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#903 2016-02-19 02:07:54

Anybody want to make a bet that the FBI already has the text of every email ever sent to or from that phone?

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#904 2016-02-19 07:35:25

Tall Paul wrote:

Anybody want to make a bet that the FBI already has the text of every email ever sent to or from that phone?

The NSA is not nearly as cooperative with other agencies as the public believes...

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#905 2016-02-19 10:25:38

Another thought - it has been stated repeatedly in the press that the Paris attackers did not encrypt any of their communications.  If they can't catch these guys when they DON'T encrypt, how the fuck do they think this will help?

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#906 2016-02-19 10:38:56

XregnaR wrote:

Another thought - it has been stated repeatedly in the press that the Paris attackers did not encrypt any of their communications.  If they can't catch these guys when they DON'T encrypt, how the fuck do they think this will help?

They probably don't.  This has snowballed to the point that every small petty person with power and a hard-on against "X The Unknown" is just trying to grab whatever they can.  I still think the sheer volume of young teen ass and dick pictures makes this all laughable.

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#907 2016-02-19 12:13:33

Baywolfe wrote:

They probably don't.  This has snowballed to the point that every small petty person with power and a hard-on against "X The Unknown" is just trying to grab whatever they can.  I still think the sheer volume of young teen ass and dick pictures makes this all laughable.

Heh, I love it when the universe cooperates and delivers a timely example of small petty persons making power grabs.

John McAfee Offers To Hack Terrorist's iPhone For FBI

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#909 2016-02-19 18:54:53

XregnaR wrote:

Tall Paul wrote:

Anybody want to make a bet that the FBI already has the text of every email ever sent to or from that phone?

The NSA is not nearly as cooperative with other agencies as the public believes...

NSA aside, they can get all they need from metadata and have issue warrants issued based off of that. The actual text of the emails is almost irrelevant at this point. The precedent is all they want.

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#910 2016-02-24 13:12:28

Everyone loves a leaked secret memo.

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#912 2016-03-02 08:34:11

https://cruelery.com/sidepic/furryfreaks.after.png


Crypto Hippies Win Turing Award

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

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#914 2016-03-06 11:18:55

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#916 2016-03-17 17:54:30

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No shit, Sherlock.

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

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#917 2016-03-17 19:43:16

Shhh...

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

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#918 2016-03-17 20:07:01

Just in case you forgot Silverpush, shhhh

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#920 2016-03-31 03:15:30

https://cruelery.com/uploads/thumbs/307_laws.jpg

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

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#921 2016-04-03 05:37:33

Another legal memo puked out by John Yoo.

You want to know why lawyers get a bad name for bullshit arguments? Look at John Yoo -- and then remember that his bullshit arguments weren't just around a single case, but to justify spying on all Americans without a warrant (we'll leave aside the fact that he did the same thing for torture as well).

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#922 2016-04-03 05:43:53

Thanks, Obama.

As Donald Trump gets closer to locking up the Republican nomination and therefore one step closer to the presidency, it's worth looking back at one of the Obama administration's most troubling legacies: specifically, the national security precedents that have allowed the US to spy on countless people and kill without accountability. The prospect now - a terrifying one - is of Trump in charge of this vast apparatus.

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#923 2016-04-03 06:24:02

Want to use a Stingray in Maryland?  Come back with a warrant.

On Wednesday, the Maryland Court of Special Appeals published a legal opinion finding that state police must not only obtain a warrant before deploying a cell-site simulator, but are required to also fully explain to the court what exactly the device does and how it is used.

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#924 2016-04-03 21:35:17

The NSA, skinning cats one way or another.

The Brennan Center has released a report on EO 12333, the executive order that regulates the NSA's overseas surveillance. Much of what the NSA does here is secret and, even though the EO is designed for foreign surveillance, Americans are regularly swept up in the NSA's collection operations:

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#925 2016-04-06 05:36:15

https://cruelery.com/sidepic/butterfly.jpg


If there's recurring privacy discussion theme over the last 6 months it's this:

Our alphabet agencies have so thoroughly compromised web security at every level of hardware and software, we're only now beginning to realize our current encryption algorithms are fucking useless.

Auto-edited on 2020-08-02 to update URLs

Last edited by choad (2016-04-06 19:46:12)

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#926 2016-04-12 00:54:36

Quelle surprise - proposed EU-US Privacy Shield doesn't actually shield your privacy.

In February, the Article 29 group outline outlined four conditions for the proposed Privacy Shield to meet the standards of EU legislation and protect human rights during the gathering of intelligence. The leaked portions of the Article 29 assessment suggest that the group does not feel all the conditions have been satisfied, which means that it cannot support the European Commission's "adequacy decision"--essentially, a statement that Privacy Shield is good enough to be used.

Although that rejection would be a major blow for the European Commission, approval by the Article 29 group is not required to implement the Privacy Shield framework. The Commission would probably go ahead anyway, since it is under great pressure from the US government, and from companies on both side of the Atlantic, to bring in a replacement for Safe Harbour to resolve the present uncertainties.

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#928 2016-04-14 00:47:06

Not the direction of change we were looking for.

Perhaps most remarkably, however, the Obama Justice Department has pressed legal theories even more expansive and extreme than Yoo himself was willing to embrace. Yoo rounded out his Stellar Wind memo with an effort to reassure Judge Kollar-Kotelly that the government's legal interpretation had limits, saying: "Just to be clear in conclusion. We are not claiming that the government has an unrestricted right to examine the contents of all international letters and other forms of communication." But that is essentially the power the NSA claims today when it conducts Upstream surveillance of Americans' Internet communications. . . . In other words, today the Obama administration is defending surveillance that was a bridge too far for even John Yoo.

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#929 2016-04-14 10:28:01

I guess some Executive Orders take longer than others. Only been waiting 8 years for this campaign promise to be fulfilled.


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#931 2016-04-15 06:45:47

Emmeran wrote:

Well here's a shocker

Color me surprised.

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#932 2016-04-15 13:47:26

The only useful information to come out of all of this is that Apple's encryption was not hacker proof, and they knew it.

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#933 2016-04-16 20:02:58

A challenge to gag orders from the Evil Empire?

This morning we [Microsoft] filed a new lawsuit in federal court against the United States government to stand up for what we believe are our customers' constitutional and fundamental rights - rights that help protect privacy and promote free expression. This is not a decision we made lightly, and hence we wanted to share information on this step and why we are taking it. . . .

Over the past 18 months, the U.S. government has required that we maintain secrecy regarding 2,576 legal demands, effectively silencing Microsoft from speaking to customers about warrants or other legal process seeking their data. Notably and even surprisingly, 1,752 of these secrecy orders, or 68 percent of the total, contained no fixed end date at all. This means that we effectively are prohibited forever from telling our customers that the government has obtained their data.

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#934 2016-04-16 20:14:51

Even though this bill is going nowhere, I guess it's encouraging anyway.

The US House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday approved legislation requiring that the authorities get a court warrant to obtain e-mail stored in the cloud.

There was no immediate date set for a floor vote on the Email Privacy Act, which would unwind a President Ronald Reagan-era law that allows the authorities to access e-mail from service providers without a warrant if the message is at least 180 days old.

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#935 2016-04-16 21:40:46

square wrote:

Even though this bill is going nowhere, I guess it's encouraging anyway.

The US House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday approved legislation requiring that the authorities get a court warrant to obtain e-mail stored in the cloud.

There was no immediate date set for a floor vote on the Email Privacy Act, which would unwind a President Ronald Reagan-era law that allows the authorities to access e-mail from service providers without a warrant if the message is at least 180 days old.

Oh that will pass for sure - except by the time it passes it will state that anything more than 90 minutes old is "abandoned" and harvestable.

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#936 2016-04-20 00:29:57

Aren't you glad we fought to free Kuwait?

Deputy PM and Interior Minister Sheikh Mohammed Al-Khaled Al-Sabah formed a special committee to study the method of putting law number 78/2015 pertaining building a DNA database into practice. Preparations are in progress now to set the regulating charter and commence taking mandatory samples from all citizens, residents and visitors.

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#938 2016-04-20 09:31:57

square wrote:

Aren't you glad we fought to free Kuwait?

Actually, yes.  And for the same reason we fought, cheap oil/gasoline.  And they're really the most pro-American country in the Middle East, fuck Israel.  I'm surprised that somebody hasn't proposed the same thing here.  And I'm not sure that I'd be opposed to it if they did.

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#939 2016-04-21 15:37:56

Baywolfe wrote:

The only useful information to come out of all of this is that Apple's encryption was not hacker proof, and they knew it.

Well it wasn't cheap hacker proof.

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#940 2016-04-21 16:50:16

There is no such thing as secure, only secure enough.

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#941 2016-04-23 00:05:38

J. Edgar Hoover is smiling.

The federal district court in San Francisco in EFF's National Security Letter (NSL) cases has unsealed its order from last month, which denies our clients' long-running First Amendment challenges to the NSL statute.

This is the first public decision interpreting the NSL statute since it was amended last year by the USA FREEDOM Act, and unfortunately, it's a disappointing one. Although the court previously found the statute unconstitutional, it held that Congress successfully addressed these problems by passing USA FREEDOM.

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#942 2016-04-23 00:18:49

Really smiling.

Until recently, however, there was at least one substantive limitation on the FBI's ability to query Section 702 data. As reported by the PCLOB [Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board], the FBI's minimization procedures provided that queries must be "reasonably designed" to "find and extract" either "foreign intelligence" or "evidence of a crime." This was a far cry from the probable cause that would be needed to obtain a warrant, but it was something. The FBI, at least on paper, could not simply go on a fishing expedition through the warrantlessly obtained data.

As of November 2015, it appears that limitation no longer exists. Displaying the intelligence community's penchant for defining well-understood terms to mean something entirely different, the FBI's most recent minimization procedures, in the FISC's words, "clarify that a search of an FBI storage system containing raw-FISA acquired information does not constitute a 'query' within the meaning of the procedures if the user conducting the search does not receive access to unminimized Section 702-acquired information in response to the search."

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#943 2016-04-23 00:27:34

square wrote:

raw-FISA acquired information does not constitute a 'query'

Like admitting they're 'away with the fairies', isn't it?

Last edited by choad (2016-04-23 00:53:04)

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#944 2016-04-25 08:06:06

Just incase this hasn't been posted here yet...

http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/com … 2016-news/

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#945 2016-04-25 10:12:48

What if a company refuses to comply?

The discussion draft is also missing any mention of penalties for what would happen should a company, like Apple in the San Bernardino case, refuse to assist law enforcement in accessing encrypted data. The language in the draft is different from the California anti-encryption bill, which was just struck down, and the New York bill, which would have placed $2,500 fines on companies that refused to cooperate.

So, comply or we'll, er... um... do something!  Would love to see Samsung (politely) tell these jokers to go fuck themselves.

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#946 2016-04-26 00:34:35

FBI is fast becoming the home of wannabe spies, hiding information from courts and even prosecutors.

The FBI guards its high-tech secrets so carefully that officials once warned agents not to share details even with federal prosecutors for fear they might eventually go on to work as defense attorneys, newly disclosed records show.

A supervisor also cautioned the bureau's "technically trained agents" in a 2003 memo not to reveal techniques for secretly entering and bugging a suspect's home to other agents who might be forced to reveal them in court. "We need to protect how our equipment is concealed," the unnamed supervisor wrote.

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#947 2016-04-26 00:57:22

Those MI6 guys are so nice; they never forget to send me a birthday card.

MI5, MI6 and GCHQ have been collecting and relying on huge amounts of data collected on almost every person in the country, according to new documents obtained by Privacy International during a legal hearing.

And spies have even been hacking themselves to find out that personal information so that they can use it for booking holidays and spying on their family members to get personal details, the papers show.

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#948 2016-04-26 14:09:31

“An example of an inappropriate ‘self search’ would be to use the database to remind yourself where you have travelled so you can update your records,” a policy added to the documents in 2001 says. “This is not a proportionate use of the system, as you could find this information by another means (i.e. check the stamps in your passport or keep a running record of your travel) that would avoid collateral intrusion into other people’s data.”

More about: SpiesGCHQMI6MI5

Ah a massive Trillion dollar secret goverment spy project that took the gutting ol civil liberties for billions of people to create, used for the most banal purposes by its masters. Well can you really blame them, that is a damn sight easier in filling out those procrastinated expense sheets. Imagine the hassle if they had to turn to the private sector to remember where they had been. Might have to create accounts and logins and all that nonsense.

Each Vehicle Sighting includes time, date, and exact location stamps.

Integrated with online mapping tools, visual pinpoint location information is available with a single click.

Access a massive database of more than a billion vehicle sightings and the addition of up to 50 million sightings added monthly.

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#949 2016-04-28 00:45:07

square wrote:

Even though this bill is going nowhere, I guess it's encouraging anyway.

The US House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday approved legislation requiring that the authorities get a court warrant to obtain e-mail stored in the cloud.

There was no immediate date set for a floor vote on the Email Privacy Act, which would unwind a President Ronald Reagan-era law that allows the authorities to access e-mail from service providers without a warrant if the message is at least 180 days old.

Through the House in watered-down form; waiting to see where the ambush comes from.

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#950 2016-04-28 05:26:59

Each Vehicle Sighting includes time, date, and exact location stamps.

Integrated with online mapping tools, visual pinpoint location information is available with a single click.

Access a massive database of more than a billion vehicle sightings and the addition of up to 50 million sightings added monthly.

Yet no one finds our state police and toll roads using automated plate scanners alarming.

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