On Monday, October 1, 2018, 4:30:38 PM PDT, juan <juan.g71@gmail.com> wrote:
On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 19:40:25 +0000 (UTC)
jim bell <
jdb10987@yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Monday, October 1, 2018, 9:20:41 AM PDT, juan <
juan.g71@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> Actually, it's more accurate for me to claim that YOU must be drunk. I've merely advocated that technology, in this case smartphones, be useable by people to protect themselves (and others.) But I do so in spite of the possibility that smartphones could be misused by government, not because of that. I said absolutely nothing about the "surveillance state", a term which conveniently you fail to define.
So I have to define "surveillance state" because nobody here is aware of the existence of the surveillance state, especially because this is a (the) crypto anarchist mailing list.
No. The "surveillance state" arguably exists, although what actually makes it up is debateable.
>> The first electrical burglar alarm was patented in 1852.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Holmes_(inventor) That allowed "surveillance", of a very primitive type, but it was not a part of any "surveillance state".
> but the police and the phone companies and the 'smart' phone manufacturers are - parts of the surveillance state.
Again, you need to define what you believe. None of this is black-and-white.
>> Smartphones, and even ordinary cell phones before them, had and have security issues. But to argue that ANY use of them, by individuals to protect themselves, somehow becomes part of the "surveillance state" is nonsense.
> "a quick 911-call if necessary." <--- isn't that the magical number to call the pigs?
I think you are merely playing with the argument. I didn't exclude the possibility that this couldn't also (or alternately) amount to some sort of privatized system.
"the phone companies" are the people who purport to, and do, accept cell-phone data in people's neighborhoods. We cannot instantly change that fact. (some communities have WiFi clouds; even better.) Who else would this system transmit data to, with current technology and installations?
Don't insert your head up your ass. I DIDN'T say that this "realtime surveillance data" would be completely UNENCRYPTED. Anyone who pays attention to the CP list should recognize that there are some rather simple protections which can be inserted (given the specific situation) to deter or prevent misuse, or by delay make such immediate use impossible, yet allow the intended uses to be implemented. A weak form of encryption that could be cracked within minutes (not milliseconds) would prohibit real-time misuse. Or perhaps a trusted third-party could issue "keys" which were automatically unlocked a specific time period later. (seconds, minutes, whatever)
Or If a trigger (an attack, for instance) occurs, the user's phone could transmit the current unlock-key to those holding the data, to ensure that it is available.