Razer Rayzer@riseup.net
Sun Oct 11 15:59:29 EDT 2015 10/11/2015 11:43 AM, Michael Best wrote:
> If so, then why did he spend a week denying it, calling me a liar,
> saying the data is fake and accusing it of being disinfo?
Because unlike Farcebook twitter Google Apple and all the others who
'squealed like a pig' after Snowden's leaks, a FISA court would put JYA
so deep in a hole no one would ever hear of his existence again. You're
NOT ALLOWED TO EVEN MENTION that the 'suits' had been in contact, no
less compromised your system...
RR
Has anyone stopped to think that perhaps it was on absolute purpose as a warning of lack of safety on his servers due to known 'but unable to speak about’ system compromise? Ie. The same fashion as a warrant canary, or what have you?
JYA’s stance has always seemed to have been: You’re not safe, please do not be deluded into believing any systems, statements, or mathematical systems will always have your back. Perhaps this is just to bring it into the absolute light for those too dense to grasp this mindset.
The above scenario would also explain his general lack of input on the situation — I myself have been expecting miles and miles of (interestingly grotesque almost) prose about the situation.
_benjaminIf so, then why did he spend a week denying it, calling me a liar, saying the data is fake and accusing it of being disinfo? And why not notify people on the website instead of the occasional tweet about how all logs leak/it's "not the worst"?And if it was purposeful, how is that okay? If he leaked four months worth of his users' logs and metadata including search terms, to make a point?On Sun, Oct 11, 2015 at 2:02 PM, Shelley <shelley@misanthropia.org> wrote:
Calling bullshit. Mirimirs right, this makes no sense. And JYA says netsol won't let him delete the logs but Netsol says logs are disabled by default[https://www.networksolutions.com/support/how-to-enable-download-the-web-logs/] and you have to turn them on.
So how the fuckd this really happen?
I truly don't know. I don't have any more info than anyone else, I was just musing about how it could have happened. Obviously, hearing JY's explanation would be the best thing.
Also agree re: the /var/log issue, but I get the impression that the restored files weren't kept in the normal file tree structure. Again, I simply don't know and I'm not trying to be an overt JY apologist - I'm just saying sometimes, shit happens. It would help if he would weigh in instead of having dorks like me positing hypotheticals.
-S
Mirimir <mirimir@riseup.net>
Are you arguing that users could have found those logs?
I almost can't imagine that. Logs are normally in /var/log/ somewhere,
and I can't imagine making them searchable. And indeed, I can't imagine
how Cryptome archives would have included anything from /var/log/, even
after system restore from backups.
<--SNIP-->
> Should access logs be kept for that long? Absolutely not. From what I> have read in the email exchange that was posted, the log files were> included in a NetSol total restore. My guess is that John/Cryptome did> not intentionally keep these files, and did not realize these files were> included in the archive.
But that's the thing. Logs should have been in /var/log/. And how would
the "NetSol total restore" have changed that?
> When I do incremental backups or updates on my own systems, I don't> usually go back and check the integrity of files I've already archived> in my closed system. I can see where this could be an honest mistake> that has gotten blown way out of proportion. It's a good lesson to be> more aware of these types of glitches.
I still don't get how logs would have ended up in archives. Maybe JYA
prepared a special set of archives for a collaborator. Maybe for someone
helping him to understand what had happened. And then maybe he forgot
about doing that. Hard to say.On October 11, 2015 10:14:15 AM "Dr. J Feinstein" <drjfeinstein@mail.com> wrote:
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