Below is a good article discussing a topic which will only continue to grow!
=========================================================
Why is
Silicon Valley helping the tech-savvy jihadists?
Developing apps and emails that are
heavily encrypted is playing into the hands of Isil. Whose side are they on?
By Clare Foges from the dailytelegraph.co.uk
7:00AM GMT 21 Nov 2015
What will it take? 129 dead on
American soil? 129 killed in California? What level of atrocity, what location
will it take for the Gods of Silicon Valley to wake up to the dangerous game
they are playing by plunging their apps and emails ever deeper into encryption,
so allowing jihadists to plot behind an impenetrable wall?
Fiendishly-complex online encryption
is providing the safe space for terrorists to plan bloodshed on an industrial
scale. Products like Whatsapp have become, in the words of GCHQ Chief Robert
Hannigan, “the command-and-control networks of choice for terrorists and
criminals” – precisely because they are highly encrypted.
Isil claimed credit for both the
Paris attacks and the bombing of the Russian airliner on Telegram, the messaging app du jour for terrorist nutcases.
Because it’s very private, you see. On this end-to-end encrypted product you
can communicate beyond the reach of intelligence agencies.
Isil now even have a 24-hour tech
helpdesk to assist would-be jihadis with secure communication, advising them on
the best under-the-radar apps.
If this is a war we are engaged in, the frontline is online – and the
enemy is being aided by Western tech companies. Terrorists want ever-safer
spaces to operate in, and the tech giants say “Sure! Here’s an end-to-end
encrypted product that is impossible to crack. It’s a lock without a key. Even
we don’t have a key.”
Why? It goes back to Edward Snowden,
the weaselly inadequate whosegrasp for posterity has proved a boon for Isil.
They should be gratefully chanting his name in Raqqa, for it was Snowden’s
revelations about government surveillance methods that triggered this
extraordinary race towards deeper encryption.
It was Snowden?s revelations about
government surveillance methods that triggered the race towards deeper
encryption
In the wake of those tip-offs, tech
companies faced a massive PR headache on privacy. And so Google, Apple,
Facebook and the rest have been falling over themselves to offer products that
no government can break into. Apple declare that they “refuse to add a backdoor into any of our products”.
Facebook have introduced a standard of encryption for emails called PGP (Pretty
Good Privacy), a “Snowden-approved” system.
Telegram offers a “secret chat”
service with a self-destruct function for messages, “for people who want more
secrecy than the average fella.” (What, like Abdelhamid Abaaoud?)
"There are legitimate concerns that if you open up a
“back door” for governments to access data, then the bad guys can come in
through the same route."
All this is making the job of the
security services infinitely harder. FBI Director James Comey calls the
challenge “going dark”. Leads are followed until they hit the brick wall of indecipherable data.
A few years ago law enforcement agencies could approach Hotmail or Google with
a warrant and get vital information to stop horrors unfolding. Now the data
they salvage is often gobbledegook – a load of encrypted numbers that are
impossible to read. They are trying to save lives but are being frustrated by
encrypted technology.
And what is the response of the tech
companies? Extraordinary arrogance. Google CEO Eric
Schmidt declared earlier this year that they “will win” the battle for
encryption, making the likes of the NSA and GCHQ out as the enemy rather than
the murderous butchers of Isil.
When asked if he slept well at night
knowing terrorists use his platform, Telegram founder Pavel Durov replied:
“That’s a very good question but I think that privacy, ultimately, and the
right for privacy is more important than our fear of bad things happening, like
terrorism.” Tell that to the grieving of Paris.
This isn’t about privacy, it’s about
profit. The tech firms have calculated that they build user numbers by
inflaming fears of violations of privacy and offering more secrecy than anyone
else. It suits them to paint Government agencies as snoopers who hate all
encryption. But this is too simplistic. GCHQ invented encryption. Half of its
job is defending the UK against cyber attacks, and the right kind of encryption
is a vital part of their armoury. They simply want reasonable access, with a
warrant, when lives are in danger.
There are legitimate concerns that
if you open up a “back door” for governments to access data, then the bad guys
can come in through the same route. As Apple CEO Tim Cook argued: “If you put a
key under the mat for the cops, a burglar can find it, too.”
But this is not a reason to refuse co-operation outright. The global
tech industry made around $3.7 trillion last year. They employ some of the
brightest people on the planet. Apple et al could, if they wanted, employ a
fraction of these resources to work out how we can simultaneously keep the good
guys’ data secure and keep the bad guys in plain sight. The geniuses of Silicon
Valley would be more than a match for the dunderheads in the desert.
Paris must be a wake-up call. If
they had any conscience at all, these great Western powerhouses of the 21st
century would be joining the fight to preserve our way of life – not helping to
facilitate Islamic State’s way of death.
===============================================================https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTgYHHKs0Zw&__scoop_post=bcaa0440-2548-11e5-c1bd-90b11c3d2b20&__scoop_topic=2455618
==============================================
**Important note** - contact our company for very powerful solutions for IP management (IPv4 and IPv6, security, firewall and APT solutions:
www.tabularosa.net
In addition to this blog, Netiquette IQ has a website with great assets which are being added to on a regular basis. I have authored the premiere book on Netiquette, “Netiquette IQ - A Comprehensive Guide to Improve, Enhance and Add Power to Your Email". My new book, “You’re Hired! Super Charge Your Email Skills in 60 Minutes. . . And Get That Job!” will be published soon follow by a trilogy of books on Netiquette for young people. You can view my profile, reviews of the book and content excerpts at:
www.amazon.com/author/paulbabicki
If you would like to listen to experts in all aspects of Netiquette and communication, try my radio show on BlogtalkRadio Additionally, I provide content for an online newsletter via paper.li. I have also established Netiquette discussion groups with Linkedin and Yahoo. I am also a member of the International Business Etiquette and Protocol Group and Minding Manners among others. Further, I regularly consult for the Gerson Lehrman Group, a worldwide network of subject matter experts and have been a contributor to numerous blogs and publications.
Lastly, I
am the founder and president of Tabula
Rosa Systems, a company that provides “best of breed” products for network,
security and system management and services. Tabula Rosa has a new blog and Twitter site which offers great IT
product information for virtually anyone.
==============================================
No comments:
Post a Comment