In the UK, Big Brother Recedes and Advances 176
PeterAitch writes "The UK government's Home Office has put a hold on their surveillance project to track details of everybody's email, mobile phone, text, and Web use after being warned of problems with privacy as well as technical feasibility and high costs." Four hours before the above Guardian story was filed, the BBC reported that the same Home Office insisted that it will push ahead with plans "to compel communication service providers to collect and retain records of communications from a wider range of internet sources, from social networks through to chatrooms and unorthodox methods, such as within online games."
why? what is the point? (Score:5, Informative)
could someone please seriously enlighten me as to why the UK government believes this has a chance of succeeding?
TalkTalk's director has already said unequivocably that TalkTalk will sue the UK Government if they proceed with policies like this, on the basis that presumably the TalkTalk director does not want to be put in jail for being ultimately responsible for implementing UK government policies that violate E.U and International Laws on privacy and human rights.
Additionally, the UK's secret service has warned the UK government that raising people's awareness of attacks on their privacy simply raises their awareness of techniques to keep their conversations private, thus making the job of snooping on conversations that really *matter* just that much more difficult and costly.
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
All right, people, I'm in charge now and we will find the terrorists. Jarvis, I want you to check for any terrorist chatter on AOL. Marley and Greggs, try searching for nuclear devices on askjeeves.com
This is the level of sophistication we're dealing with. They might catch some really, really stupid criminals. Like the ones that put their bank robbery's on youtube.
Now bearing in mind that they currently are looking at the connections between communicators, rather than the content of those communications; that's arguably even more dangerous, because it's like a giant fishing expedition combined with "guilty by association".
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is the level of sophistication we're dealing with. They might catch some really, really stupid criminals. Like the ones that put their bank robbery's on youtube
True. But yet again, the declared purpose of legislation like this and its true aim are not the same - it is never intended as a serious form of catching real "terrorist" of the strap on some dynamite and get on a bus kind. To maintain power and control you need your Thought Police [google.com]. The best weapon required is surveillance of the normal, general population - it allows the culture of fear [wikipedia.org] to be maintained, allowing the status quo to maintain power. [wikipedia.org]
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't think it's malice on behalf of the politicians. When you look at many prominent members of the Labour government you notice they're just not clever or intelligent people- Jacqui Smith, Hazel Blears, Harriet Harman, Keith Vaz, Peter Mandelson, Ed Balls and so on. I get the impression there's a few who are a bit more smart and are more malicious like David Miliband, but for the most part these people are a little dormant when it comes to their ability to think.
These people really do believe they're doing it for our own good, that it's a valid solution and that it's the right thing to do. When people like Peter Mandelson can't even keep the fact he's corrupt to the core secret, having been caught red handed about 4 times now in the middle of dodgy backhand deals, and Hazel Blears apparently can't walk down the street without getting her shoe stuck in the pavement and looking like an idiot in front of the worlds media why would anyone believe these people would have the mental capacity to pull off a power grabbing plot?
Of course you could still be right- it may not be the politicians, they could simply be puppets of those in the security services who are telling them what "needs" to be done which is plausible and probably more realistic. In general though the political problem is certainly one of incompetence rather than an inherent evil. The politicians almost certainly do believe these measures will really catch terrorists.
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
You make a good point. I was reading about Romania's dictator and his wife. He was not terribly bright, and his wife was a peasant who dropped-out of school in 4th grade. She used her power to force people to write research papers, and put her name on them, but she was dumb as a doorknob.
It seems government attracts the not-so-bright to positions of power.
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
No, its dictatorship, not communism. East Germany happened to be a communist dictatorship., but there are plenty of the other kinds
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>>>No, its dictatorship, not communism. East Germany happened to be a communist dictatorship
Oh sorry.
Maybe we ought to try Communism here in the US, UK, and EU? This time without the dictatorship aspect. What do you think?
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All large scale communist societies became dictatorships.
Therefore, all dictatorships are communist in nature.
I'm glad to see you studied logic in school.
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Is that necessarily so? I don't think anyone has seriously attempted a democratic communist state.
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Typical liberal trying to defend communism, by pretending the dark ages of communism in ~10 different countries never happened. The experiment with communism was tried; it failed. It's a flawed system that is doomed to turn away from its intended goal (freedom) toward tyranny.
While I agree that communism has definitely failed, you seem to be missing the point. The GP isn't defending communism. He (correctly) points out that the same tools are also used in other dictatorships. Several fascist states used very similar tactics and they were definitely not communist. This type of government plans needs to be opposed, no matter the ideology they're using to justify their actions.
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Neither word is useful in describing the twisted new regime in Britain. They are not communists or dictators, but they are tyrannical opressive big government types.
Orwell envisioned them as socialists, but socialism run amok doesn't explain it all. It's capitalism running amok alogside that Orwell missed.
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It's populism. The idea that government exists to give people money. It's an idea that dates all the way back to the Roman Republic.
As for the corporation aspect, well politicians are told "it's to protect the artists", so in their mind it's still serving the people.
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The GP is not "pretending" anything, he's saying "thought police", "surveillance" etc. are signs of dictatorships in general, not exclusively signs of communism. He hints that the UK is an example of a non-communist dictatorship.
Take your witch-hunt elsewhere.
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He meant there are plenty of other dictatorships which are not communist, not that there are many communist countries that are not dictatorships.
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Or to put it another way, you only get dictatorships and terrorists from extreme views.
You don't get moderates to justify taking away civil rights or to blow up crowded buildings.
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It makes more sense, IMHO, if you separate economic policy from social policy so you have a Cartesian co-ordinate system instead.
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Basically, we have a movement toward this in the USA, and the administration is far from "conservative". The last time we saw such strong fascism here was during the Wilson administration, when people were jailed for protesting our entry
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I don't think fascism belongs on the right side of the scale.
There are different ways in which one can measure left-right distinctions. I was thinking of social rather than economic, and I see "an aggressive nationalism and often racism" as socially right wing. In terms of the movement towards it in the USA, as an outside observer I see the move towards (though not all the way to) "a dictator having complete power, forcibly suppressing opposition and criticism" and "emphasizing an aggressive nationalism and often racism" was more a tendency of the previous administra
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Actually they have caught people planning to blow up supermarkets who did discuss it over web email
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/panorama/6692741.stm [bbc.co.uk]
TAYLOR: They then walked round the corner to Universal Video in Slough. Again, the spooks were on the case.
CLARKE: What they did was look at an email account on which were images of devises, electronic components which formed part of remote detonation.
Heroic British SIS officers, with a little help from the NSA were able to spy on the https connection to the web email service and also bug their car
TAYLOR: Omar's friend then had a touch of the jitters.
KUAJA: Bruv, just one thing, you don't think this place is bugged, do you?
OMAR: Nar, I don't think it's bugged bruv, at all. I don't even think the car's bugged. I was saying to XXX what we talk about sometimes, what we're doing, what I'm doing, yeah, bruv, if they knew about it, they wouldn't wait a day bruv, they wouldn't wait one day to arrest me, yeah, or any of us.
TAYLOR: At night, two days later, police specialists moved in to access to neutralise the threat.
Plus they got tips from helpful members of the public
ACCESS GIRL: [on telephone] Hi, is that the police?
TAYLOR: But the spooks also needed something else, luck.
ACCESS GIRL: We've got a suspicion about one of our customers.
TAYLOR: And there was good reason for the call, and this was it, a huge bag stored in unit 1118. Now the staff at Access had got no idea what was inside, but the warning that said oxidising agent was more than enough to cause them concern. In fact, the bag contained 600 kilograms of ammonium nitrate fertiliser. That's around half a ton, and that's more than the IRA used to bomb canary wharf.
Later that night specialists from the anti terrorist branch gained access to unit 1118, the lockup where the bag was stored. They needed to establish that the substance inside the bag was ammonium nitrate ? it was. Alarm bells rang. The spooks had been hearing details of a bomb plot and now they'd found the explosive needed to make it. The pieces of the jigsaw were beginning to come together.
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
See that's a perfect summary of why I haven't watched Panorama in ages. It's become more and more like the US style of hypermentary: Tell the audience what you're going to tell them. Tell them they should be afraid / excited / awestruck. Play some bass noise. Talk in a Really. Slow. Earnest. Voice. Tell them what you're telling them. Tell them what you've told them. End forty minutes of drawn out information.
Honestly, I would prefer a nice tidy sequence of events and some more in-depth looks at the interesting parts. But I guess my aim is to get information and their target audience is those trying to fill their life with "entertainment". But I do miss being talked to like an intelligent human being.
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I always mentally read the show's title as 'Paranoia' whenever I see it.
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Terry Gilliam made a really good documentry about:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088846/ [imdb.com]
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The fact is, the Secret Service has spent time and effort keeping the populace blissfully ignorant of technology's pitfalls and it's backfired. The creme of those ignorami are now in government.
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
Would cutting the UK off from the rest of the world for a day (in protest) be an effective demonstration of how costly this would be?
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It's really not hard to imagine.
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Again, you've missed the point. The government can't afford to not have internet (and telephone) service, even for a day. The country canno
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Nobody on the other side wants to try i
Re:why? what is the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
The budget for the snooping programme was allocated years ago, about £1bn ($1.6bn US) was made public - it was a nice small sounding figure, nothing heard of the scheme again for years. NOW there is an election looming where everything from lying about immigration to the politicians expenses claims have been leaked, they are claiming that the scheme is dead in the water, when the truth is anything but.
If the spies deny it, it is safe to assume they are lying to placate people
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8032367.stm [bbc.co.uk]
The UK's electronic intelligence agency has taken the unusual step of issuing a statement to deny it will track all UK internet and online phone use.
Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) said it was developing tracking technology but "only acts when it is necessary" and "does not spy at will".
Known as Deep Packet Inspection equipment, these probes will "steal" the data, analyse and decode the information and then route it direct to a government-run database.
Or http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article4882622.ece [timesonline.co.uk]
Every call you make, every e-mail you send, every website you visit - I'll be watching you. That is the hope of Sir David Pepper who, as the director of GCHQ, the government's secret eavesdropping agency in Cheltenham, is plotting the biggest surveillance system ever created in Britain.
The scope of the project - classified top secret - is said by officials to be so vast that it will dwarf the estimated £5 billion ministers have set aside for the identity cards programme. It is intended to fight terrorism and crime. Civil liberties groups, however, say it poses an unprecedented intrusion into ordinary citizens' lives.
Aimed at placing a "live tap" on every electronic communication in Britain, it will dwarf other "big brother" surveillance projects such as the number plate recognition system and the spread of CCTV.
I will say that the politicians here like to say "if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear". Strangely they don't subscribe to this maxim when you are looking into their criminal expenses claims, or government documents that are deeply embarrassing to the current government that were claimed to not exist - but exist, they just didn't want to release them. The UK police don't like the rise of photo and video cameras showing their abuses of the law, so the current corrupt UK government passes a law where is it's crime to photo / record a police officer. http://www.bjp-online.com/public/showPage.html?page=839141 [bjp-online.com]
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The whole Terrorism Act itself is vile, if you care to read it: it does things like put the onus on the accused to prove they were NOT doing something to prepare for terrorism, and is overly broad - "anything that is likely to be of use to a terrorist" could mean anything. A bread roll could be useful in committing a terrorist act (after all, the terrorists need sustenence). Of course the government would argue "Oh, but it would NEVER be abused like that". How can they possibly guarantee that? How can they
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It will be a suprise if this dosn't happen.
Being held for 42 days without charge will, for many people - lead to ruin even if they are just let go at the end of it. In 42 days, many people will have lost their jobs, their homes, and now have a cloud of suspicion hanging over them.
With the justification for this holding without charge making
More jobs! (Score:4, Funny)
This is good news, because it creates more jobs so that half the people in the UK can watch the other half all the time, and then they swap over every so often.
No one will be without a job then, and we solve the terrorist problem in one shot!
Re:More jobs! (Score:4, Funny)
Dude you just used "UK", "terrorist", "jobs", "problem", "half the people in the UK" and "in one shot" in a slashdot post.
You should've posted anonymously!
If you are from the UK you are screwed bro...
Re:More jobs! (Score:5, Insightful)
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You can have as many shotguns and rifles as you want, just no hand guns. And if you go up against the cops with just a hand gun, you're not making a stand but an easy target.
Shotguns (at least of the type not requiring a firearms certificate), basically yes. Rifles... while there is technically no limit on the number you can apply for on a firearms certificate, you need to effectively justify each one on the basis that you will actually use it regularly, so it's unlikely you'd be allowed to build up a significant arsenal. You'll also find it basically impossible to purchase the types of rifles which are most common in the US, as all full-bore semi-automatic rifles (e.g. the AR-
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Criminals have more rights than straight ppl here now on the protecting your family front , you cant touch them if they break in your home, they can sue you for assault
You can act in defence of your person, or the defence of a person unable to defend themselves (a child / the frail), but not to defend property. Your property should be insured, and your loss negligible.
I'll be honest, if someone breaks into my house, my words to him will be, in as calm a voice as I can muster "My property is insured. As long as you're only here for property, I'll keep out of your way." Not only may that reduce the chance of myself being attacked, but also prevent excessive damage being ca
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>>>Your property should be insured, and your loss negligible.
So I have to give $1000 a year to insure my property from a thief? That's a nice racket.
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It is unlikely they did. The majority do not carry and the shooting did not take place in a public area, where military police are more likely to be armed and on duty. The military doesn't usually guard against its own people.
Making the difficult arguments (Score:4, Interesting)
It is very hard to object to this kind of thing, because no-one is against catching criminals and terrorists if it makes us safer, right?
The opposing arguments are hard to make because they rely on criticism of human nature and seemingly outlandish warnings of sleepwalking in to 1984. None the less, they must be made if we are to save ourselves.
Everyone has things to hide, and everyone needs privacy. You don't expect your bank statement on the back of a post card, you expect it hidden inside an envelope. Surely though the police should be allowed to monitor everything? The problem is that the police are human beings too and there are endless examples of them abusing their power.
My local MP (Sarah McArthy Fry) made the argument that internet surveillance had been used to prevent a suicide, and so was entirely justified. Harsh as it may seem, one life is not enough justification. If we banned cars we could save thousands of people from being killed or severely injured every year, but the bottom line is we consider the benefits of cars to outweigh those lives.
There is no perfect system, but there must be a balance between privacy and limiting the powers of those in authority on the one hand and prevention of crime on the other.
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If we banned cars we could save thousands of people from being killed or severely injured every year,
Wrong. You'd save many tens of thousands from being killed. Many hundreds of thousands would be save from injury: http://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/publications/road_traffic/world_report/en/ [who.int]
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Everyone person will die from some cause at some time. The idea of "saving" lives is a childish delusion. The way to live freely is to accept the fact that people will die.
Know one knows whether death, which people fear to be the greatest evil, may not be the greatest good. -- Plato
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The way to argument against it is actually to argument for more and deeper intrusions. Take the argument to it's most extreme logical conclusion. For example:
Easy counter argument: demand even more and deeper privacy intrusions.
For example:
"I completely agree with and applaud this action: human life should be cherished and protected at all costs.
Also, lets not forget
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Most citizens are too stupid to understand sarcasm. They would either believe you were being truthful about desiring in-home surveillance (and then vote against you), or are trying to insult their intelligence/acting arrogant (and vote against you).
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Only if you subscribe to the same false dichotomy as the advocates of such things. It's very questionable if mass snooping does much at all to help catch criminals. That's before even considering that criminals will, gain access to such data if it can be used in any way for criminal activities.
Surely though the police should be allowed to monitor everything?
No they n
Global channels in games? (Score:2)
They're going to have fun sifting through /Trade chat trying to work out if "Anal [Terror] LOL" is a secret code...
How? (Score:2)
I talked to the government about this. The question I put to them was 'How?'.
It's pretty easy to install a secure private network - with any form of transport to go over it including voip, mail, irc, what-have-you.
It's a necessary feature of the internet.
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Plus if the jailtime for not handing over your keys is less than the jailtime for what they'd find if they had them then yup I wouldn't hand them over.
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Hmm. There are a standard set of laws which are thrown at people where there's no evidence of a real crime. Immigration charges seem to top the list - merely being arrested effectively invalidates certain types of UK residence visa from what I can gather. "Banned books" laws are another in terrorism-type cases. For political protesters, when they aren't arrested using the terrorism laws, the laws against intimidation and harassment get well-used ("the fact that they disagree with me intimidates me!"). New L
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There are plenty of ways of communicating covertly which do not involve encryption, let alone encryption using commodity computers.
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My mail server encrypts, indeed - many these days do. Debian's Postfix package uses opportunistic encryption by default. I've recently been contacted by an insurer who wants mandatory encryption between our mail server and theirs.
The mail from the PC is encrypted to the outbound server. Then the mail from one MX is encrypted to the next, and the end user is using IMAP over SSL. It's going to make snooping email very difficult, especially as more and more MTAs have opportunistic encryption on by default, and
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It's not required for the "bad guys" to use "The Internet" in the first place or even to use it in the "expected way".
Mass snooping is effectivly a "movie plot" approach. If the actual aim is to catch criminals then you need regular "detectives", if only to work out who and what needs spying on
Tagging (Score:2)
New tag for British / Big Brother stories = AirStripOne.
The often forgot non-privacy risk (Score:2)
Isn't there a problem besides the privacy concern here. That they're getting too much noise from creating a too indiscriminate collection of information, thereby shooting the signal-to-noise ratio through the roof? I understand if it looks good on paper from a security perspective, but what about a practical standpoint? To me, this feels more and more like something that is bad both from a privacy perspective and in practice.
Besides, their analyzed tubes will sure get noisy as wireless connections keep gett
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It seems like it would take a big budget, yet be otherwise feasible for them to record _everything_ and dump it off.
Exactly my point. They'd have to sift through tons of information to find their needle in that haystack, since there's no way to deal with this kind of data in any form of structured and efficient way.
If you were REALLY bothering them, they could then use that data to backdoor your box and read your DRIVE encryption. I'm sure they could probably have you on the list in under an hour.
Lay off the CSI. ;-) You're talking of the same government who've failed far easier cases than these. Can you name one documented case where this happened (decryption of drives within hours) despite the common use among criminals?
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Yes, amusingly the same day they backtracked on this, they also ruled that intercepted data does not have to be stored in an encrypted form.
The whole thing is a fucking nightmare. The inland revenue service lost the personal details of 25 million people in the UK not so long ago, there have been hundreds more large scale (multi-million victim) data leaks since then and they expect us to now trust them to store all our personal contact data and suggest they don't even need to encrypt it?
Labour government IT
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What's "signal" and what's "noise" depends very much on exactly who is looking at the data.
I understand if it looks good on paper from a security perspective, but what about a practical standpoint? To me, this feels more and more like something that is bad both from a privacy perspective and in practice.
Assuming the actual intent is better law en
The cat is out of the bag (Score:3, Interesting)
Pretty soon, I'll be ensuring that anyone I chat to either uses some kind of end-to-end encryption, or I'll just pipe anything apart from iPlayer and WoW through a VPN out of the country. At least that way, if I ever am conned into viewing something HM Gov says I shouldn't, I won't end up on a register for it.
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Of course this will also be one of the ways that the bad guys will be defending themselves with. Soak up all the processing bandwidth in chasing false trails and you can operate with impunity.
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Certain shock images can also get you a jail sentence here in the UK (Goatse, for example). We have the tabloid press and anti-porn feminists to thank for that.
Guardian got it wrong (Score:2, Informative)
Just wait till they ban all encryption. (Score:4, Interesting)
Exceptions would be made for online banking and shopping using a dedicated system that can't be used for anything else.
Using encryption for other purposes - even SSH to your work, or SSL login to your admin account on a web service would require special government certification and installing a dedicated monitoring software on the machine you're on. Otherwise, even posession of encryption software would land you in prison.
Other than that - mandatory government-issued spyware?
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Exceptions would be made for online banking and shopping using a dedicated system that can't be used for anything else.
which means that the truly hardened criminals will create an online shopping cart in order to commit crimes. (like they don't already... to whit: money-laundering)
Other than that - mandatory government-issued spyware?
what - like in china? that's working out well, for them, i understand.
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More likely they'll be running the banks, oh wait...
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They can crack one strong crypt in a week or a thousand weak crypts in a minute.
But they can't break a 50 million various grade crypts in realtime, and that's what they need. They are barely capable of monitoring that amount of plaintext.
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I'll give them 10 minutes to "decrypt" my explorer.exe file with the extension changed to
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Well, it's against the laws of thermodynamics to be able to brute force AES-256 for a start. If there were exploitable weaknesses in the algorithm, given that there are open source AES-256 implementations, it would not be possible to keep them quiet. This leaves brute forcing. (Of course, people can choose bad passphrases, but most who go to the bother of using AES-256 will probably use something decent)
http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2009/09/the_doghouse_cr.html [schneier.com]
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Two faced... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Dear Brittish friends, why do you want Stasi? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not just the Brits, it's the whole EU. It's an EU regulation that pretty much all countries accepted.
And it's for our protection, it's to stop terrorists. Erm... or what is to stop child pornography. Maybe it was to catch copyright infringes. Well, it was to stop something anyway, I think.
Anyway, the people will be more safe.
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Our American cousins should not gloat about this .... you already have your traffic monitored, and your ISP is not allowed to tell you if it is
A case is currently going very slowly through the courts (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACLU_v._NSA) on Warrantless surveillance conducted by the NSA where the ISP's were ordered not to reveal that they were assisting the NSA with monitoring or even that they had been ordered not reveal this ....
Wow... (Score:2)
Just wow...
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*All* governments want to spy on everything you do. You think the US is immune to this?
That's why it's so important the legal system is independent from government, so it can't do the things it wants to do.
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to stop child pornography. Maybe it was to catch copyright infringes
Yes, we must stop the digital copying of child pornography, because it will lead to an explosion in child pornography production.
And we must stop the digital copying of Hollywood movies, because it will lead to the cessation of Hollywood movie production.
Wait ... what?
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It's not just the Brits, it's the whole EU. It's an EU regulation that pretty much all countries accepted.
No. Sweden, for example, tried to avoid implementing it completely [cyberlaw.org.uk]. The Irish and the Slovaks also didn't like it. It was a British idea [theregister.co.uk] - they just realised it would have had a rough ride through the UK parliament so went to the EU to policy launder [wikipedia.org] it (which in less polite circles is called "corruption").
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You dumb ass. Nobody wants this.
Nobody, (well perhaps Carol Vorderman) wrote to their MP and said "Gief me digital police state pl0z!?"
Governments suck up all the power they can get, limited only by technology and democratic checks and balances. We are all in this together, because the cancer tends to spread.
Some little bastards in your own government are looking over the deployment of the Chinese firewall right now, and saying "Yeah, that's cool. That could work here too."
Regardless of race and nationality
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We already kill ourselves in large numbers each year using cars, tobacco, junk food and alcohol, without any help by religious extremists. They're not even going to make a dent.
This proposed legislation has little to do with protection of the citizenry and more to do with making sure that those in power, remain in power.
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Sadly, some of our compatriots do want it.
Some of them have a mix of just enough racism, just enough respect for authority and just enough credulity to have really, heavily bought into the "terrorists are everywhere" line. They think anyone with dark skin of arab/persian or even indian descent is probably plotting to overthrow the state and/or perpetrate some mass murder like 9/11 or 7/7. The tabloids deliberately confuse them and conflate immigration (legal or otherwise), asylum and terrorism into one big
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the problem, is that the islamic community needs to do more to out these factions. when these communities refuse to habor criminals who blow up buses, then we might actually get somewhere. take the london bombings, there's no way the people that made those bombs had their wives/family/friends/neighbours all fooled. someone close to them would have known something was going on, and could have pretended that attack.
until you start seeing real rejection of this f
Re:Dear Brittish friends, why do you want Stasi? (Score:4, Insightful)
Bombers are not sheltered by communities, they may be sheltered by one or two people very close to them.
It is like claiming that fascist bombers are being sheltered by the white community (there has been one who actually platned bomds, and other who were planning to until caught in Britain).
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So what your are saying is that the actions of my neighbour reflect on me. That sounds like guilt by loose association, which is one of the arguments used for the culture of citizens spying on and reporting each other in 1984.
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When people learn that not all dark-skinned foreigners are Muslims that would be a step in the right direction too.
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Who said anything about left or right?
I just meant that a lot of people have been taken in by fear of terrorism and immigration, as well as fear of youth, and they welcome this crap. What the government's motives are I shudder to think, in fact I don't think for the most part that this shower of retards we currently have in power are really running anything.
I, for one, would love a classical liberal government. Social freedom, social responsibility (i.e. NHS and essential welfare are safe) and an attempt to
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Re:Horse, stable door, bolted... (Score:4, Informative)
Encrypted traffic does not hide who you are communicating with.
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Given the general level of competence by the government simply using ipv6 will do that... no need for an anonymising network.
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Actually, I would guess the origin of the jokes comes from the difference in word order between English and Russian, rather than some truth about how people in Russia live.
It seems to be an example of the Cold War mentality of emphasizing that the Soviets are totally different than Americans in every way.
I know you weren't looking for a serious response, but this meme could use some explanation.
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I should also mention the key fact of Russian using a different alphabet... obviously many languages have different word order than English, but having a different (yet seemly kind of recognizable) alphabet makes the writing seem much more exotic and attention-grabbing.