocols.

The Microsoft security bulletin makes it clear that an attacker could exploit the vulnerability to execute arbitrary code on a Windows system running as a server. However, it's not as clear whether a malicious HTTPS website could exploit the vulnerability to execute code on a Windows computer when a user visits the site in Internet Explorer, which relies on SChannel for SSL/TLS connections.

A separate Microsoft blog post about assessing the risk for the November security updates suggests that this might be possible. It contains a table that lists the most likely attack vector for MS14-066 as "user browses to a malicious webpage."

Microsoft did not immediately respond to a request for clarifications.

"The vulnerability bulletin provided calls out servers as the potential victims, but the SSL/TLS stack is used every time your browser connects to a secure website (which most are these days)," said Jared DeMott, a security researcher at Bromium, via email. "And it would be straightforward for an attacker with details of this vulnerability, to host a malicious site that offers 'security' via the bogus SSL/TLS packets. Could a malicious website exploit IE with this bug? Until someone reverse engineers the patch, we'll have to wait to hear about how bad it is."

This critical SChannel flaw comes after serious vulnerabilities were found this year in other widely used SSL/TLS libraries, including OpenSSL, GnuTLS and the TLS library used by Apple in Mac OS X and iOS.

But the update described in MS14-066 doesn't only address a security vulnerability. It also adds support for stronger encryption ciphers on older Windows versions.

"This update includes new TLS cipher suites that offer more robust encryption to protect customer information," the security bulletin says. "These new cipher suites all operate in Galois/counter mode (GCM), and two of them offer perfect forward secrecy (PFS) by using DHE key exchange together with RSA authentication."

In recent years, researchers demonstrated attacks against TLS configurations that use the RC4 stream cipher or block ciphers like AES that operate in cipher-block-chaining (CBC) mode. This leaves ciphers that operate in Galois/Counter Mode (GCM) and that are only available in TLS 1.2 as one of the few fully secure alternatives.

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Microsoft fixes critical crypto flaw, strengthens encryption for older systems

How quantum computers will undermine cryptography

As a result, investment in quantum computing has increased and the pace of development has accelerated, with companies like Microsoft and IBM getting on board in recent years. While it used to be thought that the first functioning quantum computers would emerge in 2050, it now looks like they may only be 10-20 years away.

However, Mr Snow warns that while quantum computers will be a "wonderful gift" for the scientific community, they also pose a "monstrous threat" to the security functions running on the World Wide Web.

"Every single security function out there is using something called public-key cryptography. It's a specific set of algoriths and they all share one common property they absolutely spill their guts and fall apart under a quantum computing attack," said Mr Snow.

"So the quantum computer comes to exist, and web security is dead. Nobody should send any money anywhere over the web again."

Mr Snow said this is mainly due to vulnerabilities in the 'border gateway control engines' that transfer data across national borders. These vulnerabilities are well documented, and cyber criminals have been exploiting them to steal money and spy on web users for the past 20 years, but they have never been fixed because the web is not owned or controlled by any single entity.

The only people with the power to fix the vulnerabilities are the network administrators that control the border gateway protocol, but they do not regard data protection as their problem, as their job is simply to ship data across boundaries not to store it.

"They don't realise that if the border gateway protocol is fixed, it would solve a hell of a lot of problems for the millions of people that are being misdirected on the end points at their sites because of bad routing decisions that have been made by attackers," said Mr Snow.

In the event that these border gateway control engines are taken down by a quantum computing attack, it could bring down the entire Web, according to Mr Snow.

He pointed to the congressional testimony of Sami Saydjari, founder and president of the US Cyber Defense Agency, which was published in 2007 and demonstrated the potential devastation an incident of this scale could wreak.

Mr Saydjari claimed that, with three years preparation and a budget of $500 million, an attacker could launch a cyber attack that would take down the US infrastructure for 30 days, crippling transportation networks, rupturing oil and gas pipelines with improper control, disrupting financial services and disabling communications networks.

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How quantum computers will undermine cryptography

This 10-Year-Old Is Headed To College, What’s Your Problem?

by Gil Kaufman 16 hours ago

Ria Cheruvu is like any 10-year-old kid she loves to play piano, sing and dance. And, oh yeah, shes getting ready to graduate from high school next year and start college at Arizona State University, where she plans to study Neural Cryptography.

Wait, what? I not only had to spell-check that, but I had to Google what it even means, and Im not close to 10 years old.

You see, Cheruvu is a genius. Like, next-level genius. In addition to composing her own songs, shes currently studying genetics, writing expository essays in English and learning about algorithms in algebra. You know, kids stuff.

According to KSAZ in Arizona, Cheruvu will graduate seven years before her peers and has some pretty major plans for her future already.

Neural Cryptography, that is my career choice, she said when asked what her major might be. It is the study of neuroscience which is the study of the brain and the mind cryptography which is coding.

And, while youre still trying to figure out what to have for lunch today, Cheruvu who loves noodles and quesadillas has also plotted out what she wants to do after college too. I want to kind of prevent diseases like Alzheimers maybe, and possibly find an alternative cure, she said.

Cheruvu lives with her parents in Gilbert, Arizona, and attends a special online school called Arizona Connections Academy, where shes currently taking honors courses intended for seniors and has just written an original soliloquy for Shakespeares Macbeth. And get this: her parents rule is no homework after 6 p.m. What does she do when shes done with her work for the day? I go on bike rides with my friends, she said.

And she wants to be president, of course.

Often guilty, never convicted. Serving 15 years to life at MTV News.

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This 10-Year-Old Is Headed To College, What’s Your Problem?

Cryptocurrency Round-Up: Satoshi Unmasked, Russia Softens Bitcoin Stance and ‘Bitcoin Worth $1m’

The price of bitcoin has continued its remarkable recovery.(IBTimes UK)

Bitcoin has continued its remarkable price recovery that began at the start of November with a further gain of 7% over the last 24 hours.

Most other major cryptocurrencies have seen similar improvements in price, including dogecoin and darkcoin and namecoin, while litecoin and peercoin have seen more modest gains of around 1% to 2%.

One of the biggest movers across all markets is pesetacoin. One of two unofficial cryptocurrencies of Spain, pesetacoin rose in price by 37% since yesterday to take its market cap above $100,000.

Previous bills had set fines for creating, issuing or promoting digital currencies like bitcoin at $1,314. This will now be reduced to $1,050 in a revision that head of Russia's Federal Financial Monitoring Service Evgeny Volovik said reflects the underlying potential of bitcoin technology.

"I consider the bitcoin ecosystem as a prototype of a system that is undergoing rigorous testing from all sides," Volovik told CoinTelegraph.

"With experience and further innovation, I think it is very possible that the blockchain will have a very bright and promising future."

The search for Satoshi Nakamoto, the illusive creator of bitcoin, may well be over(Adrian Chen)

Research that involved deep analysis of the 80,000 words posted online by Nakamoto has been detailed by financial writer and investigative journalist Dominic Frisby in his book 'Bitcoin- The Future of Money?'

"There is no proof, just a great deal of circumstantial evidence," Frisby told IBTimes UK.

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Cryptocurrency Round-Up: Satoshi Unmasked, Russia Softens Bitcoin Stance and 'Bitcoin Worth $1m'