"The Dark Net: Inside the Digital Underworld," Jamie Bartlett, examines the options for escaping observation -- for a while. Cypherpunks is featured for promoting privacy with technology; crypto, anonymizers, digital currency, unauthorized disclosures and more. And how escaping observation very often involves criminal activity, although as Tim May and others claimed, that is the price paid for cloaking from prying eyes. That Tor cloaks 415-1230% of child porn sites, 550-7000% of drug sales, and the like, is allegedly seen by the rebellious undergrounders as "so what, personal freedom is not free." So the richest have the greatest personal freedom, "so what," declared Judge Loretta Preska sentencing shackled hackers for violating the private enclaves of her kind's lawfully-bending relatives and unjudicials. Security of any kind is always bleak, not just due to NSA, its the Devil, why else would religion exist except to forecast the worst imaginable and preach slim chances of avoiding prying eyes of homicidal deity. Crypto bent-back prayer leads the day in fashionable cloaks against inevitable deitific spying -- mostly done by the same devils who espouse cryptosystems which inevitably fail like perpetual motion machinic faiths of all kinds. To the rescue upgrades offer a tad more dreadless illusion while injecting sand and rust into the sanctuaries, desktops, laptops, handhelds, clouds, national security, 4-rotored ski lifts to heaven. Hey, wake up, faithless cypherpunks will not be fooled, remember this when cold dead hands clamber into windows of Ecuadorian embassies, run skirted circles at Fort Leavenworth, dream of languid days key-signig in Hawaii from scrotum-iced pole dancing in Moscow, incise 365x24 days x 10 years to go on large sceen cell walls. Remember too where the grandfathers of cpunks loll, picking fleas from their cats, rueing STDs on their bitches, grooming authors of Deep and Dark Web tomes of horrific beasts lurking inside electronic frontiers of children's Kindles. At 08:46 AM 6/18/2015, you wrote:
2015-06-18 13:28 GMT+09:00 grarpamp <<mailto:grarpamp@gmail.com>grarpamp@gmail.com>: Cypherpunks... when / where will it all end?
The cost of observation is ever dropping. With improved processing capability (hardware and software) the value of data is ever rising. There is only one logical conclusion: permanent, global observation.
Resistance is effective but eventually futile, you cannot reverse time, you cannot reverse progress.
More fruitful is managing the inevitable future. Will we go gently into corporate hell? Will we let power games rule us? Do the wealthy buy privacy, and the people's data? Will you, at the very least, own the data about you? Will populism be managed by algorithms? Do our current systems still work in such a future? How will the developed areas relate to the underdeveloped? Etc. etc. etc.