On Tue, Oct 25, 2016 at 05:04:57PM -0400, krishna e bera wrote:
On 25/10/16 01:55 PM, tortalk@arcor.de wrote:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/10/25/judge_orders_fbi_to_reveal_whether_e... "The case is one of several the Feds are pursuing against more than 100 alleged users of the child sex abuse material exchange network called the Playpen. The prosecutions have become test grounds over investigators' use of hacking tools to unmask Tor users Playpen was hidden in the Tor network and agents injected tracking software into Playpen visitors' browsers to identify users.
...
The Playpen investigation also sparked last year's controversy over Carnegie-Mellon University's part. It was accused of revealing de-anonymisation research to the FBI in 2014, and last November said it wasn't paid for the research, but rather, served with a subpoena."
Perhaps our new Board member from CMU can provide more details, e.g. a copy of the subpoena and their response.
That's anyway an effective way to create an faux "arms-length" appearance - fund a particular study (e.g. HS identification), and subsequently serve a court ordered subpoena upon the university study once it's clear they have data you can use (for parallel construction or otherwise). Can such faux arms-length "plausible deniability" on the part of the university, be restructured into a process that is subpoena proof?