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22 May 19:51

Another Salvo in the Second Crypto War (of Words)

by Bruce Schneier

Prosecutors from New York, London, Paris, and Madrid wrote an op-ed in yesterday's New York Times in favor of backdoors in cell phone encryption. There are a number of flaws in their argument, ranging from how easy it is to get data off an encrypted phone to the dangers of designing a backdoor in the first place, but all of that has been said before. And since anecdote can be more persuasive than data, the op-ed started with one:

In June, a father of six was shot dead on a Monday afternoon in Evanston, Ill., a suburb 10 miles north of Chicago. The Evanston police believe that the victim, Ray C. Owens, had also been robbed. There were no witnesses to his killing, and no surveillance footage either.

With a killer on the loose and few leads at their disposal, investigators in Cook County, which includes Evanston, were encouraged when they found two smartphones alongside the body of the deceased: an iPhone 6 running on Apple's iOS 8 operating system, and a Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge running on Google's Android operating system. Both devices were passcode protected.

You can guess the rest. A judge issued a warrant, but neither Apple nor Google could unlock the phones. "The homicide remains unsolved. The killer remains at large."

The Intercept researched the example, and it seems to be real. The phones belonged to the victim, and...

According to Commander Joseph Dugan of the Evanston Police Department, investigators were able to obtain records of the calls to and from the phones, but those records did not prove useful. By contrast, interviews with people who knew Owens suggested that he communicated mainly through text messages -- the kind that travel as encrypted data -- and had made plans to meet someone shortly before he was shot.

The information on his phone was not backed up automatically on Apple's servers -- apparently because he didn't use wi-fi, which backups require.

[...]

But Dugan also wasn't as quick to lay the blame solely on the encrypted phones. "I don't know if getting in there, getting the information, would solve the case," he said, "but it definitely would give us more investigative leads to follow up on."

This is the first actual example I've seen illustrating the value of a backdoor. Unlike the increasingly common example of an ISIL handler abroad communicating securely with a radicalized person in the US, it's an example where a backdoor might have helped. I say "might have," because the Galaxy S6 is not encrypted by default, which means the victim deliberately turned the encryption on. If the native smartphone encryption had been backdoored, we don't know if the victim would have turned it on nevertheless, or if he would have employed a different, non-backdoored, app.

The authors' other examples are much sloppier:

Between October and June, 74 iPhones running the iOS 8 operating system could not be accessed by investigators for the Manhattan district attorney's office -- despite judicial warrants to search the devices. The investigations that were disrupted include the attempted murder of three individuals, the repeated sexual abuse of a child, a continuing sex trafficking ring and numerous assaults and robberies.

[...]

In France, smartphone data was vital to the swift investigation of the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attacks in January, and the deadly attack on a gas facility at Saint-Quentin-Fallavier, near Lyon, in June. And on a daily basis, our agencies rely on evidence lawfully retrieved from smartphones to fight sex crimes, child abuse, cybercrime, robberies or homicides.

We've heard that 74 number before. It's over nine months, in an office that handles about 100,000 cases a year: less than 0.1% of the time. Details about those cases would be useful, so we can determine if encryption was just an impediment to investigation, or resulted in a criminal going free. The government needs to do a better job of presenting empirical data to support its case for backdoors. That they're unable to do so suggests very strongly that an empirical analysis wouldn't favor the government's case.

As to the Charlie Hebdo case, it's not clear how much of that vital smartphone data was actual data, and how much of it was unable-to-be-encrypted metadata. I am reminded of the examples that then-FBI-Director Louis Freeh would give during the First Crypto Wars in the 1990s. The big one used to illustrate the dangers of encryption was Mafia boss John Gotti. But the surveillance that convicted him was a room bug, not a wiretap. Given that the examples from FBI Director James Comey's "going dark" speech last year were bogus, skepticism in the face of anecdote seems prudent.

So much of this "going dark" versus the "golden age of surveillance" debate depends on where you start from. Referring to that first Evanston example and the inability to get evidence from the victim's phones, the op-ed authors write: "Until very recently, this situation would not have occurred." That's utter nonsense. From the beginning of time until very recently, this was the only situation that could have occurred. Objects in the vicinity of an event were largely mute about the past. Few things, save for eyewitnesses, could ever reach back in time and produce evidence. Even 15 years ago, the victim's cell phone would have had no evidence on it that couldn't have been obtained elsewhere, and that's if the victim had been carrying a cell phone at all.

For most of human history, surveillance has been expensive. Over the last couple of decades, it has become incredibly cheap and almost ubiquitous. That a few bits and pieces are becoming expensive again isn't a cause for alarm.

This essay originally appeared on Lawfare.

EDITED TO ADD (8/13): Excellent parody/commentary: "When Curtains Block Justice."

22 Aug 01:15

Uma coisa que aconteceu comigo semana passada no metrô e que, se eu fosse convidado pra participar de uma dessas coletâneas do tipo “I love rio” seria a trama do meu segmento

by João Baldi Jr.

city of god

daí que eu tinha saído do futebol lá na tijuca e entrei no metrô. no rosto aquele cansaço e aquele desespero que apenas o atleta de meio de semana e o jogador profissional márcio araújo conseguem demonstrar, o corpo como uma imensa pokebóla contendo dentro dela um pokemon chamado “dor” que falaria apenas “dor dor dor dor…arrependimento!”.

por ser a primeira estação as cadeiras tão vazias, sem aquele dilema moral de sentar ou não, então pego uma cadeira perto do final do vagão, me sento, coloco minha mochila do lado, vou dar aquela respirada funda que apenas pessoas cansadas e psicopatas de filme dão, e o metrô vai chegando na segunda estação. logo após ele chegar, eu, já respirando normalmente, decido pegar um livro na mochila e começo um elaborado processo de busca arqueológica porque apenas vou jogando as coisas lá dentro, sem muito critério.

é aí então que ouço a porta do fundo do vagão se abrindo – não era daqueles vagões novos, vazados, era dos vagões antigos, com portinha de maçaneta – mas sigo na busca pelo livro, que aparentemente se colocou entre uma cueca e meu tênis de ir pro trabalho. e aí eu, olhando na direção contrária, ouço o cara que acabou de entrar no vagão gritar bem alto

“QUEM TIVER DINHEIRO NA CARTEIRA AÍ JÁ PODE IR SEPARANDO PRA ME PASSAR, NADA DE GRACINHA, PODE SEPARAR…”

e aí o tempo, num fenômeno que eu, que tranquei a faculdade de ciência no terceiro período, só posso classificar como “muito doido”, se dilata mas também se comprime. se dilata porque eu tive tempo de pensar cerca de mil vezes o mantra “perdi tudo, vou morrer, perdi tudo, vou morrer, perdi tudo, vou morrer” e comprime porque eu nem tive tempo de conseguir achar a caceta do livro. tava muito escondido o livro. eu preciso organizar melhor essa bolsa, tá complicado achar qualquer coisa.

mas era aquilo. perdeu perdeu, e quando tu perde tu apenas perde, respira fundo, aceita que é a vida, aguenta o parabéns, com vela e tudo, com é big é big é big, porque se reagir é pior, vamos viver pra lutar outro dia. mas aí o cara, que tinha invadido o vagão gritando, completa a frase dele, é claro.

“QUEM TIVER DINHEIRO NA CARTEIRA AÍ JÁ PODE IR SEPARANDO PRA ME PASSAR, NADA DE GRACINHA, PODE SEPARAR…”

“…PORQUE EU TÔ VENDENDO O CHOCOLATE MAIS GOSTOSO DO RIO DE JANEIRO!”

e aí ele dá uma risada. aquela risada gostosa, aquela risada cheia, aquela risada do olho brilhar.

o filho da puta.

o filho da puta tava vendendo chocolate.

o filho da puta tava vendendo suflair.

peguei meu livro, xingando baixinho só pra mim. as pessoas ainda compraram uns 10 reais de suflair dele. a galera é foda, sério. a galera é foda.


Arquivado em:é como as coisas são, Crônicas, Rio, Sem Categoria, situações limite Tagged: a alegria e a sagacidade do carioca constrastando com o receio e o eterno desconforto do mineiro, a galera realmente é foda, a gente nunca tá preparado, aí não, assim você me quebra, atingindo seu pokemon interior, é a vida, chocolate suflair, Crônicas, dramas do cotidiano, histórias reais da vida real, o crime anda muito grande, pessoas, problemas, rio de janeiro, suflair sério suflair, vivendo no limite
17 Aug 12:02

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - The Ethical Fourier Transform

by admin@smbc-comics.com

Hovertext: There's a lot of networking to be done on the Dark Side.


New comic!
Today's News:
16 Aug 23:08

Em livro, jornalista narra história do 'imperialismo brasileiro' na África - 08/08/2015...

by Pai Osias
800px-Coturnix_coturnix_eggs_normal.jpg
Author: Pai Osias
Source: Facebook
Em livro, jornalista narra história do 'imperialismo brasileiro' na África - 08/08/2015 - Mundo - Folha de S.Paulo fb.me/4vlNZESAf
16 Aug 23:08

RT @tariqpanja: Anti-government protesters in Rio calling for return of military...

by Pai Osias
800px-Coturnix_coturnix_eggs_normal.jpg
Author: Pai Osias
Source: Mobile Web (M2)
RT @tariqpanja: Anti-government protesters in Rio calling for return of military dictatorship. No joke. No embarrassment. http://t.co/sW9ee…
CMiUycBWIAAd4qn.jpg:large
16 Aug 01:43

RT @metiane: UBER BUS - EU APOIO ESSA IDEIA !!! http://t.co/Eo3pHMeNU0

by Pai Osias
800px-Coturnix_coturnix_eggs_normal.jpg
Author: Pai Osias
Source: Mobile Web (M2)
RT @metiane: UBER BUS - EU APOIO ESSA IDEIA !!! http://t.co/Eo3pHMeNU0
CMdN0drXAAA98QS.png:large
16 Aug 01:43

RT @jackironica: - Desculpa a demora pra responder é que eu tava cozinhando o arroz...

by Pai Osias
800px-Coturnix_coturnix_eggs_normal.jpg
Author: Pai Osias
Source: Mobile Web (M2)
RT @jackironica: - Desculpa a demora pra responder é que eu tava cozinhando o arroz - Há 3 meses? - Era arroz integral
15 Aug 22:36

A evolução é uma briga eterna.

by Zanfa
Osias Jota

cientificamente preciso

evolucao

capinaremos?d=yIl2AUoC8zA capinaremos?i=xj6hppU0cX8:yT5wKLDAX_Y:V_ capinaremos?d=dnMXMwOfBR0
15 Aug 13:21

Marvel Comics | b93.jpg

b93.jpg
15 Aug 13:21

Superman | e8f.jpg

e8f.jpg
15 Aug 13:21

Video Game Logic | 510.png

510.png
15 Aug 13:21

Pornhub | 31c.jpg

31c.jpg
15 Aug 13:21

[Intensifies] | 4d2.gif

4d2.gif
15 Aug 12:51

ISIS | d18.jpg

d18.jpg
14 Aug 16:52

HOW DO YOU KNOW

dinosaur,hilarious,jesus,noah,Raptor

HOW DO YOU KNOW that isn't noah? I don't see a name tag...

Submitted by: DeCoria

Tagged: dinosaur , hilarious , jesus , noah , Raptor
14 Aug 00:27

cenobite for president

by kris

20150813_cenobite

“say what you want about his policies — ”

he wants every human being on earth murdered and cast into a torture dimension

” — but he’s definitely got an opinion and he’s not afraid to say it. that’s admirable in a leader.”

14 Aug 00:27

Matching Icons | 46f

46f
14 Aug 00:21

Shockwave from a volcanic explosion in Papua New Guinea.



Shockwave from a volcanic explosion in Papua New Guinea.

13 Aug 23:56

Webcomics | fac.jpg

fac.jpg
13 Aug 02:02

A saga de Anon, o Carinha do TI – Episódio 21.

by Zanfa

21

capinaremos?d=yIl2AUoC8zA capinaremos?i=PPjeClgOff0:GWHIIEY3Flk:V_ capinaremos?d=dnMXMwOfBR0
12 Aug 20:01

Tumblr | 9ae.png

9ae.png
12 Aug 14:56

Barack Obama | b7a.png

b7a.png
12 Aug 14:56

How Many Earths Can Fit Into The Sun?

by Brad
E73
12 Aug 14:56

@choracuica eu acho que a coisa mais importante num casamento é ter tomada dos dois...

by Pai Osias
800px-Coturnix_coturnix_eggs_normal.jpg
Author: Pai Osias
Source: Twitter Web Client
@choracuica eu acho que a coisa mais importante num casamento é ter tomada dos dois lados do padre
12 Aug 14:56

Cães são mais inteligentes que os humanos.

by Zanfa

Uv3qYi5 (1)

capinaremos?d=yIl2AUoC8zA capinaremos?i=SucuaRXND5A:gUbTNB-02KA:V_ capinaremos?d=dnMXMwOfBR0
12 Aug 14:56

lord-kitschener: we will never be as punk rock as this cat

tumblr_mqhzmamUoD1qbfsl4o1_r1_500.jpg

lord-kitschener:

we will never be as punk rock as this cat

12 Aug 08:58

thehumanarkle: marvelgifs: I’m gonna be fine. The most...





thehumanarkle:

marvelgifs:

I’m gonna be fine.

The most realistic scene in any Marvel movie.

12 Aug 02:26

Photo



12 Aug 01:15

ramjet94: Remember how Teen Titans had a lesson...

Osias Jota

eita!

















ramjet94:

Remember how Teen Titans had a lesson about Racism without blatantly bringing Cyborg’s Race into it?

12 Aug 00:25

Tumblr | 218.png

218.png