Re: [liberationtech] RiseUp
----- Forwarded message from elijah <elijah@riseup.net> ----- Date: Tue, 15 Oct 2013 15:47:15 -0700 From: elijah <elijah@riseup.net> To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu> Subject: Re: [liberationtech] RiseUp Message-ID: <525DC5F3.8010604@riseup.net> User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/24.0 Reply-To: liberationtech <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu> On 10/15/2013 03:07 PM, Yosem Companys wrote:
If you have any thoughts about Riseup, whether security/privacy-related or otherwise, I'd love to hear them.
I think I am the only person from the Riseup collective who is subscribed to liberationtech, so I will reply, although what follows is not an official position or response from the collective. We started when it was impossible to get even simple IMAP service that was affordable. Very early on, it became apparent that one of the primary issue facing our constituency (social justice activists) was the rapid rise in abusive surveillance by states and corporations. Riseup does the best it can with antiquated 20th century technology. Without getting into any details, we do the best that can be done, particularly when both sender and recipient are using email from one of service providers we have special encrypted transport arrangements with. Admittedly, the best we can do is not that great. And, of course, our webmail offering is laughably horrible. Riseup is not really a "US email provider". The great majority of our users live outside the United States, and email is just one of many services we provide. There has been much discussion on the internets about the fact that Riseup is located in the US, and what possible country would provide the best "jurisdictional arbitrage". Before the Lavabit case, the US actually looked pretty good: servers in the US are not required to retain any customer data or logs whatsoever. The prospect of some shady legal justification for requiring a provider to supply the government with their private TLS keys seems to upend everything I have read or been told about US jurisprudence. Unfortunately, no consensus has emerged regarding any place better than the US for servers, despite notable bombast the the contrary. As a co-founder of Riseup, my personal goal at the moment is to destroy Riseup as we know it, and replace it with something that is based on 21st century technology [1]. My hope is that this transition can happen smoothly, without undo hardship on the users. As evidence by the recent traffic on this list, many people are loudly proclaiming that email can never be secure and it must be abandoned. I have already written why I feel that this is both incredibly irresponsible and technically false. There is an important distinction between mass surveillance and being individually targeted by the NSA. The former is an existential threat to democracy and the latter is extremely difficult to protect against. It is, however, entirely possible to layer a very high degree of confidentially, integrity, authentication, and un-mappability onto email if we allow for opportunistic upgrades to enhanced protocols. For example, we should be able to achieve email with asynchronous forward secrecy that is also protected against meta-data analysis (even from a compromised provider), but it is going to take work (and money) to get there. Yes, in the long run, we should all just run pond [2], but in the long run we are all dead. -elijah [1] https://leap.se/email [2] https://pond.imperialviolet.org/ -- Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations of list guidelines will get you moderated: https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech. Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at companys@stanford.edu. ----- End forwarded message ----- -- Eugen* Leitl <a href="http://leitl.org">leitl</a> http://leitl.org ______________________________________________________________ ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://ativel.com http://postbiota.org AC894EC5: 38A5 5F46 A4FF 59B8 336B 47EE F46E 3489 AC89 4EC5
Finally, Elijah, a voice of sanity among the hysteria about way over-hypedsmall number of NSA revelations magnifying and exposing the unexceptional Lavabit scam. Online insecurity has been well understood since online was invented. probably the worst ever of any means of technological communication. Cryptographic protecton for a porous infrastructure appears the most likely cause of the delusion, a favorite export of this list and other crypto fora. Only recently has the fundamental weakness of online communications has this delusion received adequate attention and for the weakness of NSA infosec can be thanked for that. Attention is not yet adequate for this commercial exploitation of what comsec wizards have kept far too quiet about, although this list raised alarms from the gitgo of encryption boosterism. Commercial and non-official exploitation of the comsec delusion remains far greater than that of official spies, including essential undergirding of official spying. Privacy policies in particular were invented as a ruse to divert attention from ubiquitous spying on the public by online services whether of governmental, commercial, institutional, non-profit, personal, anonymizing, traffic hiding, the gamut of Internet opportuniism pretty well demolished by Mozorov and others, especially on this list, but not so much on other lists and fora which ban incredulity, doubt, skepticism and "off-topics" concerning comsec. Time for more than shutting down enterprises that have betrayed the public for two decades, that only allows the perps to escape full accountability by governmental, commercial, institutional, non-profit, personal, anonymizing, traffic hiding, the gamut of Internet opportuniism. Anonymity and leak exploiters deserve special attention for running bait and switch operations which have led the public to believe in shitty security for submissions, media coverage, honesty and nobility of purpose indistinguishable from the gov-com-org kind of hucksterism pushed as a target. Greenwald and Assange, what have you done to Manning and Snowden. For the answer, read cypherpunks archives.
participants (2)
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Eugen Leitl
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John Young