C'mon gang - I know we all want to spin up a W3C or IETF standard to support offline signed web-assets. Then we can -definitively- say that the person producing a torrent file has the same private key as the site operator. -Travis On Sun, Oct 11, 2015 at 9:53 PM, Alfie John <[1]alfiej@fastmail.fm> wrote: On Mon, Oct 12, 2015, at 12:32 PM, Travis Biehn wrote: > You can start by re-posting the leaked traffic logs... (Editorial > discretion is frowned upon amongst the idealists.) > > Maybe set up an onion, host on i2p, freenet (hehehe), ethereum, the > blockchain, torrents. Spread it far and wide, set up a PKI, set up a > WOT, keep it all offline. > > If you're a real masochist you'll host the docs on some crazy > 'website' with no indirection protecting you from legal/illegal/TLA > action. Keep the info off the dark web, off the deep web and in the > search indexes. > > Warrant canary (which won't work), encryption (you won't be safe) and > signatures (secrets will be stolen.) > > If you think you can survive as well as JYA, Deb & fare better than > Assange, go for it. Be prepared. > > It doesn't pay very well. You'd have to be crazy to do this. Or you can be like TheCthulhu and run your own data centre with good lawyers. Alfie -- Alfie John [2]alfiej@fastmail.fm -- [3]Twitter | [4]LinkedIn | [5]GitHub | [6]TravisBiehn.com | [7]Google Plus References 1. mailto:alfiej@fastmail.fm 2. mailto:alfiej@fastmail.fm 3. https://twitter.com/tbiehn 4. http://www.linkedin.com/in/travisbiehn 5. http://github.com/tbiehn 6. http://www.travisbiehn.com/ 7. https://plus.google.com/+TravisBiehn