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German TOR Servers Seized

mrogers writes "Servers participating in the TOR anonymizing network have been seized by public prosecutors during a child porn crackdown in Germany. TOR provides anonymity for clients and servers by redirecting traffic through a network of volunteer-operated relays; the German prosecutors may have been trying to locate an anonymous server by examining the logs of the captured relays."

427 comments

  1. legal basis by IAR80 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    --
    http://ebgp.net/ccc/
    1. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Axis of evil, 9/11, terrorists, paedophiles, pirates, political opposition. That should cover it.

    2. Re:legal basis by Alphager · · Score: 5, Informative

      They were siezed as evidence. The prosecutors monitored a forum where childporn was traded and basically siezed every computer whoose IP was in the logs. There is some controversity on this siezure, as there are rumors that the prosecutors knew that they won't find anything on a tor-node. It is important to note that none of the tor-nodes-owners has been charged with anything; running tor on a server is NOT the reason these people were targetted.

    3. Re:legal basis by Pecisk · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      "Someone told us...Guy in fine suit"

      --
      user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
    4. Re:legal basis by truedfx · · Score: 1
      On what legal basis?
      FTFA:
      Those servers were most probably configured to be TOR Exit-Nodes, so their IP-addresses might have shown up in the server logfiles of the child-porn servers in question.
      Shame on them, investigating computers used to access child pornography. And as for
      --- http://world4.monstersgame.co.uk/?ac=vid&vid=47010 693
      What the fuck does this have to do with anything? (I browse with signatures disabled, so no, that is not a signature.)
    5. Re:legal basis by Ice.Saoshyant · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Child porn. Apparently, the IPs of some of those servers were found on the logs of child porn web sites.

      The excuse to seize the servers relies on the cops wanting to find any data of those web site users, which they won't, because of the way Tor is built.

      Sad day for annonymous Internet, as more of the crap side of humanity uses services like Tor, and people who do need it, like people in China, are the ones burned.

    6. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      "On what legal basis?"

      Actually, under the auspices of the Because Act, this is entirely legal. This little known piece of international legislation is, in fact, at the heart of many of the most prominent legal actions in the world today. Much loved by the RIAA, MPAA and the US due to it's implicit allowal for random search and seizure, legal 'fishing trips', non-judicially warranted wire taps, and it's espousal of 'guilty until proven guilty' legislature; the entire text of the Because Act has been reproduced below: -

      Because Act

      1. Because.

      1.1. Just, because.

    7. Re:legal basis by Jason+Hood · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      That the government seized them as evidence in a child pornography ring. Anything else they find is inadmissable.

      So if you aren't trading child porn, you are fine. Are you worried?

      But wait, lets kick this into paranoia gear. The Man is taking over everything! We have no privacy! AHHH!

      -1

      --
      Are you intolerant of intolerant people?
    8. Re:legal basis by computational+super · · Score: 3, Insightful
      So if you aren't trading child porn, you are fine. Are you worried?

      Of course, comrade. If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    9. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To Protect the Children(tm), of course.

    10. Re:legal basis by FooAtWFU · · Score: 3, Insightful
      If someone seized my computers, I'd be kind of upset. I sort of use them every once in a while, you know?

      How long would they be gone? Would I ever get them back? Can they at least clone the disks for me so I can have my data back?

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    11. Re:legal basis by Nuskrad · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So if you aren't trading child porn, you are fine. Are you worried?

      But the people who had their equipment seized WEREN'T trading child porn (or at least, they've not been arrested or charged with that). They were just running a Tor node, which is perfectly legal, and something I do. So yes, I am worried.

    12. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Presumably the TOR servers aren't logging anything, if they are though then it's a different story.


      They can perform a very effective traffic analysis with just lists of IP addresses, they can collect IP addresses of what may be other child porn servers that TOR users may have visited. They also can potentially collect sets of incoming IP addresses from clients which might be very useful if any of those IP addresses showed up somewhere else (maybe in a access log on a web server) or if the owners of those IP addresses are already known sex offenders.


      It's true that they'll only see a snap shot of the data on the tor network and they rotate peers out fairly quickly but I wouldn't assume that there isn't anything usful..


      All anonymous services on the internet are eventually used for evil, call that Axel's Law. You may not like it but I haven't seen it not happen yet, be it disgruntled employees posting corporate secrets or freaks looking for child porn, if there is a way to really maintain anonymity on the net, it will be abused.
         

    13. Re:legal basis by Jason+Hood · · Score: 2, Informative

      This happens all the time! Fluid evidence can be seized in order to retain its state. Its unfortunate for the owners, but necessary for law inforcement.

      --
      Are you intolerant of intolerant people?
    14. Re:legal basis by joshetc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I walk in my room to find my computer was stolen
      Me: OMG My computer was stolen
      My Friend: If there was no child porn on it you are ok
      Me: What the fuck are you talking about? My COMPUTER IS GONE

    15. Re:legal basis by alcmaeon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      running tor on a server is NOT the reason these people were targetted.

      I disagree. Running TOR is exactly the reason they were targeted. There may be nothing illegal about running TOR, but there is no denying the chilling effect of the government seizing people's computers on the kiddie porn pretext. The fewer people running TOR, the fewer people who can freely criticize governments--any governments, not just those in China.

    16. Re:legal basis by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Did they seize every router through which regular traffic would have had to travel to get to the forum? How far is it going to go. Are the going to seize all the computers from a major German ISP? because i'm sure somebody used their networks.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    17. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But this is a fishing expedition. It is as if the police seized all servers and logs of your ISP to try and identify someone committing credit card fraud.
      Now that may be legal (but I don't think it is, in the U.S. at least) - but it sure doesn't seem right.

    18. Re:legal basis by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1, Insightful
      You should have considered the consequences of your actions when you configured your computer to allow other people to route data through it, knowing that some of that data could be something of a criminal nature.

      If you're not prepared to wear the results of your choices, don't make them. I'd have little sympathy in this case.

    19. Re:legal basis by TheGreek · · Score: 2, Informative
      The fewer people running TOR, the fewer people who can freely criticize governments--any governments, not just those in China.
      I dunno where you live, but I don't need TOR to criticize my government.
    20. Re:legal basis by makomk · · Score: 4, Informative

      Shame on them, investigating computers used to access child pornography.

      Note that, due to the way Tor works, seizing the Tor exit nodes won't help track down the actual people responsible in any way. (Even if they had full access logs, which I somehow doubt, all each node knows is the previous step in the routing chain, not where the connection originated). It will, however, help scare people off running Tor nodes quite nicely.

    21. Re:legal basis by Jorgensen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sounds like a good reason to perform backups... (unless they've been seized too)

    22. Re:legal basis by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      let me answer for the police for you.

      this is a very accurate answer....

      NO.

      well maybe, a friend got their PC back after 4 years and the drives were wiped. If the police take it, do not ever expect it back.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    23. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anything else they find is inadmissable.

      Under German law, it is admissable.

    24. Re:legal basis by alcmaeon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sad day for annonymous Internet, as more of the crap side of humanity uses services like Tor, and people who do need it, like people in China, are the ones burned.

      Did it ever occur to anyone that protecting governments--all governments, not just those in China--from opposition is the very reason for taking actions like this?

      Think about it: do kiddie porn and terrorism really affect more people in the world than say, domestic violence, or alcohol abuse, or even theft? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than lack of food, lack of sanitary water, low wages, or disease? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than hurricanes and tsunamis? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than war, cluster bombs, or unexploded mines?

      Ah, but where are government resources spent: fighting the scourge of kiddie porn and the battling terrorists lurking under every bed.

      The point of these "fights" against kiddie porn and terrorism are to get people accustomed to giving up their rights and, sure enough, even in the U.S. our rights are rapidly being eroded. A supreme Court Justice from even 30 years ago would hardly recognize the U.S. today.

    25. Re:legal basis by Sarisar · · Score: 1

      Please define 'child porn'. I'm an unmarried, childless guy who has pictures of kids on his hard drive. How would that be viewed?

      These are people I know, parties I've been to and I've taken pictures. I took pictures of my GFs sisters new baby for example. Again nothing dodgy at all. Every single child I have in a photo, their parents are aware (and in most cases have copies of the pictures). But what's to say the government couldn't turn around and arrest me and report to the press that pictures of children had been found on my hard drive. The press would skin me alive!

      That is the problem, that people believe whatever the media tells them. If in Germany they say TOR was used to help child pornography, most people would let the government make it illegal. Look at the UK where filming your kid in a play at school is illegal now because of paedophiles (ok probably can't spell it but I'm not googling to spell check the word!)

      I would bet that almost _everyone_ would have something on their computer that could be considered 'bad' in some way. They don't care about any good aspects coming out of TOR, they just care about the bad things. /rant

    26. Re:legal basis by cp.tar · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I don't need TOR to criticize my government.

      Yet.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    27. Re:legal basis by linkedlinked · · Score: 1

      Right, very necessary for law enforcement.

      Now, remind me again how they expect to get any evidence out of a Tor node?

      I mean, I understand completely the legal basis for it, and I know that they "just have to check," even though it's clear that there's no important data stored on an anonymous node... But "just borrowing" someone else's equipment can often lead to lots of losses. I'm not sure if this Tor node was a for-profit kind of thing (likely not), but I know that if my webserver goes down for more than 30-40 seconds, my host is losing $$$$$.

      I guess a "Well, your computer can't help us, and you need it back to feed your family" is too much to ask for.

    28. Re:legal basis by Alphager · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As long as we don't know that the prosecutors knew that it were tor-servers with no information whatsoever on them, it is just standard-procedure:
      1.found childporn-forum
      2.get the logfiles from the forum
      3.get your hands on every machine mentioned in the logfiles to find additional evidence
      It is important to note that the servers were siezed after a judge autorized the siezure. Once they notice that they cannot gain any info from the servers, they will be returned.

    29. Re:legal basis by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      My parents used to use that one a lot... and I'd oh so foolishly tell them "there is no such law".
      Seems I was wrong after all.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    30. Re:legal basis by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Imagine you had a lawn. You decide it's not a big deal if a few people hang out there, because it's not really an inconvienience for you. Now, for some reason someone get into a fight, somebody gets stabbed or whatever. The poilce come and block off your garden, forensic experts running around, long police statements about who used to hang out there and whatnot - a huge inconvienience. Did you do anything wrong? No. But did the police also do anything wrong? Also no. Sometimes people will be inconvienienced because someone else broke the law. The sky is not falling over that.

      It's like practicly inviting a bunch of house occupants to take residence in your buildings, if you think that's not going to inconvienience you, you're naive. It's like dressing up like a hooker, then go down to the red light district and complain about getting indecent proposals. By being a TOR exit node, you volunteer your node to look just like someone accessing child pornography. Will it send you to jail? No. Are you begging for something like this to happen? Yes.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    31. Re:legal basis by eosp · · Score: 1

      You must be new here.

    32. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI, it's seize not sieze. Nobody ever claims English is a logical language...

    33. Re:legal basis by Kjella · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I dunno where you live, but I don't need TOR to criticize my government.

      Translation: You're neither important nor dangerous enough.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    34. Re:legal basis by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The truth is there is not guarantee to anonymity in the US constitution out side of voting. I doubt that Germany or the rest of EU is any different. What people don't seem to get is that Child pornography isn't a victimless crime and it is a bigger problem that most people want to admit. Child pornography looks like it will be the down fall of the all anonymous Internet access.
      I was going to rant about how TOR and Freenet should do some self policing and frankly I wish that they would. However I can also see how that could remove any type of common carrier status protection they may have.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    35. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't need TOR to criticize your government either.

    36. Re:legal basis by RubberBaron · · Score: 2, Funny

      Inconvenient? No, when my garden needed a good digging over, I just called the police 'anonymously' to report that 'my wife' had disappeared for over a week after some serious arguments. I denied everything (after all, I hadn't done anything). And now the garden is looking better than ever...

    37. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always thought it was

      1. Because I can

    38. Re:legal basis by TheGreek · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      I don't need TOR to criticize my government.
      Yet.
      DUN DUN DUN!

      You're almost as good at fearmongering as the Bush administration is.
    39. Re:legal basis by Coco+Lopez · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Your reasoning would make phone companies and ISPs equally culpable. I agree with you, but I'm just not sure you thought it through.

    40. Re:legal basis by timeOday · · Score: 1

      the difference is that the anonymizing networks serve no other purpose.

    41. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There is, considering the results, noone anywhere near as good at fearmongering in the US as the Great George W. Just as Reagan was the Teflon President, George Bush Junior is the Boogeyman President.

    42. Re:legal basis by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      Keep telling yourself that.

      --
      I hate printers.
    43. Re:legal basis by crawling_chaos · · Score: 2, Funny
      I dunno where you live, but I don't need TOR to criticize my government. Translation: You're neither important nor dangerous enough.

      Meta-Translation: you are deluded into thinking that you are.

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
    44. Re:legal basis by demigod · · Score: 5, Insightful
      You should have considered the consequences of your actions when you configured your computer to allow other people to route data through it.


      1. Routers are compters.
      2. Internet backbone routers are configured to allow other people to route data through them.
      3. All Internet backbone routers must be seized to stop child porn.
      4. We must have no sympathy for the TELCOS or the loss of the Internet. "It's for the children"®

      --
      "The last thing I want to do is deal with a bunch of people who want something."
      Major Major
    45. Re:legal basis by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter how Tor works, and the cops probably don't know how it works. They did a blanket grab of all the IPs they could get in the place's logs. That grabbed dumb criminals and innocent people. It happens, and there's not a lot we can do about it.

    46. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's perfectly logical. "i" before "e" except after "c" or when sounded like "a" as in "neighbor" or "weigh" unless it's the "cies" in the plural of a word ending in "cy", a gerund like "being", a word starting in "i" prefixed with "re", or one of these exceptions: albeit ancient atheist caffeine casein cleidoic codeine conscience counterfeit deficient deity efficient eider either feisty financier foreign forfeit glacier gneiss greige greisen heifer heigh-ho height heir heist kaleidoscope keister leisure leitmotiv monteith neither omniscient onomatopoeia peignoir phenolphthalein phthalein prescient proficient protein reveille Rotweiller science seismic seize seizin sheila society sovereign specie species sufficient surfeit teiid their weir or weird. That about covers it.

    47. Re:legal basis by TheGreek · · Score: 1
      Keep telling yourself that.
      I criticize my government on a fairly regular basis. I've never been hauled off to jail.

      I know people who criticize my government much more fervently. They've never been taken away to jail, either.

      Then again, I guess I don't confuse "vandalism" and "property destruction" with "criticism."
    48. Re:legal basis by Fred_A · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I dunno where you live, but I don't need TOR to criticize my government.
      That's obviously because you're not very good at it.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    49. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not "even in the US" - it's in the US and the UK, primarily. Most other places keep civil liberties.

    50. Re:legal basis by the+donner+party · · Score: 1

      It's not really a government conspiracy. Ordinary, well-meaning people get nervous when they think about all those heinous acts that can be carried out without police being able to do anything about it. Where would we get if we let people communicate safely without possibility of any oversight? Why, that would surely lead to lawlessness and anarchy! People want the police to be in control.

      And you know what, it's not necessarily a bad thing that police investigators can get access to other people's secrets, as long as there is judicial oversight to keep the police in check. There really are people out there who wouldn't mind being able to ruin other people's lifes if they could get away with it. Witness the Craigslist prank that was reported recently.

    51. Re:legal basis by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 1

      Internet Routers don't hide the requesting IP. My post to slashdot is passing through 20 routers to get there (6 inside UVA, about 14 outside UVA), but CmdrTaco can see my IP. If I post something illegal and he has to turn over the IP, he'll at least get one that points to UVA's network's connection to the Internet. Whereas if I was using Tor, he wouldn't get that, he'd get some random computer somewhere. That's the difference.

    52. Re:legal basis by TheGreek · · Score: 2, Informative
      That's obviously because you're not very good at it.
      I'm quite good at criticism.

      I just don't live in a country where the Gendarmes can say that certain public meetings (for example, to protest a new labor law) are illegal.

      Nor do I live in a country where people think "riot" and "legitimate protest" are synonyms.

      Maybe you should get your own affairs in order before you start slinging horseshit across the pond.
    53. Re:legal basis by Shadowlore · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It is a classic "Four Horse Men" manuever:

      If Tor users include Kiddie Porn, then Tor must be bad and eliminated. Especially if it interferes with policework. So start associating the two and eventually people will be happy to make other people give up their rights.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    54. Re:legal basis by RichMeatyTaste · · Score: 1

      Hello? Read up on your history. Monitoring communications is nothing new, nor are investigations such as this.

      Did you know Abe Lincoln had reporters that weren't "on his side" thrown in jail?

      Do you know how throughly people were monitored during WW2? Let along during other parts of the 50's through 70's?

      I'm not even going to comment on your statements about the seriousness of terrorism and child porn. It's easy to think nothing of them when they haven't touched your life in any way, so I'll just end this by saying that your opinion is hypocritical to say the least.

      --


      Ever feel like you are driving the getaway car?
    55. Re:legal basis by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      I started to become extremely paranoid. Some guys invent/implement a pure anarchic network like Tor or setup their own "internet" which can't be traced.

      Imagine the impact on those govt. types...

      It becomes story in media and months later, purely illegal content like child porn etc starts to appear. I wonder if those guys posting child porn which becomes reason of these actions smokes Morley brand of cigarettes :)

    56. Re:legal basis by spikenerd · · Score: 1

      You should have considered the consequences of your actions when you configured your computer to allow other people to route data through it, knowing that some of that data could be something of a criminal nature.

      Who says these people didn't consider the consequences of their actions? Maybe they knew there was a chance of harrassment, but they believed in freedom enough to do it anyway. How does that make the harrassment justifiable?

    57. Re:legal basis by IAmTheDave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly - anything that is not in direct government control - or directly viewable by said government - is a haven for child pornographers. Don't you know anything?

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    58. Re:legal basis by sgtrock · · Score: 1
      The truth is there is not guarantee to anonymity in the US constitution out side of voting.


      This is so wrong!

      The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.


      What part(s) of the ninth and tenth amendments are so hard for people to understand?
    59. Re:legal basis by hsa · · Score: 1

      You don't need legal basis when you flash the word "child porn".

      In Finland, they made a stupid legistlation that ISP can be ordered to block content and forced to turn in user records - why? Well the magical words "child porn". If abused correctly, goverment could - in theory - now stop ISPs from giving access to sites with political agenda and see which citizens like to hang out in goverment oppositing sites.

      It is just strong emotional image, and I do agree it is a bad thing, but I hate when people use it as an excuse to do other things. Things that might be considered harmful otherwise, but will be "required" to stop these evildoers.

    60. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Once they notice that they cannot gain any info from the servers, they will be returned.

      HAAAAAAAAHAHAHAH! That's hilarious.

      5 years from now, once the machines are basically worthless, they'll be "returned" with severe damage and missing hard drive.

    61. Re:legal basis by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      But phone companies and ISPs are corporations, and we all know that only corporations are first class citizens in the US. We have no right to expect equal treatment to a made up entity.

    62. Re:legal basis by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      As I said there is no guarantee to a right of anonymity.
      Any state may pass a law restricting it.
      "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
      What that means is a power not prohibited by the constitution can be give to a state or local government. That means that the right to anonymity is NOT PROTECTED!
      If you think that it is please put it to the test. Go into a bank, police station, or government office with a mask on.
      What is so hard to understand about the term NOT PROTECTED!
      NOT FORBIDEN != PROTECTED

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    63. Re:legal basis by jZnat · · Score: 1

      I browse with sigs disabed, too. I think people do that to spam. I wish mods would browse with sigs disabled so they could downmod those spammers.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    64. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, wouldn't that make them BETTER for finding and removing KP? You can track down the IP address which, unlike TOR, isn't hidden and nab the producer and consumer!

    65. Re:legal basis by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There is some controversity on this siezure, as there are rumors that the prosecutors knew that they won't find anything on a tor-node. It is important to note that none of the tor-nodes-owners has been charged with anything; running tor on a server is NOT the reason these people were targetted.

      A machine connects to a child porn website. The website server records its IP address. The police obtain the server's logs, locate the suspicious machine and are informed by its owner that it's a Tor node.

      Should the police:
      1. Instantly believe this explanation, and eliminate this machine from their enquiries without a further word; OR
           
      2. Seize the machine, and check it over to make sure that the owner's excuses are indeed true, and that the machine isn't compromised or running other data-relaying software or whatever on behalf of an elusive child pornographer.

      If it is a 100% legitimate Tor node, then the police won't find anything untoward. But the police still have to check - because otherwise, "I was running a Tor node, honest guv'nor!" could become a standard get-out-of-custody-free card for anyone else whose computer is under investigation.

      --
      Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
    66. Re:legal basis by trewornan · · Score: 1

      Any important data on my computers is backed up on a memory stick on a chain round my neck. I doubt most police are bright enough to get that at the same time they seize my computer. And if your wondering why I think I need this sort of precaution - I run a freenet node and thus could be subject to something like this. My government may feel they have the right to intercept and decode everything I send or recieve, but I don't agree and intend to make it as difficult as possible.

    67. Re:legal basis by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 1

      You can't track someone that way if they use TOR. You could track that way back to the TOR exit-node, then you have to go through TOR to get to the entrance-node, and follow the entrance-node back to the bad guy.

    68. Re:legal basis by fpylin · · Score: 1
      Think about it: do kiddie porn and terrorism really affect more people in the world than say, domestic violence, or alcohol abuse, or even theft? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than lack of food, lack of sanitary water, low wages, or disease? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than hurricanes and tsunamis? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than war, cluster bombs, or unexploded mines?

      It is not about how wrong things are. Kiddie porn is *wrong*. It is as wrong as terrorism in moral terms. By not punishing the offending parties, you are condoning their act in tearing apart the future of those innocent girls. It is difficult to quantify the enourmous psychological effect of sexual exploitation in children and their families -- something that cannot be measured by a simple death toll.

      Don't get me wrong. In principle I do believe in freedom of speech and freedom to surf.

    69. Re:legal basis by gmack · · Score: 1

      Think about it: do kiddie porn and terrorism really affect more people in the world than say, domestic violence, or alcohol abuse, or even theft? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than lack of food, lack of sanitary water, low wages, or disease? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than hurricanes and tsunamis? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than war, cluster bombs, or unexploded mines?

      This is a pointless arguement. The fact that we can't fix everything does not mean that we shouldn't make life better for those that we can. Just because we can't make life better for someone in some other part of the world does not mean that our part of the world shouldn't be kept as clean as possible. I expect the police of my country to arrest people who trade pictures of children being raped just as I expect them to investigate reported cases of domestic abuse or theft.

      TOR is a prime example of idiots ruining a good idea. Instead of being used for free speech it gets used for anonymous forum spamming, untraceable bot attacks and DoS. It needs to just die.

    70. Re:legal basis by Intron · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Do you mail your letters in clear envelopes?

      --
      Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
    71. Re:legal basis by muuh-gnu · · Score: 1

      > but they believed in freedom

      In the freedom to rape children in the ass an film it, as 99% of users of anonymous networks do?

      > enough to do it anyway.

      They overlooked that they on the other side also believed in freedom of the rapists to take the childrens freedom not to get ass raped and filmed at it.

      > How does that make the harrassment justifiable?

      Because they knowingly aid children rapists in exchanging rape movies, just for the small, negligible chance that there among all the child porn, there would be some *.txt file criticising the chinese goverment.

    72. Re:legal basis by fearlezz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Governments just say it's about child porn or terrorism, and get away with anything...

      --
      .sig: No such file or directory
    73. Re:legal basis by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      I bet the US Postal Service has been used for criminal purposes. Would you have "little sympathy" if their delivery trucks were seized? The cases are parallel. Neither one knows what's going through their network. Both serve vital legitimate purposes. Both are intended to support legitimate use. "Knowing that some of that data could be something of a criminal nature" is kind of a vacuously true statement.

      Closer to home, what about your own mail server? Other people route data through it, from the Internet to your users. Some of that is 419 spam, which is felony wire fraud. That's not a "could be", that's almost certain. Yet, knowing beyond reasonable doubt that your equipment is being used for illegal purposes, you continue running it. If police break down the door of your data center and cart off your servers, will you have "little sympathy" for yourself? Would you be philosophical and tell yourself that you "should have considered the consequences of your actions"? If so, then you have a coherent worldview.

    74. Re:legal basis by computational+super · · Score: 1
      The fact that we can't fix everything does not mean that we shouldn't make life better for those that we can

      You left out a couple parts of this sentence:

      The fact that we can't fix everything does not mean that we shouldn't tear apart every fiber of the fabric of our society, hound innocent people, make criminals of the nonviolent, jail victims of circumstance, and cast aside the basic principles of a free civilization in a misguided attempt to make life better for those that we can apply knee-jerk emotions rather than reason to.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    75. Re:legal basis by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      I'm torn, is this informative or funny?

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    76. Re:legal basis by Greatmoose · · Score: 0

      Places like North Korea or maybe Saudi Arabia? I'm sorry, which civil liberties have you lost in the US (or UK)?

      {crickets}

      --
      Clearly I forgot to equip my +5 Codpiece of Karma.
    77. Re:legal basis by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1, Troll

      > Veteran arrested on Veteran's day for reading an editorial out loud

      No, Veteran arrested on Veteran's day for arrogantly demanding and attempting to interrupt a meeting organized by other people for other purposes.

      > Other protestors arrested

      Yes. Arrested for sitting their asses down in front of the White House and refusing to move. You don't get to do that just because you really, really, gosh darn it, really believe in your cause.

      When you distort things for the purpose of rhetoric, you just demean your cause.

      > Brett Bursey

      Now this is much more relevant. You can only hold up a sign or "boo" in a government-designated "free speech zone", though you can hold up supportive signs and cheer anywhere.

      Quote real, troubling things like this and you will build much more momentum than quoting lots of misleading things. Oh, golly, the guy who throws pies in people's faces was arrested for interrupting someone's meeting and throwing a pie in someone's face. How horrible! Gestapo! Seig Heil, mein fuehrer!

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    78. Re:legal basis by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      > Once they notice that they cannot gain any info from the servers

      These are the same people who claim that marijuana residue on the walls is not just evidence of prior smoking, but is considered "posessio" in and of itself. That is, you are in posession of the residue, and that contains some of the marijuana chemical that is illegal, and therefore you are "in posession" of marijuana.

      These are the same people who claim the new laws are all for "terrorists", then immediately use it to spy on "drug lords". But wait, drug lords aren't terrorists, right? "Oh yes, they fund terrorism! And their effect on cities is akin to terrorism!"

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    79. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is more like someone got into a fight down the street, and ran through your lawn on the way to the fight. They're not exactly sure where the fight took place, so they block off your garden to try and figgure it out. But it was naive to leave your garden unfenced, right?

    80. Re:legal basis by demigod · · Score: 1
      OK, replace "Internet Router" with "firewall using NAT".

      --
      "The last thing I want to do is deal with a bunch of people who want something."
      Major Major
    81. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was under the impression that due to the way TOR works if you aren't on an encrypted connection and you send/post identifying information it _will_ be visible at the exit node?

      Now, whether they can actually retrieve any of that information is another question entirely.

      And if they can maybe TOR needs to look at a live-cd system that refuses to make any use of any sort of swap/hard drive (at least as an alternate version)?

    82. Re:legal basis by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But when the time comes that people are getting "disappeared" for criticizing the government, I'd rather that TOR existed than not. If we let TOR get disassembled now because of "think of the children" issues, we'll be screwed in the future when we really need it.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    83. Re:legal basis by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 1

      You should at least have a starting point - generally a household or an organization. UVA uses NAT, and so you only get the UVA external IP. Most universities and companies keep logs of this sort of stuff. So either you have a place to get the logs from, or you have it narrowed down to a household or building. With TOR, you have none of that.

    84. Re:legal basis by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      No, Veteran arrested on Veteran's day for arrogantly demanding and attempting to interrupt a meeting organized by other people for other purposes.

      Um... just about all meetings worth protesting at are "organized by other people for other purposes!"

      Yes. Arrested for sitting their asses down in front of the White House and refusing to move. You don't get to do that just because you really, really, gosh darn it, really believe in your cause.

      Why not? I think you should be allowed to do that (unless you're blocking traffic, in which case the police should ask you to move to the sidewalk)!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    85. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In the freedom to rape children in the ass an film it, as 99% of users of anonymous networks do?

      Can you substantiate that? Of course not. It's just the usual hysterical idiocy.

      The thing about an anonymous network is that you don't know what people are using it for. The child porn is visible to you because--

      1. You want to see it. Obsessing about child porn seems seems to be the number one source of titillation for Internet control freaks these days.
      2. It's done in FORUMS, because they want to find each other. If somebody is doing something they DON'T want to advertise, you'll never know about it.

      I know a lot of TOR users, and I know they're using it for things other than child porn. I very much doubt any of them is also using it to download child porn, let alone produce or distribute it. In my world, THEY are 99 percent of TOR users.

      Anyway, since child porn people would fuck the kids ANYWAY, even if they NEVER photographed it, I think the relatively small additional damage of having movies passed around would in fact be more than outweighed by one .txt file, if it were the RIGHT .txt file.

    86. Re:legal basis by BalanceOfJudgement · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The truth is there is not guarantee to anonymity in the US constitution out side of voting.
      Wrong.

      "The congress shall pass no law restricting the freedom of speech."

      1st Amendment to the US Constitution. Anonymity is a prerequisite for truly free speech, and any judge who rules otherwise should be shot. The founders themselves published under pseudonyms in order to protect their identities while still spreading the word about their new government, for two reasons:

      1. Anonymous writers do not have to deal with ad hominem attacks, meaning nobody can try to kill the message by attacking the messenger, and

      2. People saying unpopular things tend to become the focus of alot of violence very quickly, and anonymous speech protects their lives.

      The founders recognized that ideas are more important than stability and should be kept safe from force. THAT is the value in anonymity and that was one of the intentions behind the 1st Amendment.

      Anyone who has read the Federalist Papers (or even a good review of them) would know that, and that damn well includes ANY judge ruling on ANY topic that might even HINT at a Constitutional issue.
      --

      We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
    87. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      Please define 'child porn'.

      Sure thing. Child pornography is a picture or video of children involved in sexual activity. Well, anyone under 18 that is. Er.. of course they don't actually have to be having sex, but still, sexual or nude images of anyone under 18. (Cough) Hrm... of course, they don't technically have to be nude or having sex, as long as there is a "lavacious exhibition of genitals". Basically, child porn is a picture or video of someone under 18, either having sex or not having sex, naked or clothed, and lavaciously exhibiting genitals, or appearing sexual in any way*.

      One easy definition for child porn: any picture or image of someone under 18.

      *also remember, it doesn't have to be a real child if the virtual or drawn image is "indistinguishable" from a real child.
    88. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      But when the time comes that people are getting "disappeared" for criticizing the government, I'd rather that TOR existed than not. If we let TOR get disassembled now because of "think of the children" issues, we'll be screwed in the future when we really need it.

      When the time comes that people are getting "disappeared" for criticizing the government then TOR will effectively cease to exist because anyone running a TOR server or any unauthorized computer will be "disappeared", anyone possessing a copy of TOR in source or executable or any other format will be "disappeared", anyone accessing any unauthorized computer will be "disappeared."

      How will TOR help you then?

      I don't know why people think that stuff like TOR would be any use against a totalitarian police state. Totalitarian police states are terribly effective. They don't even need a reason beyond suspicion or mere whim in order to "disappear" persons they don't like or believe might pose even the slightest of threats to their continuance.

      Turing Word: complied

      Have you complied with MiniTruth's latest directive citizen?

    89. Re:legal basis by grahammm · · Score: 1

      I started to become extremely paranoid. Some guys invent/implement a pure anarchic network like Tor or setup their own "internet" which can't be traced.
      Imagine the impact on those govt. types...


      If I remember correctly, Tor was developed by the US Navy. So if other parts of government do not like it.....

    90. Re:legal basis by BalanceOfJudgement · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Basically, child porn is a picture or video of someone under 18, either having sex or not having sex, naked or clothed, and lavaciously exhibiting genitals, or appearing sexual in any way*.
      Well holy crap. By that standard, pictures of young girls in swimsuits on Yahoo! advertising hotel specials should result in Yahoo! getting ransacked and their advertising staff arrested.

      But then, the point really isn't to make a coherent standard; it's to make anyone prosecutable so that you can pick and choose your victims.
      --

      We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
    91. Re:legal basis by takeya · · Score: 1

      Extremely insightful comment. To be honest I tried to find a way to disagree with it, but you're right. The most outspoken, the most "dangerous" subjects of the government, the most likely to disturb the status quo, are always targeted and often "taken out."

    92. Re:legal basis by novus+ordo · · Score: 1
      What that means is a power not prohibited by the constitution can be give to a state or local government.
      You just outlined the reason why Madison didn't want to include a Bill of Rights in the first place:
      "It has been objected also against a bill of rights, that, by enumerating particular exceptions to the grant of power, it would disparage those rights which were not placed in that enumeration; and it might follow by implication, that those rights which were not singled out, were intended to be assigned into the hands of the General Government, and were consequently insecure. This is one of the most plausible arguments I have ever heard against the admission of a bill of rights into this system; but, I conceive, that it may be guarded against."
      ALL rights government has are derived from the Constitution and ultimately from the people. If you fail to understand that then you fail to understand the whole concept behind the Constitution.
      --
      "You're everywhere. You're omnivorous."
    93. Re:legal basis by gkhan1 · · Score: 2, Funny

      In the UK they actually have another act, specifically to protect the right of governments to use the Because Act. It's the great Watchagonna do 'bout it? Act of 1843. It was enacted because Lord Featherbottom, a member of parliament, had been getting grief from a certain Mr. Parsley who had succesfully used the What defence against the good Lord. The court case was closely monitored in the media at the time, even though it has gone down in history as the most boring trial of all time. Excerpt from transcript:

      LORD FEATHERBOTTOM: Because!
      MR. PARSLEY: Because what?
      LORD FEATHERBOTTOM: Because!
      MR. PARSLEY: Because what?
      LORD FEATHERBOTTOM: Because!
      MR. PARSLEY: Because what?
      LORD FEATHERBOTTOM: Because!
      MR. PARSLEY: Because what?

      And so on and so forth. It was a war of attrition, and on the fourth straight day the elderly lord collapsed, and thus his case was lost. Following that incident, Featherbottom made a rousing speech to the parliament and got his act, well, enacted.

      As an interesting historical sidenote, Featherbottom and Parsley eventually became good friends and formed, and were the first presidents of, the London Fine Cheese Society, an organisation famous to this day. Britannia never smelled the same.

    94. Re:legal basis by BraksDad · · Score: 1

      ...and most of us secede from our parants at some point...

      I think these kind of things happen with a bit less civility when we talk about governments and their constituents.

      --
      Slowly waving my hand - "This is not the sig you are looking for."
    95. Re:legal basis by BalanceOfJudgement · · Score: 1

      Yes. Arrested for sitting their asses down in front of the White House and refusing to move. You don't get to do that just because you really, really, gosh darn it, really believe in your cause.
      So let me get this straight. They sat down, on public land, to exercise their free speech, did not present a clear danger to the rest of the public, and it's ok to arrest them?

      When you distort things for the purpose of rhetoric, you just demean your cause.
      Quoth the poster.
      --

      We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
    96. Re:legal basis by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      But then, the point really isn't to make a coherent standard; it's to make anyone prosecutable so that you can pick and choose your victims.
      Exactly, mod this man insightful. Hell, by the given definition, any pictures of me are child pornography, since I happen to be 17 years old. Oops, guess I can send anyone other than my family with such pictures to jail!

    97. Re:legal basis by jthill · · Score: 1
      All anonymous services on the internet are eventually used for evil
      Please name any useful feature of anything in creation that is not eventually used for evil.
      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    98. Re:legal basis by cronius · · Score: 1

      The point is: Everyone knows it's wrong, that's the whole point. Because no one wants to defend it, and joe random easily attacks it (that's you in this case) it's used as an excuse for government control. Just like terrorism is.

      The government can do anything they want by just labeling something as either "terrorism/terrorism act" or "child pornogrophy/pedophiles." It works because people blindly attack those things (including anything labeled as such). It works because social norms makes people afraid to say otherwise. Label it and control it. In this case it was (a node in) an anonymous network. What's next?

      It is exactly because of this people need to be critical. I'm not condoning child pornography, and it's typical that anyone attacking the governments actions would be told that they were (underlining my point here). The government is using it as en excuse to do what they want, and in this case that's excactly what they did. As others have pointed out: Seizing a Tor server returns no useful information, that's the whole point of an anonymous network: No single node can reveal the origin of a connection. Whoever is in charge doesn't care: They want to frighten people. By labeling it.

      --
      Life is Reality
    99. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Captain, I can't row in a straight line!

      I see your problem, you're using an exclusive oar.

    100. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Then I guess we can suppose you're not living in The Beacon of Democracy (TM), the U.S.A.

      Try being a Muslim in the United States and voicing the opinion that 9/11 happened because of the U.S. foreign policy. See what happens.

      Or try wearing a shirt with Arabic script *and* being a Muslim in a U.S. airport. http://www.aljazeera.com/cgi-bin/review/article_fu ll_story.asp?service_ID=12362 (Oh, by the way, you can find this in other news agencies - Western, that is.)

    101. Re:legal basis by TheGreek · · Score: 1
      Try being a Muslim in the United States and voicing the opinion that 9/11 happened because of the U.S. foreign policy.
      You speak of "foreign policy" like it's a tangible object capable of hijacking four aircraft and piloting three of them into buildings.

      See what happens.
      You'll probably be ridiculed, but you won't be dragged off to Lubyanka. Free speech involves allowing people who don't agree with you to retort.
    102. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually you get exactly that. You get a starting location to request logs from. From those logs you can then see the next hop. Typically TOR will use three hops (not sure if you can even use more, can't remember and don't feel like looking it up right now). So, 3 log requests (sorry 3 computer confiscations) later and you have your kiddie porn user. If you care enough to go through all the trouble.

      The only real differences between this actual situation and the hypothetical one you've mentioned (being behind NAT) is that TOR nodes are typically run by individuals rather than organizations/corporations and that the TOR exit node doesn't need to be geographically near the actual user (and yes you could achieve this as well in your example, if say someone was connecting to UVA via VPN from some random location in the world).

    103. Re:legal basis by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "If someone seized my computers, I'd be kind of upset."

      Not to mention that in these days....if your good name and the mention of sexually related charges against you....you are pretty much marked for life, even if no real charges are filed or you are not guilty at all.

      Anything related to a sex crime can really fsck up your life, even if the charges were mistaken.

      Not to mention, your name WILL be on some police file/list for a long, long time to come.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    104. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you encrypt your drive conents?

    105. Re:legal basis by trewornan · · Score: 1

      No but data held for the freenet node is encrypted when recieved and never decrypted.

    106. Re:legal basis by cheshire_cqx · · Score: 1

      You seem to forget that telephone records are subpoenaed all the time in criminal investigations. I just hope governments at least get the search warrant.

      Likely this kind of operation (TOR), with of course no records of traffic to turn over to police, must have at least the logs seized if that's where the investigations lead police.

      The police should do their best to minimize disruption my getting a forensic mirror of all the drives, retuning all non-relevant hardware, and giving TOR an image of the data.

    107. Re:legal basis by Alchemar · · Score: 1

      or 3, check the IP address out and find out if it connects to a TOR server. It would seem that this should be possible without seizing the computer.

    108. Re:legal basis by tomjen · · Score: 1

      Did you know Abe Lincoln had reporters that weren't "on his side" thrown in jail?

      And that is one of the reasons why I dont consider him a anything other than a criminal.

      Do you know how throughly people were monitored during WW2? Let along during other parts of the 50's through 70's?
      Let me guess - telephones, telegraph and mail (out/into the country)? Extra monitoring for people of importance?

      The difference is, that today people use email to communicate with each other many times a day - unless you where suspected a spy (or worked at Bletchly) you would not be watched 24/7 even during WWII. An individual could easily be today.

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
    109. Re:legal basis by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 3, Insightful

      or 3, check the IP address out and find out if it connects to a TOR server. It would seem that this should be possible without seizing the computer.

      ... But the machine could potentially be both a Tor node and be responsible for accessing the child porn website - without the aid of some separate, anonymous request routed over Tor. One hypothetical case would be a desktop machine that also runs a Tor node in the background. Without a close look at the machine, the police have no sensible way of telling.

      --
      Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
    110. Re:legal basis by Burz · · Score: 1

      That doesn't matter when spying becomes deriguer, because today's government is not today's government and who knows what the government (or employers, for that matter) will start holding against you in the near future. With years of data amassed about you, they could start blacklisting and harrassing you (or worse) "just in case".

      Nevermind that the data doesn't rightfully belong in their hands; Its basically a given that some people will try to capitalize on it, purposefully misconstruing it "by accident". This is how otherwise useless people in governments and corporations alike justify their bonuses and re-elections along with their nepotism and cronyistic bid-less contracts. Such people set their sights on using the powerful tools of the day to manufacture scapegoats and by the time their handiwork becomes known for what it is, at that point it can be nearly impossible to depose them.

      Don't give them any more information than you absolutely have to.

    111. Re:legal basis by huge+colin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If your government was oppressive enough to stop any criticism, what makes you think that the same government wouldn't also prohibit the use of any anonymizing software, and seize any hardware running it?

    112. Re:legal basis by LordSnooty · · Score: 1

      Wow, you posted that in a deep voice.

    113. Re:legal basis by huge+colin · · Score: 1
      If someone seized my computers, I'd be kind of upset. I sort of use them every once in a while, you know?
      You seem to forget that you do not have the right to never be inconvenienced. If someone commits a crime and is going to stand trial, then it's entirely possible that you will be pulled away from your job (for anywhere between a few days and many months) to act as part of a jury. The point is, we all have to suffer because of the mistakes of a few. This is understood.

      The solution to this is to have a society that does not, on any level, tolerate wrongdoing.
    114. Re:legal basis by LWATCDR · · Score: 1, Troll

      Freedom of speech doesn't mean the right to yell fire in a public building or to publish child pornography. There are many facets of life where you are not allowed to act with anonymity. You can not own property, drive a car, fly on a plane, or have a bank account and remain anonymous.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    115. Re:legal basis by Jerrycan · · Score: 1

      AUFMACHEN !

    116. Re:legal basis by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1
      If it is a 100% legitimate Tor node, then the police won't find anything untoward. But the police still have to check - because otherwise, "I was running a Tor node, honest guv'nor!" could become a standard get-out-of-custody-free card for anyone else whose computer is under investigation.

      At the same time, consider. It seems that if you ever get your computer seized by the police, the actual chances of you getting it back are slim - and if you do get it back, it will probably be several years afterwards and it will be relatively useless. Does this mean that whenever the police suspect you of doing something wrong with your computers, they can come in and effectively shut you down without niceties like, say, a trial?

      I'm sure that there's some precedent with other sorts of seizures like this, but it seems that computers take it to a new level as they may accumulate terabytes of evidence... and from another angle, you would think they would be able to just make a bitwise clone in most cases and return it with the rest of the hardware to the Suspects. Apparently this isn't something that generally happens though....

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    117. Re:legal basis by Mr2001 · · Score: 1
      Should the police:

            1. Instantly believe this explanation, and eliminate this machine from their enquiries without a further word

      Hmm... yes? What's the worst that could happen, someone might go unpunished for connecting to a child porn web site? Can't say I'd lose any sleep over that. Downloading doesn't hurt anyone; the images have already been made, and any abuse that might happen already has.
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    118. Re:legal basis by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      What is "harrassing" about seizing material evidence in relation to an ongoing investigation? They seized the end point servers. "They don't keep logs"? Some default installs of Tor /do/. I don't see how this is harrassment.

    119. Re:legal basis by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      Your analogy doesn't work. If the delivery truck needed to be seized for the purposes of forensics for whatever reason, go ahead. In this case, the computer that served as the end point is material evidence for the traffic that came through it. You knew this was a possibility when you configured that server for this purpose.

      Your mail server analogy doesn't work either. It is not illegal to be the recipient of a 419 spam. The material evidence that can be gathered for the prosecution of a 419 spam can be gathered at the outbound mail server.

    120. Re:legal basis by scott_karana · · Score: 1

      It's not really a pretext if the Tor server's IP address was logged by the kiddie porn site.

      "Oh, it wasn't me, officer; I just let people anonymously use my server to access illegal things!"
      I'm pretty sure that is truly illegal. I mean, the if the IPs of trouble sites are known, the server could have blocked them. Nobody would complain.

    121. Re:legal basis by Haeleth · · Score: 1

      But when the time comes that people are getting "disappeared" for criticizing the government, I'd rather that TOR existed than not.

      "When"? Not "if"? What unfortunate country do you live in where you consider it a foregone conclusion that your government will inevitably turn into a totalitarian police state?

      Forgive me if I harbour a naive belief that freedom and democracy might possibly be self-sustaining.

    122. Re:legal basis by k98sven · · Score: 1

      But the people who had their equipment seized WEREN'T trading child porn (or at least, they've not been arrested or charged with that). They were just running a Tor node, which is perfectly legal, and something I do. So yes, I am worried

      If that worries you, why shouldn't you be worried?

      By running a Tor node, you are letting other people use your property without restriction. And no, there's nothing illegal in that. But that also means they may be using your property to commit a crime. And that's a fact that you are well aware of.

      Now if you're in the situation where somebody used your property to commit a crime, what do you suggest the Police should do about it?

      Should they take your word: Someone else was using it at the time, and that you don't know who it was? How many criminals would ever be caught by that method of investigation?

      Or should they take the property as evidence and do a forensic analysis to find out whatever they can? If you're telling the truth, then you will not be charged. And you'll get your stuff back when they're done (depending on whether it's deemed needed for the investigation or not). Yes, it sucks to have your property seized as evidence. But what alternatives are there?

      The answer is: None. Anything you own could be used to commit a crime, and anything used to commit a crime is evidence. And I for one think the Police should have the ability to seize evidence, if they can demonstrate to a court that it was indeed used in a crime and obtain a warrant for it. (With additional safeguards, such as the inadmittability of evidence of any other crimes they might find, and inadmittability of evidence obtained through an illegal search).

      Are you really implying that the police should only be allowed to confiscate evidence that belongs to someone charged with a crime?

      If having your property seized as evidence worries you, that's too bad. All you can do about that is reduce the chances that it is used in a crime. So the answer there is simple: Avoid letting strangers use your stuff. In particular when there's a criminal application for it that you are well aware of.

      Or is your argument: If we assume the police knew it was a Tor server, and how Tor works, etc. They should know better and assume they won't find anything, and therefore simply not bother? That would simply be bad detective-work. If that's the only lead they have, there's no justification for not at least bothering to check up on it.

    123. Re:legal basis by FreakWent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can you name any countries that have never been a police state, even in wartime?

      Of those countries you can name, how many have never singled out a particular group for rounding up and incaceration, on the basis that they are a member of that group?

      If you think about it seriously in context, then each country is likely to experience all forms of government over time, unless of course the whole game changes and the concept of a country is abandoned altogether.

    124. Re:legal basis by Jeff+Molby · · Score: 1
      There are many facets of life where you are not allowed to act with anonymity. You can not own property, drive a car, fly on a plane, or have a bank account and remain anonymous.
      You're right, but the anonymity should only be waived in relation to situations such as you enumerated. Per the 9th and 10th, we do (should?) have the inherent right to anonymity. It's not absolute, but the state should have something akin to "probably cause" before it can compel you to identify yourself.

      This is merely academic though, since this is taking place in Germany and it sounds like they have more than enough probable cause anyways.

    125. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Child pornography isn't a victimless crime

      Scenario: I take a few sexy pictures of my 16 year old girlfriend. The cops search my possessions for unrelated reasons and find said pictures. I am arrested and charged with possesion of child pornography. Who is the victim in this situation? My girlfriend, who I am legally able to have sex with and consented to having the pictures taken?

      You can dismiss this scenario and claim your issue with child pornography concerns much more heinous material, but you cannot deny that the pictures would nevertheless be illegal and I could face serious jail-time. How can you support such an open-ended, vague law that delivers such harsh punishments?

      Child pornography (at least the horrid kind of which you most likely refer to) is a photograph of a crime. There are indeed victims in these photographs and videos. However, as I see it, the perpetrator of these crimes is the person sexually abusing the victims in the material, not the poor sap who downloads it off of kazaa 10 years later. Sure, you can make the old argument that demand causes further production, but why do believe that this is, "a bigger problem that most people want to admit"? Don't just take Alberto Gonzalez's word for it. Do you routinely run across child pornography on the internet? I sure don't, and I've seen some pretty bizarre adult porn. Do you think eliminating child pornography would cause any reduction in the number of children molested? Do you have any concern for people who may become victims of this law themselves (such as the 16 year old arrested for distribution of child porn for taking pictures of herself)?

      Finally, do you agree that virtual child porn should be illegal, as it is now? (See PROTECT Act of 2003) Do you think virtual child porn is a victimless crime?

    126. Re:legal basis by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      A supreme Court Justice from even 30 years ago would hardly recognize the U.S. today.

      Perhaps not ... but for many of those Justices, decisions they made then helped put us where we are now.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    127. Re:legal basis by oohshiny · · Score: 1

      It will, however, help scare people off running Tor nodes quite nicely.

      And why shouldn't it? If we, as a society, outlaw access to certain kinds of information, then, logically, when Tor nodes are being used to access that information, the operators of those nodes must share in the legal responsibility.

      No, the real solution to these problems is to back off the restrictions we have placed on on-line information. Child pornography is disgusting, and having bomb making information on the Internet carries some risk, but we have to balance that against the damage that enforcement efforts against those kinds of information risk doing to our democracy.

    128. Re:legal basis by oohshiny · · Score: 1

      But the people who had their equipment seized WEREN'T trading child porn

      Sure, they were. They downloaded the content on someone else's behalf and then passed it on. Furthermore, this was deliberate, since that's the whole point of running a Tor node.

      They were just running a Tor node, which is perfectly legal, and something I do.

      Running a Tor node is legal, but when someone uses your Tor node to do something illegal, then you're helping them. And, yes, you should be worried.

      I don't like the result, but you can't support restrictions on posting and/or accessing information on the one hand, and oppose restrictions and liability on Tor nodes.

      (A second problem is that Tor is a piss-poor design from a technical point of view.)

    129. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hell, by the given definition, any pictures of me are child pornography, since I happen to be 17 years old. Oops, guess I can send anyone other than my family with such pictures to jail!

      Your family is not exempted. Neither, by the way, are you. What is really insane about these laws is that you could take a picture of yourself naked, post it on the internet, and be charged with sexually abusing yourself.

      Don't believe me? It happened to this girl: http://www.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/internetlife /2004-03-29-child-self-porn_x.htm
    130. Re:legal basis by ista · · Score: 1

      According to what I know of those cases, only the hard drives have been removed by ISP technicans at all ISPs at about the same time, those ISPs were asked to copy those drives and reinstall the copy, so that the customer still gets access back to their server. After that, only the source disks for those copies have been seized. So probably the police knew that any claims due to any damage by non-experienced technicans are definitely to avoid.

      Sidenote: if you were running a TOR node on a dedicated server (a server you're paying at least 50 bucks per month plus traffic and so on), why would you do so? Public wellfare to those who wish to remain anonymous?

      istalix

    131. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Child pornography (at least the horrid kind of which you most likely refer to) is a photograph of a crime. There are indeed victims in these photographs and videos. However, as I see it, the perpetrator of these crimes is the person sexually abusing the victims in the material, not the poor sap who downloads it off of kazaa 10 years later.

      Isn't it generally acknowledged that there is some kind of right of privacy? Violation of the victims' privacy makes distributing these pictures a crime.

      If I take nude pictures of a girlfriend with her consent and post them on the internet, then (provided she is old enough to give consent) it's legal. But if I make nude photos of my girlfriend's mom without her consent and post them on the internet, then it's a violation of her privacy and she can definitely bring legal action against me.

      So it is much more of a privacy violation if a person takes part in distributing pictures which by their very nature cannot be properly consented to, such as pictures of a preadolescent kid being sexually abused.

      Obviously distributing the pictures is not the same kind of crime as making them. And the laws are written to draw a distinction.

    132. Re:legal basis by xappax · · Score: 1

      Well, since you haven't said what country you live in, it's pretty hard to argue. I suggest, however, that no matter where you live, you try getting seriously involved in a political or social movement which makes life difficult for some extremely powerful entity. This may include
      A) A powerful sovereign nation, most likely the one you live in (though not always)
      B) A vastly wealthy and resourceful international corporation
      C) A massive religious or political movement (usually the one in power in your country)

      Dedicate your time - no, not your free time, like your LIFE - to disrupting business-as-usual for this entity. Of course, you should always obey the letter of the law, using only legally permitted methods to advance your movement. Watch your movement blossom, win the minds of many people everywhere, threatening the very existence of such a powerful entity.

      And see how long it takes for the entity to do everything in it's power - including, believe it or not, illegal (maybe even unconstitutional) things - to neutralize you.


      Try it, for real. I think you'd learn a lot.

    133. Re:legal basis by xappax · · Score: 1

      One hypothetical case would be a desktop machine that also runs a Tor node in the background. Without a close look at the machine, the police have no sensible way of telling.

      You're completely right...but this indicates a much deeper issue than most police forces and governments are prepared to address:

      You can't trace internet users.

      Tor has been a military-strength proof-of-concept of this fact, but it can be seen in many other ways as well. If you route through a non-logging proxy, you will be traced to the proxy's IP, not your own. If you connect to a wireless network, you will be traced to the network gateway's IP. If you connect from a library, you will be traced to the library's IP.

      ISPs, the police, and governments cling to the notion that an internet connection is like a street address - that is, it can be linked to a physical space and a specific person. As the scenarios above (and many others) demonstrate, this is completely false.

      Furthermore, conducting investigations under the assupmtion that any abuse originating from an IP is the absolute responsibility of whoever legally "owns" that IP can easily make trouble for many law-abiding people. If you have a grudge against me, all you have to do is send a bomb threat using my IP address, and bingo, I'm under a federal Homeland Security investigation! Yes, there are meatspace analogs to this type of prank, but they require such advanced planning and effort that they aren't committed often at all. Using someone else's IP, however, is a fact of the internet.

      There are many people who would like to preserve a system where IPs map infalliably to responsible "owners", who can be held accountable for any activity from their address. They insist on "tough love", that IP owners should be punished simply because they failed to secure their networks, or allowed someone else to use them.

      While I personally think that this is a bad idea because it eliminates the potential for anonymity on the internet, the question is moot. People can't protect their networks. People allow their IPs to be used for abuse constantly (knowingly or otherwise), and this will not change. The sooner the establishment learns this, the more trouble they'll save themselves and everyone else.

    134. Re:legal basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but I clearly indicate the to and from addresses on my envelopes.

    135. Re:legal basis by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      A foreing policy can take a quite tangible meaning, including bombs fallings and troopers invading your country. In the case of the recent US foreing policy I believe this occurence has been witnessed rather often.

    136. Re:legal basis by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      Does that include using the Internet?

      Or are you trying to say that you have the right to use Internet anonymously, except when you're accessing child pornography, in which case you don't?

    137. Re:legal basis by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Dedicate your time - no, not your free time, like your LIFE - to disrupting business-as-usual for this entity.

      It never ceases to amaze me. Somebody like you writes something like this, then follows it up with hand-wringing about how that same entity is going to act to protect itself. SURPRISE! What did you think they'd do, sit there and take it? The part that is missing from your Master Plan to Play Antisocial Badass (you know, when you're not flipping burgers or whatever the hell it is you do to pay rent until you figure out how to "go off the grid" and stick it to The Man) is how to cope with the consequences of your actions.

      Good luck with that, you hardened rebel, you.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    138. Re:legal basis by alcmaeon · · Score: 1

      People want the police to be in control.

      Wrong. Some people want the police to be in control. And then there are some who value freedom a little more. I would prefer some criminals go uncaught rather than have any limits on political speech. I realize this is a very Enlightenment-informed and therefore old school attitude in this modern age of Orwellian perpetual surveilance.

    139. Re:legal basis by alcmaeon · · Score: 1

      Hello? Read up on your history. Monitoring communications is nothing new, nor are investigations such as this.
      Did you know Abe Lincoln had reporters that weren't "on his side" thrown in jail?
      Do you know how throughly people were monitored during WW2? Let along during other parts of the 50's through 70's?

      And I suppose your point is something like "If being spied upon was good enough for my dear old Granny, then it's good enough for me"?

      You know, the Catholic Church used to torture and imprison scientists whose ideas they deemed dangerous (especially so because the scientists were correct). Is this a good idea? I mean, assuming you want to live in a modern world with progress in technology and not in a Medieval pig-sty.

    140. Re:legal basis by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Forgive me if I harbour a naive belief that freedom and democracy might possibly be self-sustaining.

      Not even the Founding Fathers believed that; that's why we have the 2nd Amendment.

      Ben Franklin (from here):

      At the close of the Constitutional Convention, a woman asked Benjamin Franklin what type of government the Constitution was bringing into existence. Franklin replied, "A republic, if you can keep it."

      Thomas Jefferson:

      The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.

      etc.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    141. Re:legal basis by Xylene2301 · · Score: 1

      The key is W's words after 9/11:
      "Don't forget to shop."

      Terrorism makes people stay home and quit shopping. That means no tax $$.
      Domestic violence and kiddie porn don't stop tax revenue.

    142. Re:legal basis by LandruBek · · Score: 1

      That is a fantastic reply to, "If you're not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to hide." You should post that to Bruce Schneier's blog

      --
      $META_SIG_JOKE
    143. Re:legal basis by jbdigriz · · Score: 1

      Hey, whaddya mean, "yet?"

      Ask Jim Bell.
      Ask Jim Goad.
      Ask Sherman Austin.
      Etc.

      Tim May used to say all the time, back before the cypherpunks list pretty much dissolved, that if your sekrit comm network can't withstand subpeonas and jackboots on a kiddie porn (or tax evasion, or terrorist conspiracy, or money-laundering, or dope-dealing, etc.) warrant, then it is hardly secure for anything else, or anonymous. People want to eat their cake and have it too, but like another man said, TANSTAAFL. At least the Tor project hasn't fallen for the trap waiting for Freenet, currently enmired in the "darknet" fallacy.

      You either believe in the 1st Amendment or you don't. There is no middle road here. That is a fantasy and rationalization the courts came up with.

      James B. "My sister is a Fed" DiGriz

    144. Re:legal basis by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 1
      Try being a Muslim in the United States and voicing the opinion that 9/11 happened because of the U.S. foreign policy. See what happens.
      Hopefully you are ridiculed and corrected for saying anything like this. If you hold the viewpoint that attacks on random civilians is justified because of "foreign policy" and you are Muslim, then you should consider yourself an extremist Muslim because this is not the viewpoint of most Muslims in the world.

      As far as the t-shirt profiling, that type of stuff is the product of an individual stepping over the line in trying to silence this persons free speach. It can happen anywhere and this type of stuff does happen everywhere.

    145. Re:legal basis by xappax · · Score: 1

      Step 1: Respond to character attacks

      you know, when you're not flipping burgers or whatever the hell it is you do to pay rent

      I don't have a paying job, I'm a full-time volunteer political activist. I don't pay rent, either. I squat.

      until you figure out how to "go off the grid" and stick it to The Man

      I consider myself fairly "off the grid" already (perhaps not completely, since I live in the first world), since I spend essentially no money. I scavenge (dumpster) and grow my own food, I only use free internet (at the library or wherever it's available), and get virtually all my material goods from other people's excess. People tend to use the phrase "stick it to The Man" sarcastically, but I truly believe that it's everyone's duty to actively oppose corrupt governments and other oppressive institutions that seek to erode our rights. If that makes me a naive sucker, then so be it.

      Step 2: Respond to actual arguments

      SURPRISE! What did you think they'd do, sit there and take it?

      You're right, it isn't a surprise at all that a powerful entity would act violently and illegally to protect itself. That was basically the point I was trying to make in my original post. It's to be expected that even a supposedly democratic and free society with a centralized government might at some point decide to turn against some of it's citizens if said citizens were making big waves. In almost all situations, I'd say a government that breaks it's own laws or principles to oppress it's citizens is in the wrong, and should be stopped.

      The part that is missing from your Master Plan to Play Antisocial Badass [...] is how to cope with the consequences of your actions.

      Well, see that's where Tor comes into the discussion. Tor, and other efforts like it, are excellent tools to cope with the consequences of a successful socio-political movement. If we acknowledge that governments will probably want to censor us whenever we start making their lives difficult (even if they're choosing not to do it now), that allows us to create tools to preempt censorship.

      So basically, even though Tor may not be needed now in the "free world" (since, let's face it, we aren't making very big waves), it is important to develop and implement it now in preparation for a situation where it may be absolutely vital.

    146. Re:legal basis by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Dumpster diving squatter, my ass. Is that where you also play interactive novel video games? Indeed, for such a concerned off-the-grid radical activist, you seem to spend a lot of time gaming. And of course, over here and here, you're playing techie and sounding suspicously like Just Another Corporate Sysadmin.

      With regards to the response of any entity to an attack, I'll only point out that you're the one hand-wringing and claiming the response is "violent and illegal." What "big waves" are you talking about? What is the response you're talking about? Unless you can provide some specifics, your rant is that of a paranoiac.

      The ironic part is that I do believe there is tremendous value in a system like Tor. There are people who need it. I strongly doubt you're one of them. I certainly am not. Yes we should both reserve the right to have access to such a system, but at this point I'm not aware of our government operating to suppress that right. (I assume you're American, due to this retarded and childish story you posted.)

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    147. Re:legal basis by xappax · · Score: 1

      :) Your commitment to researching and criticizing my personal situation is remarkable - and a bit creepy. While I can assure you that everything I have written on Slashdot is honest, suddenly I'm not really interested in providing more personal details of my life to someone who is evidently only interested in making fun of me. If you choose to believe that I therefore have something to hide, I guess there's nothing I can do about it.

      What "big waves" are you talking about? What is the response you're talking about? Unless you can provide some specifics, your rant is that of a paranoiac.

      The reason there are no specifics in my previous explanation is that government repression could apply to any number of situations, in any number of countries. If you believe that the US government has never violated citizen's right to free speech, I really don't have time to tell you all the ways you're wrong. If you're interested in learning, I'd encourage you to do some research on your own, maybe with COINTELPRO as a starting point. I'm not aware of anyone in the US being persecuted for either accessing or hosting Tor servers, so you're right about that. But if the US government is willing to shut down 20 anti-war websites and peek at all the log files, it doesn't seem like that much of a stretch to think that it would be valuable to use an anonymizing service both when hosting and accessing this kind of content.

      So, I think we've both made our points, possibly more than once. I'm done with this thread, so if you want to have the last word, go for it!

    148. Re:legal basis by CogDissident · · Score: 1

      Says the 885380 to the 2403? Respect seniority buddy.

    149. Re:legal basis by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Your commitment to researching and criticizing my personal situation is remarkable - and a bit creepy.

      Nothing creepy about it. You do realize you can just click on somebody's username and see whatever they've posted, right? I doubted the veracity of your claims, so I sought to review your earlier positions to see whether there was any consistencty. What I found was lacking. I don't care enough about you or your opinions to "make fun" of you -- I simply called bullshit where I saw it.

      As for the last word on the actual subject at hand, well, consider it yours, that really isn't of any interest to me. ;)

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    150. Re:legal basis by magetoo · · Score: 1
      It is important to note that the servers were siezed after a judge autorized the siezure. Once they notice that they cannot gain any info from the servers, they will be returned.
      Does that sort of thing still work in Germany? I'm asking because I know that here (Sweden), it doesn't. The prosecutor is still holding on to completely unrelated hardware that was taken during the Pirate Bay raid, for example. I'd love to have the option to move to a somewhat better country, if it has to come to that.


      I guess posting a week late won't exactly improve my chances of getting a response..

    151. Re:legal basis by Alphager · · Score: 1

      I always try to respond ;-) That sort of thing still works in germany, yes. It may take some time to get the papers in order, but should not take longer than two months.

  2. Why Logs Are Bad by RealBothersome · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Just another fine example of why logging your customer activity can be a bad thing.

    1. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by nstlgc · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes, finding those poor child porn collectors sure would be a bad thing.

      --
      I'm Rocco. I'm the +5 Funny man.
    2. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How exactly is this `a fine example' of why logs are `a bad thing' on the grounds it's to crack down on child porn abuse?

      You can complain all you like about invasion of personal privacy and rights, but don't be a tool.

    3. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It is a fine example because even though someone may have accessed a child pornography server through that TOR node, lots of other users who had not been involved in the case would have had their connection information seized as well if the server had kept logs.

    4. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I think he was referring to the fact that if you have logs, then you're computers could be confiscated in the event that someone used your service for any illegal activity. I mean, catching the bad guys is good and all, but you're still quite inconvenienced when you get your computers taken away. If you keep no logs, then they might not catch the bad guys, but they also don't have a reason to take your computers away.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    5. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by TheGreek · · Score: 1
      If you keep no logs, then they might not catch the bad guys, but they also don't have a reason to take your computers away.
      They won't know you don't keep logs until they seize your computers.
    6. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by hey · · Score: 1

      You can publicize that you don't keep logs.
      Eg https://www.spammimic.com/terms.shtml

    7. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by TheGreek · · Score: 1
      You can publicize that you don't keep logs.
      Yeah, there's lots of reason to believe you.
    8. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by pla · · Score: 1

      You can publicize that you don't keep logs.

      One problem with that idea - Tor doesn't keep logs, and anyone capable of analyzing a captured machine would know that. Therefore the police took these machines as more of a petulant "fuck you for exercising your rights and wanting anonymity" rather than as any plausible form of evidence.

      Yes, we all need to fight to keep our rights eroding as slowly as possible (but still eroding, make no mistake - Thus the need for a legislative reboot, aka "revolution", every few hundred years). But never forget that those we fight against won't just smile and merrily tolerate our refusal to become their willing slaves.

    9. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by Kjella · · Score: 1

      You can publicize that you don't keep logs.

      Except you won't have much of a choice anymore. The EU has passed their Data Retention Act, in the US it looks like they're happy that AT&T bends over for them (not to mention they already have vastly expanded powers in the Patriot Act already, legally). JAP got slapped with an injunction that basicly said "short-circuit your anonymity, or we're shutting you down". The only ones you can "trust" are those you don't need to trust like open Wi-Fi spots, and networks formed by completely normal individuals. You can slap a big ISP with a gag order, threats of huge liability and shut them up. Not so with a mass action against individuals, it'd leak in a heartbeat.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    10. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      finding those poor child porn collectors sure would be a bad thing.

      Finding and stopping people who are actually sexually abusing children is a darned good idea.

      But considering that people have been prosecuted for "child pornography" possession for fictional depictions, or for innocent cute pants-around-ankles shots of toddlers of the type parents have been known to take, yes, sometime it is a bad thing when "collectors" of "child porn" are found.

      Certainly it's a bad thing when we shred civil liberties to find people who are in mere possession of certain strings of bits.

      Sexual abuse of children is and should be a serious crime. Acting as an accessory to the sexual abuse of children by producing and selling recording of such acts in order to fund more abuse is and should be a serious crime. Fortunately, people who are selling something have to maintain something of a public profile so that their customers can find them, giving us a bit of a handle on catching them.

      Merely possessing or publishing images of the sexual abuse of children should be a civil matter, unauthorized publication of images.

      It's odd indeed that if I had a film of two teenagers making love before a maniac burst in and gruesomely killed them both, it would be more acceptable to publish the death footage than the sex footage.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    11. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by nstlgc · · Score: 1

      But considering that people have been prosecuted for "child pornography" possession for fictional depictions, or for innocent cute pants-around-ankles shots of toddlers of the type parents have been known to take, yes, sometime it is a bad thing when "collectors" of "child porn" are found.
      I don't see how this is relevant to this situation.

      Certainly it's a bad thing when we shred civil liberties to find people who are in mere possession of certain strings of bits.
      These are not just strings of bits, these are bits that make up a picture. Any illegal substance could be called a collection of atoms, but that won't hold up in court.

      --
      I'm Rocco. I'm the +5 Funny man.
    12. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In that case we need to hide who is running Tor.
      Do the cops on know the IP-address of the server?

    13. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Sure there is. Keeping logs requires space and you configuring it to run smoothly. Not keeping logs allows you to use smaller HDs and spares you the hassle.

      So is it likely that you don't keep logs if you say so?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by TheGreek · · Score: 1
      Sure there is. Keeping logs requires space and you configuring it to run smoothly. Not keeping logs allows you to use smaller HDs and spares you the hassle.
      Perhaps you should look into good compression and log rotation. Not hard to set up, saves a lot of space.

      So is it likely that you don't keep logs if you say so?
      Law enforcement comes to your door because your internet connection was used to access child pornography. You say it wasn't you, but was probably somebody using your anonymizing proxy for which you don't keep logs.

      And you expect them just to take your word for it and not execute a search warrant to take your computers for forensic analysis?
    15. Re:Why Logs Are Bad by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, not keeping logs saves 100% space. I don't know a compression algo that reaches that rate.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  3. Well, well, well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think with the recent furore surrounding AOL, Facebook and even that Craigslist incident, this is the final nail in the coffin of the idea that ANYTHING you do on the internet is anonymous. Surf carefully, people, or your actions will come back and bite you later.

    1. Re:Well, well, well by SamSim · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well said, Jeff.

  4. Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by johanw · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As far as I know and read the Tor documentation, Tor doesn't keep logs. So either the police is incompetent, doesn't know it and seizes the servers anyway (not unsurprising), or either they are irritated by an anonymous network they can't control and try to harrass as many people using it as they can, to try to break it down (also wouldn't surprise me). Or both options apply at the same time (most probable option IMO).

    1. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Lex-Man82 · · Score: 1

      What are the chances of getting IP information off it after doing some data recovery?

    2. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Brieeyebarr · · Score: 0

      I'm sure the logs weren't local. They were monitoring the servers and probably decided "Oh, we'll just seize the server and blame it on this child porn thing, no one will notice."

    3. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Delirium+Tremens · · Score: 1

      Zero. If their policy is not to keep logs, they probably don't event bother creating them in the first place.

    4. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you could not forbid onion routing services but wanted to send a signal that running a TOR server isn't a wise thing to do, what would you do?

    5. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by thelost · · Score: 1

      Or doing the only thing that they can under the circumstances? It's not unreasonable to give the Police a 3rd option, not just harassment or incompetence.

      I certainly don't support what they've done, but from their perspective they are doing the sensible thing and the appropriate thing. People should with-hold judgement for a little longer.

      --
      Promote Charity on Myspace, Show Your Colours!
    6. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Trashhalo · · Score: 1

      I am not quite sure what they are expecting to find. Even if the tor server did keep logs it would still be annoying trying to track down who these requests are coming from. If the servers they got are middle nodes then all they get in logs would be: this other middle node wants me to pass this encrypted data to another middle node. Only the exit node gets to see the request and the data that gets passed back. So if they are trying to get back to the source that way I would imagine they would need to seize every node along the way hoping each one kept logs. Also I would imagine many of the tor middle nodes are not located in Germany. The other possibility would be they are grabbing exit nodes. If thats the case AND these exit nodes keep logs then I don't think that reveals the source. It could lead back to the source if say a middle node wanted to login to a kiddy porn site with a username and the police know that username is associated with a certain person. So I guess I am saying on a tor network logging SHOULD be disabled. If some tor servers happen to have logging on it is not the end of the world as long as its not a exit node and if it is a exit node then it still doesn't reveal who you are just makes it alot easier. Disclaimer: I could be talking out of my ass, this is just based on my understanding of how the tor network works. Also I do not support kiddy porn this is just me thinking about privacy in general on a tor network.

      --
      Dooom
    7. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      For all intents and purposes it looks like "harrassing" is the answer. There are several articles about this (See http://www.boingboing.net/2006/09/10/report_german _police.html for a nice round up of them) which clearly indicate that the authorities were both aware of how TOR operates and aware that any data gleaned from the TOR servers would likely be uselss. The good news is that the owners of said servers are (currently at least) treated as witnesses and not suspects; the bad news is that all raided nodes were exit nodes and that at least in one instances the hard drive was wiped during the investigation before being returned. Arguably, they might want to ensure that the owners of the TOR servers did not somehow try to mask their own access to kiddie porn through it, but in all it looks like heavy handed harassment.

    8. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      OK, TOR doesn't keep logs, but is it possible to set up a honey-net TOR router that does keep logs? If I were law enforcement, that's what I would be doing.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    9. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Nuskrad · · Score: 2, Informative

      No. The whole point of Tor is that it uses multiple relay servers, and incremential encryption, meaning that the route of the packet can't be traced from any one machine.

    10. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Fuck the police, if they were competent they'd just got a disk image. It's not like they can get any info anyhow. How long now before Tor is illegal in Europe?

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    11. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by CreatureComfort · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or doing the only thing that they can under the circumstances?

      As long as we're coming up with and condoning police actions that are 1)useless in accomplishing their stated goal, 2)harassing innocent citizens that have broken no laws, and 3)designed to imtimidate society and quell anything that might reduce police power and control... well, they could have gone in and shot the guys operating these TOR nodes. Would have been just as effective as confiscating their computers in finding out who the kiddie porn people were, and as an added bonus, those dirty anonymizers would never do that again.

      --
      "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
      Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
    12. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by alcmaeon · · Score: 1

      or either they are irritated by an anonymous network they can't control and try to harrass as many people using it as they can, to try to break it down

      Bingo!

    13. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Depends, incompetent at what? The cops already recognise they are not competent enough to analyse what is on the machine so they send it to somebody who is. The same is true for all sorts of evidence that gets sent "to the lab".

      To me it seems like competent police work to hand this sort of thing to experts. To those who run TOR it sucks that law enforcement is a blunt instrument, but what choice does a competent cop have other than to "sieze all the computers and let the lab sort em out"?

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    14. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (posting anonymously to keep mod points) Unless you have data recovery that can recover data previously stored in Dynamic RAM....virtually zero. There might be something in the server's swap file, which is actually a scary thought, but realisticly not much chance of finding anything there either.

    15. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Lex-Man82 · · Score: 1

      So basically the German police are wasting everybody's time and money. Oh well I guess they've got to follow up all there leads.

    16. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Fred_A · · Score: 1
      I am not quite sure what they are expecting to find. Even if the tor server did keep logs it would still be annoying trying to track down who these requests are coming from.
      99% of "experienced" (as in "have been around the block a few times") Internet users have never heard of Tor. What makes you think the police, whichever country you pick will be any different ? They picked machines based on which ones accessed the site. That's it. They most likely don't have the faintest idea what Tor is, nor do they care because it's not their job. They can't know everything about everything, they're cops, not sysadmins.

      The owners of the seized nodes have most likely lost their machines (or will only get them back in a few years), but given the way an investigation works, there is no practical alternative. The machines are potential evidence and as such are collected. That's all there is to it. You have to follow the procedure "just in case", even if the stuff you grabbed ens up being useless.

      And yes it sucks. So if you run a Tor node or some sort of public service, don't do it on a critical box. And make backups.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    17. Re:Is the polica incompetent or harassing? by Trashhalo · · Score: 1

      You make some good points. I can't imagine random policeman reads the tor documentation on his lunch break.

      --
      Dooom
  5. Basically an open proxy by cerberusss · · Score: 2, Informative
    This is exactly why almost any shell or virtual private server provider has something in their policies like:
    Bouncers, anonymous proxy servers, Wingates, open relay SMTP servers, or other systems or mechanisms that allow remote users to connect through the system(s) to (an)other system(s), are not allowed.
    --
    8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
  6. Moo by Chacham · · Score: 1

    In other news, Slashdot is being suspended for letting adults read posts of minors. In response, Slashdot will be having an entry form where a poster needs to prove he is over eighteen, and then is driected to Digg.com instead.

    1. Re:Moo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In response, Slashdot will be having an entry form where a poster needs to prove he is over eighteen, and then is driected to Digg.com instead.

      Surely if they fail to prove they are over 18 they will be directed to Digg?

      Or do you have some other explanation for the comments on Digg?

    2. Re:Moo by jZnat · · Score: 1

      You mean that if the user is under eighteen, they get redirected to Digg? Sounds good to me!

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
  7. Automatic computer crime... by RyanFenton · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wonder how the law is worded in Germany - is the crime posession (in which case stray banner ads in your browser cache would be just as criminal), or is the crime the intentional act? The catch is that if the crime is over intentional act, then that law is a thought crime law, which is also bad - though it does protect against automatic guilt for detection.

    Sexual crimes against children are some of the most monsterous things mankind can do - and they do occur with a very high frequency, and they are worth detecting and stopped at every opportunity. But like most conceptual wars on horrible things, it collateral damage can go out of control when unchecked. Here's hoping that this guy is innocent, and that his case can at least set some boundries on law are acceptable in this horrible issue.

    Ryan Fenton

    1. Re:Automatic computer crime... by swarsron · · Score: 4, Informative

      The crime is posession. I know a case where police raided several homes because one picture of a cdrom full of porn pictures which you could order via internet was child porn. Most people didn't even notice it (several thousand pictures on one cd) but still got prosecuted for posessing child porn.

    2. Re:Automatic computer crime... by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      I honestly wouldn't be surprised to see that happen in the USA or pretty much any other country either. Your IP shows up in a kidde porn list, your server gets confiscated as evidence and held indefinitely. I'd hate to be a test case in an "Aiding and Abetting" charge, too. I could just see a prosecutor trying to float that one past a judge, too.

      If this sort of thing were routine, it might make a good way to deal with botnets. Acquire botnet info, install tor on the zombies, get zombies confiscated. Later, rinse, repeat. Having their systems confiscated a few times might drive the owners of those computers to take their system security more seriously.

      I've also wondered if a device like a Zaurus could be deployed in open wi-fi nodes or plugged into hard networks on the Internet. Do some Ninja infiltration into that company, duct tape device under a desk somewhere and plug it in to the network. It could probably sit there for months or years before being noticed, doing all sorts of who-knows-what? Running anonymizer proxies, sniffing smb passwords, whatever...

      These are all hypotheticals, of course. I would never seriously consider doing either one of these, personally. Though it would be fun to ninja-infiltrate a company at some point...

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    3. Re:Automatic computer crime... by CTachyon · · Score: 2, Informative

      If "intentional act" equals "thoughtcrime", then all degrees of murder and manslaughter are equivalent. Law has a long basis of judging degree of guilt depending on intent, and for good reason: someone who did it intentionally is more likely do it again. This makes the most sense in the murder/manslaughter distinction, but also applies to e.g. 2nd degree murder (a crime of passion, unique to the situation) versus 1st degree murder (a planned murder, something that might become a pattern) versus 1st degree murder with a hate crime enhancement (a planned murder targeting an entire class of people, something that's clearly a pattern already). These details are specific to U.S. law and even then vary from state to state, but the principles apply broadly.

      There is, of course, a key distinction between "intent" and "thoughtcrime": thoughtcrime is a thought that is illegal in itself; intent, while a thought, is only relevant if an actual physical crime has been committed beyond mere intent. (The line gets a bit blurry, of course, when you start dealing with charges like "Conspiracy to commit Foo", where the act of Foo was never actually carried out and might never have happened.)

      --
      Range Voting: preference intensity matters
    4. Re:Automatic computer crime... by zenthax · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Sexual crimes against children are some of the most monsterous things mankind can do - and they do occur with a very high frequency, and they are worth detecting and stopped at every opportunity.
      I'm thinking abusing the trust and power the public citizenry has place in your hands is one of the most monstrous things mankind can do and it does occur with a very high frequency
    5. Re:Automatic computer crime... by demigod · · Score: 1
      Sexual crimes against children are some of the most monsterous things mankind can do - and they do occur with a very high frequency


      "very high frequency", now that's kind of vague.

      Do you have any real stats? It doesn't appear that they are reported on the FBI's Uniform Crime Report.

      --
      "The last thing I want to do is deal with a bunch of people who want something."
      Major Major
    6. Re:Automatic computer crime... by value_added · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sexual crimes against children are some of the most monsterous things mankind can do - and they do occur with a very high frequency, and they are worth detecting and stopped at every opportunity.

      When I read words like these, I have to wonder if there is a purpose to such self-righteous posturing, or whether the poster expect everyone to share that leap of faith and assume it's relevant to the article or subject.

      Hate to disturb any heads that might have been nodding in unison, but what the hell. A reasonable estimate is that 99.99% of the crap that would/could be found is the same crap that's been shovelled and re-shovelled through usenet as far back as I remember. Have a look some time. The only real crime to be found (with rare exceptions) is the crime you would commit by looking (i.e., downloading) and that crime, as far as I'm concerned, is a very technical one. As for everything else -- provocative, lewd, in bad taste, shameful -- I can think of lots of words, but an organised police hunt to track down a bunch of wankers downloading pictures protects no one and is a misplaced effort at best. If you're looking for likely targets of people who do, in fact, commit real crimes against children, you might start by looking at families -- aunts, uncles and close relatives. Those folks rarely take pictures, however, let alone publish evidence of their crimes for everyone on the the internet to share.

      I'm reminded of something I heard not too long ago on a show hosted by that emotional snow-job of a wanna-be-anchor by the name of Anderson Cooper. He was speaking with some law enforcement officer who informed him with requisite officiousness that there were "over 100,000 child pornography sites" on the internet. Shit, you'd think with that many we'd all be tripping over them every day! But we don't. Go figure. The veteran reporter's reply was "Gee, I didn't know that."

      Journalism at it's finest.

      What does exists, to varying degrees, is the content from a bunch o teen modelling sites (many in the US) and a few websites here and there that are most likely run by Russian mafia that belong in the provocative, lewd, or in bad taste category (depending on one's jurisdiction, religeous affiliation and/or degree of interest in prurient matter). Criminals? Most likely, at least the Russian ones. But no monsters.

    7. Re:Automatic computer crime... by kt0157 · · Score: 1

      "Sexual crimes against children are some of the most monsterous things mankind can do"

      Not wishing to belittle the offence, I do think that having your skull repeatedly pierced by an electric drill and then your head cut off is more monstrous. Something that now happens on a daily basis in Iraq. So if you were to put your limited time and effort into stopping something bad, should it (a) be spent battling TOR, or (b) be spent bringing Rumsfeld to the International Criminal Court?

      K.

    8. Re:Automatic computer crime... by cain · · Score: 1

      Cite? Sounds like an urban legend to me...

    9. Re:Automatic computer crime... by pavon · · Score: 1

      Law has a long basis of judging degree of guilt depending on intent, and for good reason: someone who did it intentionally is more likely do it again.

      I agree that intent != thoughtcrime, but this is a horrible justification of it. The reason that intent is an acceptable criterion is because it shows how cupable, or how much at fault you were for the crime. If someone dies at your hands as the result of negligance you are more at fault than if they died as the result of an unpreventable accident. If you willingly and knowingly maintain a dangerous work environment, then you are more at fault than someone whose negligance was due to ignorance. If you plan and and carry out a murder you are more at fault than the guy you coerced into participating. The punishment for any offence should be capped at the damage it caused to the victim and society at whole, in this case, death penalty and costs of policing murders. However, it is perfectly just to have a lesser punishment than this if you are not entirely at fault for the crime, in fact it is necissary for justice to be upheld.

      On the other hand if the only way that you can justify increasing someone's punishment is that they more likely to commit another crime, then you are punishing them for something that they have not done - you are punishing them for precrime. It doesn't matter that they commited a crime in the past - once they have served a reasonable sentence for their crime then they are done, and are just as innocent as anyone else in society. Any additional punishment placed on top of them without additional crime committed is unjust.

    10. Re:Automatic computer crime... by euri.ca · · Score: 1

      >The punishment for any offence should be capped at the damage it caused to the victim and society at whole I disagree slightly, there are a lot of crimes like petty theft whereby if the punishment for the theft of $20 was a $20 fine it's not a punishment at all. Especially for clearly criminal but petty behaviour (physical theft) you need a larger punishment to reflect the fact that you just can't catch them every time.

    11. Re:Automatic computer crime... by swarsron · · Score: 1

      I can't give a you a URL to the specific case. The source is a friend of mine who's with the police. He was directly involved in the investigation.

      But if you can read german: http://dejure.org/gesetze/StGB/184b.html
      I can't translate it all (as you can guess english is not my first language and the formulations in german law texts are quite complicated) but the headline "Verbreitung, Erwerb und Besitz kinderpornographischer Schriften" translates to "distribution, acquisition and posession of child pornography" so posession is clearly a crime which can be punished with up to two years prison

  8. Tor can and does log data. by hal9000(jr) · · Score: 2, Informative

    Not interesting

    As far as I know and read the Tor documentation, Tor doesn't keep logs.

    Read first, then post.

    By default, Tor logs to the screen (it's called "standard out", or "stdout" for short) at log-level notice. However, some Tor packages (notably the ones for OS X, Debian, Red Hat, etc) change the default logging so it logs to a file, and then Tor runs in the background.

  9. I use tor by The+MAZZTer · · Score: 1

    Because my school's network is prejudiced against IRC connections. They last maybe all of 5 seconds. IRC over SSL works fine, but unfortunately not all networks support it. Only downside to using tor for IRC is that some idiots have gone and gotten some tor nodes glined (ie banned).

    Luckily tor servers are run by people from all over the world. It would have to take a very large cooperative international effort in order to bring down tor... hopefully the majority of governments realize that would be a stupid idea.

    1. Re:I use tor by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ``Only downside to using tor for IRC is that some idiots have gone and gotten some tor nodes glined (ie banned).''

      That's kind of the problem I have with tor. In the absence of better identifying information, how else do you fight abuse than by throwing the baby (good tor users) out with the bathwater (abusers using tor)? The same applies to whole networks that operate from behind NAT or proxies, etc.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    2. Re:I use tor by Magada · · Score: 1

      Do port forwarding over ssh/ssl to a proxy outside your school's ZOC. No reason for you to use the TOR network. Unless you have other reasons to do so.
      On the other hand, TOR is vulnerable specifically because there are dedicated exit points, making attacks against the whole network less expensive.

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    3. Re:I use tor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If governments begin charging operators of TOR nodes as accomplices in whatever crime that happens to be committed via TOR, then the resulting chilling effect WILL effectively shut down TOR.

    4. Re:I use tor by daranz · · Score: 1

      Your other choice would be setting up ssh on your home machine, and then bringing putty with you on a thumbdrive (assuming the machines you're using are running Windows). You can also run ssh over a port like 443 or 80, to decrease the chances of it being blocked.

      Many IRC networks just ban every Tor exitnode outright in fear of abuse. The list of exitnodes is available and it's not going to be hidden.

      --
      This is a sig. It is appended to the end of comments I post.
    5. Re:I use tor by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      I can't imagine IRCing over Tor. Tor is as slow as molasses. The lag, everything... gah!

    6. Re:I use tor by DCGregoryA · · Score: 1

      Not really.

      If they wanted to knock out Tor, all they'd have to do is DDOS the system. Its not like your typical government doesn't have the resources to pull off something simple as that.

      Its by sheer grace that it hasn't been done already. I wouldn't count on it lasting forever though. They'll probably DDOS the system from a slew of gov owned zombie machines and try to blame it on hackers.

  10. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by rmsmith · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I find it ironic that you spent as much of this time that is oh-so-precious as you did to rant at people you've never met and, most likely, never will meet, to stop allegedly wasting their time.

  11. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Kamineko · · Score: 2, Funny
    (here's a hint: watching Cowboy Bebop in your jammies and eating a bowl of Shreddies is *not* "getting on with your life")

    Not your life, maybe.

  12. Tor logs by 1u3hr · · Score: 5, Interesting
    From Tor man page

    Log minSeverity[-maxSeverity] stderr|stdout|syslog
    Send all messages between minSeverity and maxSeverity to the standard output stream, the standard error stream, or to the system log. (The "syslog" value is only supported on Unix.) Recognized severity levels are debug, info, notice, warn, and err. We advise using "notice" in most cases, since anything more verbose may provide sensitive information to an attacker who obtains the logs. If only one severity level is given, all messages of that level or higher will be sent to the listed destination.

    SafeLogging 0|1
    If 1, Tor replaces potentially sensitive strings in the logs (e.g. addresses) with the string [scrubbed]. This way logs can still be useful, but they don't leave behind personally identifying information about what sites a user might have visited. (Default: 1)


    So one would have to deliberately change several defaults to get logs with any data the cops might be interested in. From their point of view, worth a try, but unlikely to be fruitful.
    1. Re:Tor logs by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      If I were the cops and there were any useful way to get data out of a TOR router, I would set up several honey-pots.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    2. Re:Tor logs by dr_d_19 · · Score: 1

      If TOR can be configured this way, is there anything stopping the police from setting up a couple of TOR nodes themselves and simply keep the logging at a maximum? Or actually modifying the TOR source to actively monitor the activity?

    3. Re:Tor logs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't claim to fully understand Tor, but here goes.

      A normal Tor connection looks like this:

      application client <-> tor client <-> node 1 <-> node 2 <-> exit node <-> application server

      Everything from the tor client to the exit node is encrypted in an "onion" fashion, i.e. each node can only decrypt the layer that is intended for it. This means the first node only knows the source and the next node, but not the destination (the web site the user accesses, for example). The second node knows neither the source nor the destination, just the previous and the next node. And finally, the exit node only knows the previous node and the destination.

      This has two implications. Exit nodes know your traffic if you don't use encryption on the application layer. Don't use your webmail over Tor unencrypted for example! Everyone can setup an exit node and sniff passwords or other data which could lead back to the source.

      Secondly, someone setting up a single Tor node can never know both the source and the destination of the traffic. To do that, someone would have to setup a large number of nodes and be able to force tor clients to use all his nodes as the chain. Since tor clients frequently change the chain and choose praticipating nodes randomly, that's pretty much ensuring anonymity.

    4. Re:Tor logs by eosp · · Score: 1
      Then they would get the node before that. Let's use this diagram:

      You - Tor1 - Tor2 - Tor3 - TorExitNode - Internet

      To find you, the police would have to control anything starting with "Tor". Of course, in the real thing this is more like 100 randomly selected nodes, not just 3.

    5. Re:Tor logs by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      If I understand how TOR works, yes, they could. And they'd get loads of info on which node the request came from and to which node it was forwarded... here and there the site will be requested from that computer, but not much too often.

      All in all, they most likely wouldn't get much out of it, just like they won't get anything out of this.
      Except, of course, intimidating people who use TOR, which seems to be the primary reason the nodes were confiscated.

      If all the people whose computers have been used in the anonymizing network get their computers confiscated like criminals, soon enough everyone participating in such a network will face the same risk.
      Basically, it's like all the apartments through which a fugitive passed running from the police became sealed as crime scenes and the families living there evicted until he's been caught and tried, although the fugitive only broke a few windows getting in and straight out.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    6. Re:Tor logs by grimdonkey · · Score: 1
      If I were the cops and there were any useful way to get data out of a TOR router, I would set up several honey-pots.

      It's onion routing - it has layers. Your 'honeypot' will only give away the previous layer. Considering there are 800 nodes now, you have... ermm... very very small odds of catching someone.
    7. Re:Tor logs by grimdonkey · · Score: 1

      I might have been misleading. I did not mean you are routed through all the nodes.

    8. Re:Tor logs by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, your odds get better as the number of connections and the number of honeypot rises. Since a connection is rarely only one (especially when you're dealing with bboards or such), and if you have reasonably many computers running, you might get a "complete" route every now and then.

      But, if you have that, you certainly won't seize computers and cause a riot. More likely, the whole deal is about cutting down anonymous proxies.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    9. Re:Tor logs by Splab · · Score: 1

      You really should know what you talk about before posting. Honeypots won't do squat agtainst TOR, you need global control at link level and timeing attacks (or I think about 90% of the nodes) to link each request with a peer.

  13. You forgot; by empaler · · Score: 3, Funny

    1.2. I've answered why already twice, are you going to be making trouble?

  14. It's Tor not TOR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't capitalize every letter in the name.

  15. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by kalirion · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Come on, man, Cowboy Bebop is so 20th century..... Get with the program and watch some Samurai Champloo already.

  16. to break the rules by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I'm not saying that the rules are 'good' rules, but you, exactly like the child pornographers, are using tor to avoid the rules.

    The point here is that certain 'freedoms' have costs and limits. Your demand to avoid the petty rules of your school about IRC is merely a matter of degree away from a child pornographers demand to view kiddie porn unmolested.

    And meanwhile, with the current international paranoia, the powers that be will always be very interested in who doesn't want to be listened to.

    --
    init 11 - for when you need that edge.
    1. Re:to break the rules by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      I just have to ask: Why are you comparing the propogation of child porn to using IRC at school? One is exploitative and wrong, the other completely harmless while breaking a rule.

      Error: Invalid comparison.

    2. Re:to break the rules by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 1
      Because they're both breaking the rules. Speeding and murder are both against the law, and both will get you in trouble with the police. That doesn't mean that they're morally equivalent, but they are comparable. And here's the rub, whilst we both agree that using IRC is not in the same league as kiddie porn, that's a purely relatavistic/subjective viewpoint.

      --
      init 11 - for when you need that edge.
    3. Re:to break the rules by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Again, I beg to differ. There is indeed an objective moral difference between IRC and child porn, even when both break rules. Child porn hurts and exploits children, while IRC prints text on a screen.

      Let's count the victims, shall we?
      Child Pornography: X children, where X = however many were told they'd never see Mommy and Daddy again if they didn't do as they were told. Or whatever evil shit child pornographers do to get the kids how they want.
      IRC: Nobody.

      Lo and behold, an objective difference clearly emerges between IRC and child pornography. I don't see why you're so innured to arbitrary rules when you could apply objective morality for yourself.

    4. Re:to break the rules by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 1
      You make the equation people hurt = morally bad. Well, er, that's your viewpoint, and mine, but it ain't neccessarily so. Moral values are relativistic/subjective.

      Let's take an easy to understand example. I like to smoke a little hash, I have done for over thirty years. When I go to buy my hash I quite often pick up a bit extra for a mate.

      My point of view - I'm a good mate helping out a friend by getting him some hash he wants.

      The Daily Mail point of view - I'm a drug dealer who thoroughly deserves serious jail time.

      Neither of us is right. It could even be said that the Daily Mail view has more moral value because it reflects the currant law of the land. Indeed, it may be the majority view, but neither of us can construct a logical, reasoned argument for our point of view that doesn't rest somewhere on a belief, and at this belief you need to say I/society feel that X is good/bad, end of story. (c.f Collingwood - ultimate presuppositions)

      --
      init 11 - for when you need that edge.
    5. Re:to break the rules by nasch · · Score: 1
      You make the equation people hurt = morally bad. Well, er, that's your viewpoint, and mine, but it ain't neccessarily so. Moral values are relativistic/subjective.
      Can you come up with any moral theory (that you didn't just make up) that doesn't condemn harming people? Technically you could make up anything and say that it's your moral theory, but let's talk about morals that are actually espoused and practiced by people in the real world.

      Neither of us is right. It could even be said that the Daily Mail view has more moral value because it reflects the currant law of the land.
      Law derives legitimacy from morality, but the reverse is not true.
    6. Re:to break the rules by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 1
      Many ancient (and some not so ancient) civilisations believed that slavery was moral. Slavery, by it's very nature, hurts people by depriving them of their humanity. It may well be that in a few hundred years the way the west exploits the third world will be viewed with equal abhorance. Who knows?

      Current relativistic morality believes slavery is bad. This comes back to my original point. Moral values are, at best, relativistic, and, more usually, subjective. However, you, and those after kiddie porn, are both using tor for the same thing, to circumvent the rules. This is not a moral position, this is a quasi legal position.

      --
      init 11 - for when you need that edge.
    7. Re:to break the rules by nasch · · Score: 1
      However, you, and those after kiddie porn, are both using tor for the same thing, to circumvent the rules. This is not a moral position, this is a quasi legal position.
      First, I don't use tor. Second, even if I did I wouldn't necessarily be breaking any rules. Third, by stating that using tor for any reason to break a rule is equivalent, you're claiming that all rules are equal. So you now have to defend the position that a ban on IRC use is equivalent, either legally or morally, to a ban on child pornography. Or a ban on conspiracy to commit murder. Proceed.
    8. Re:to break the rules by jthill · · Score: 1
      merely a matter of degree

      I bet that line works great with people you can punish for detectably regarding it as idiotic.

      I agree that kids bypassing school rules isn't much of an argument for TOR. You can't make a simple point without putting your thumb on the scales like that? You should be ashamed.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    9. Re:to break the rules by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Law derives legitimacy from morality, but the reverse is not true.

      This is the best sentence I've read in months.

    10. Re:to break the rules by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can you come up with any moral theory (that you didn't just make up) that doesn't condemn harming people?

      Most moralizers, particularly conservative religious fundamentalist sorts, have escape clauses that allow them to harm others. For a simple and topical example, isn't killing or imprisoning someone, say a pedophile or a terrorist, causing harm to that individual? Justification of any action other than to "turn the other cheek" is an admission that your moral theory "doesn't condemn harming people" except in a relativistic or subjective manner.

      Another poster raised a question that got me thinking. "Is All Child / Adult Sexual Contact Abuse?". I would recast that question as "is it harmful, and, if so, why?" In some cultures (including, until not so very long ago, European and American cultures) the distinction between child and adult is not very clearly defined. What boundry exists may be very different from what is generally considered appropriate in contemporary western cultures. It may be wrong (cultural chauvanism) to judge contact between what we in the US or parts of Europe consider adults and children outside of the cultural context in which that contact occurs. In the interest of stirring the debate, an additional point to consider is the possibility that the sexual contact itself doesn't cause harm, rather the harm is caused by the cultural context in which the contact occurs.

      Furthermore, what is considered child pornography in many places does not require any evidence of sexual contact at all. In Japan, it is common for parents to bathe with their children until their teens and young daughters are often see in the mens side of public baths with their fathers (never been in the women's sides of the onsens so can't comment about what happens over there). If I were to snap a pic of this and send it to you to prove the point, you could be arrested in the US for possession of "child pornography". Again, context makes a big difference. In Japan, it is considered healthy for children to see adults of the opposite sex in the buff. The logic being that then the children will grow up without odd hangups or distorted perceptions and expectations about the opposite sex. Don't know how well it works, but that is the idea.

      In the US, if word spread around about dad soaping up his ten year old daughter in the bath, many people would consider it some sort of sexual abuse, particularly if he was doing it in some public place. Here it is considered bonding and is healthy. The cultural context makes all the difference.

  17. give it up for authoritarianism by moxley · · Score: 5, Interesting

    These governments want total control and will do whatever is necessary to get it - including subverting their own laws, false flag attacks, manipulation of the public via mainstream corporate media distortions etc.

    BY the time their goals are achieved the internet will probably be like an interactive version of MSNBC crossed with the home shopping network.

    Anonymity and privacy online will be a thing of the past. All dissenting viewpoints will be monitored; no, wait, ALL viewpoints will be monitored.

    Things like TOR which promote freedom and privacy will not be tolerated by these fasicsts, and they will find a way to subvert or desrtoy them - if the child porn argument doesn't work then they'll use the oldest trick in the book: There are terra-ists out there, they're gonna get us! We must take away your freedom to keep you safe. Give it up for safety, trust us, we know what's best and we have your best interest in mind.

    1. Re:give it up for authoritarianism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So just because you dissagree with his comment and find it stupid you want it removed/banned from the site? arent you then realy confirming his suspicions a little bit?

    2. Re:give it up for authoritarianism by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 1

      Anonymity and privacy online will be a thing of the past. All dissenting viewpoints will be monitored; no, wait, ALL viewpoints will be monitored.

      Hello 'moxley'. Have you been forgetting to take your pills again?

      Stop playing as a child revolutionary, give up on the paranoia and grow up.

      --
      Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
    3. Re:give it up for authoritarianism by moxley · · Score: 1

      Oh please - it's interesting how you're telling me to grow up, yet you're the one who is trying to invalidate my point of view by what amounts to calling names.

      There is a deeper level of politics going on in America than the 2 party system, it's about playing both sides of any conflict in order to achieve the goal. I would call it vigilance, which is something that is the responsibility of all Americans, unfortunately too many of us are content to believe that CNN and MSNBC will be vigilant for them; and besides, even if I am paranoid by your standards, I think there is good reason to be.

      If the political reality of America in 2006 (vs what you find in the mainstreasm media) is too much for you to handle - you may wish to stick with Douglas Adams; or maybe that's the problem, too much fantasy and not enough reality.

  18. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Bob_Villa · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    This is a stereotype. Many Americans like myself are very concerned about the world's problems, the environment which is being destroyed, and many other things that are going wrong with this world. Some people will hide from the world and its problems. They choose alcohol, or drugs, or video games, or some other distraction to take their mind off of life. But we don't all do this.

    I disagree heavily with the current administration's policies. I will do my part and vote against them in the Fall election. Hopefully if the Democrats can take control then Bush the madman will lose some of his power, but our superpower status as a country is being abused and ruined by a man who is waging his own holy war against muslims. I think everyone should be able to plainly see that the US needs another evil enemy to fight without Russia, so they decided the muslims of the world are the next big threat.

    I think if we pulled our army out of every country, cut its funding dramatically and used money to help poor third world countries learn to become self sufficient and generate jobs for many of their citizens that this would go a lot further towards combating terrorism then taking over countries that we don't agree with and rebuilding 'democratic' governments for them. What if China took over countries for fun and made them 'communist' to make them better? We would cry foul pretty quickly.

    Anyway, I know this is a long answer to your slam against Americans, and I'll probably get flagged as troll and/or offtopic too, but some of us are nice people who want our country to be noble again, the country other countries wished they could be. Now most of them hate us because of Bush and his policies.

  19. That's happened here in the US by MikeRT · · Score: 1

    They pulled that crap with a Usnet provider, but our legal system actually provided the provider with some recourse against the police that moderated their seizure of equipment. The root problem in these sorts of cases is that the police can't seem to get competent forensic techs for this sort of thing. I don't know how it is in Germany, but in the US it's not for lack of money in many jurisdictions. I'd blame it in general on the police culture.

  20. Not for the unwashed masses, anyway. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Remember Bronfman's declaration about anonymity?
    "Anonymity, on the other hand, means being able to get away with stealing, or hacking, or disseminating illegal material on the Internet - and presuming the right that nobody should know who you are. There is no such right. This is nothing more than the digital equivalent of putting on a ski mask when you rob a bank."
    Edgar Bronfman, Jr., CEO Seagram
    Only the rich and powerful can enjoy true anonymity.

    The rest of the unwashed masses are to be tagged and followed "for their own good" (according to the police).

    If you listened to the police, they would jail everyone for their own good.

    1. Re:Not for the unwashed masses, anyway. by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      Only the rich and powerful can enjoy true anonymity.

      I wonder if putting on a ski mask and robbing a bank is also equivalent to not telling all your friends (and significant other) when you hire a prostitute or have an affair? Most rich people do that at one time or another and try to keep it secret. Same with financial assets and business deals. Heaven forbid the government monitor confidential business communications!

    2. Re:Not for the unwashed masses, anyway. by Becquerel · · Score: 1

      Great quote. The obvious retort is that banning people from wearing masks in banks, is not the same as removing anonymity everywhere, ie banning all kinds of masks completely everywhere.

      --
      My spelling isn't bad, I'm evolving the language
  21. Exit nodes? by hellvis80 · · Score: 1

    Are they just seizing exit nodes or what? If not then I'm even more worried.

  22. Why keep logs at all? by xmuskrat · · Score: 1

    If you run something like Tor, why keep logs at all?

    --
    activestudios web design
  23. log(0) by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why do anonymizers keep logs? A perfect anonymizer would keep no logs, be stateless, offer no sign of a transaction once closed. That probably wouldn't actually work, or be maintainable. But why not logs only to Flash, overwritten with random data after every transaction is completed? Transient encrypted logs useable only within the transaction, with the key deleted along with the rest of the log?

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:log(0) by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Really? Tor has settings that let you decide how much logging to do, and also allow concealment of any sensitive information. The software probably just has logging to help in debugging itself and the Tor network.

    2. Re:log(0) by Darren+Bane · · Score: 2, Informative

      The information Tor logs is useless to police. Its stuff like daemon startup time, shutdown time, circuit changeover time. Nothing to do with the actual data passed.

      --
      Darren Bane
    3. Re:log(0) by etymxris · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, the Tor exit nodes were making GET and POST requests against some kiddy porn web server. The web server itself, not part of the Tor network, logged the IPs of the Tor nodes. There is no way to prevent this, Tor has no control over what the web server chooses to log. The Tor nodes themselves probably did not log anything useful, and so would be a deadend for police. However, since the Tor exit nodes can be conduits for good and bad, the police certainly are creating a chilling effect against running such nodes. If you run an exit node, you will likely get your computer seized.

    4. Re:log(0) by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Doesn't that make all ISP proxy servers targets? Won't this chilling effect encourage ISPs to install even more spybugs for police, on all kinds of traffic and application streams?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    5. Re:log(0) by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Nothing in the world is easier than not implementing logging. The main reason is that such services get tons of flak from all directions if they don't implement any kind of logging. They're perfectly happy to collect logs to serve the relatively few warrants they get (you know, those things given out by courts and accepted as part of the justice process) and rake in the cash from all the paranoid people (or those that seek anonymity from people that can't get warrants). As long as they don't go flashing them around or hand them over wholesale to the government, most people actually don't have a problem with that.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    6. Re:log(0) by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      "The main reason is that such services get tons of flak from all directions if they don't implement any kind of logging."

      Can you be more specific about which kinds of flak and which directions? After all, that is the crux of the entire problem we're discussing. If they get a legit warrant and don't have logs, why is it their problem?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  24. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WTF? Samurai Champloo is the worst piece of crap to come out of Japan since the last 2 episodes of Evangelion.

  25. Define Child by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sexual crimes against children are some of the most monsterous things mankind can do - and they do occur with a very high frequency...


    Is taking nude photos of a girl who is 17 years and 11 months old some of the most monsterous (sic) things mankind can do? According to Albert Gonzalez it is. Is it monstrous to take nude photos of a woman made up to look like a young girl? Maybe your age limit should be 21 years to be sure.

    The current withchunt on pedophiles fails to make a distinction between act against a 5 year old, and those of a seventeen year old. A Seventeen year old can be accepted in the army and carry a gun, but is not mature enough to make decisions about their own bodies. Makes sense to me...
    1. Re:Define Child by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      It's as sensible as many "age of permission" laws. There are states where you can get a license with 18 or even 16, but can't drink booze unless you're at least 21. In other words, you're enabled to kill someone by running over him before being able to kill yourself with alcohole poisoning.

      The mind boggles, ain't it?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Define Child by Catbeller · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A seventeen year old can legally carry a rifle and shoot people, and be shot in return, if they join the armed forces. You can kill, but you can't have sex. The comparisons are endless.

      And if everyone who had crossed the age-limit lines in real life were actually identified and arrested, over half the damned country would be in prison.

      This kiddie porn scare is the witchhunt of our times. No actual numbers, just fear, accusation and intimidation.

      And to put some gasoline onto the fire here, I say with fervor that those who chase the pedophiles are almost certainly pedos themselves. I mean who else has the biggest kiddie porn collections but the kiddie porn crusaders? Think about it. Kick in a door of a righteous preacher and he's always closeted with the demons he rails most against.

    3. Re:Define Child by QCompson · · Score: 1

      Also crazy:
      In many states you can legally have sex with a 16, 17 year old girl, yet if you take a nude picture of her, you can go to prison.

      I only collect grandma porn (60+), just to be sure.

    4. Re:Define Child by presarioD · · Score: 1
      And to put some gasoline onto the fire here, I say with fervor that those who chase the pedophiles are almost certainly pedos themselves. I mean who else has the biggest kiddie porn collections but the kiddie porn crusaders? Think about it. Kick in a door of a righteous preacher and he's always closeted with the demons he rails most against.
      Ahhhhh, if only I had mod points for you, what a perfectly true statement...
      --
      Yam, yam, uga booga, yam, yam, yade, yade, uga booga, yam, yam, yade, yade
  26. take your thought one step further by Alphager · · Score: 1

    Oh yeah, we stopped searching for that murder. Ok, we got his fingerprints, but we would have to find a suspect to try a match on him, and that is pretty annoying.

    1. Re:take your thought one step further by Trashhalo · · Score: 1

      Hmmm maybe I was off by saying annoying. I meant near impossible. You would need to not only get every middle node in the chain but every node would have to have logging on. If even a single node had logging disabled then you can't trace it back. On top of that as I said many of the nodes exist outside the country of investigation which means convincing other governments that you have enough evidence to seize their citizens equipment. What are the chances of all this happening? I would guess they would have better luck consulting a psychic medium on the location of the downloader.

      So I dont really see the fingerprint example as the same. There are too many barriers taking that path.

      --
      Dooom
    2. Re:take your thought one step further by Alphager · · Score: 1

      It is extremely unlikely that they succeed, yes. However, there is a chance. They are bound by law to follow EVERY lead they have. This lead will end right at the servers.

  27. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure I'm far from the only one to point this out, but the current administration will be leaving office no matter how you vote this Fall - its two terms are up.

  28. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Teun · · Score: 4, Insightful
    What if China took over countries for fun and made them 'communist' to make them better? We would cry foul pretty quickly.

    Tibet, anyone?

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  29. Lesson I have learned by messju · · Score: 1

    The story teached me that you should not run a tor exit node (in Germany) on a server that you cannot walk out in thirty seconds flat if you spot the heat around the corner. [in style of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_(film) ]

    If you don't want too much troule but want to donate: run a middleman only node.

  30. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think if we pulled our army out of every country

    Nobody cares a fucking shit what you think.

  31. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Bob_Villa · · Score: 0, Troll

    But if he can lose his power due to Democrats taking the House and Senate, he will have a very useless final two years. And if we could impeach him and Cheney, that would be a nice bonus. :) They really need to be punished for what they've done to our country and so many others.

  32. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ergo Proxy > *

    Fuck you shinsen-subs!

  33. Hark at the privicy freaks. by EddyPearson · · Score: 0

    This is the part where all the privicy freaks get outraged and start hurling all-too-vague legal mumbo jumbo around the comment system.

    I think this is TOTALLY reasonable, any computer using an IP that had accessed these child porn servers would have been seized and quite rightly so. I mean, if Tor servers were immune to this kind of thing, then all i'd have to do is setup my PC as an exit node and i could browse disturbing images to my hearts content, and not worry about legal action.

    Another thing i'd mention is Tor is given such a whiter-than-white public image by the supporters (the privicy freaks i mentioned) that people often lose sight of its purpose, which is to make you anonymous on the internet. Now forgive me for saying it, and I accept that certain places like china ARE affected by censorship and more legit reasons for wanting privicy, but in the vast majority of countries your internet history isn't tracked and there are not govenment agents trying to read your e-mail. In places like this, there is only one reason to use Tor and be "private" which is becuase you are doing something illicit that you dont want a legal entity to find.

    I'm sorry, but i will not believe that 99% of the users of Tor are checking their e-mails. Quite the opposite, I'd hazard a guess that 90% of the traffic going through Tor IS doing something questionable, and this being the end result is hardly surprising.

    Ed

    --
    You feel sleepy. Close your eyes. The opinions stated above are yours. You cannot imagine why you ever felt otherwise.
    1. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by MrNaz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Any particular reason that you think browsing disturbing images should be a crime? I agree, it'd make you a sick whacko, but since when did we decide to lock up all sick whackos even if they didn't actually do anything? I think I must have missed something while I was on safari in Iran...

      --
      I hate printers.
    2. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whilst I broadly agree with your viewpoint, who defines what is "questionable" and what is not? Given that (AFAIK) UK ISPs are obliged by law to record web site visits of all UK residents, maybe I don't want anyone to know that I like to visit "Grandma's Spread4U" wesbites in my spare time (!), and frankly, why should anyone else know. There will come a time when lives and careers will be made or broken on this type of harmless information - each erosion of the privacy laws brings us one step closer to that day.

    3. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by ledow · · Score: 1

      I'm not a privacy freak (I don't care about my cookies and I'm not bothered enough to encrypt anything other than passwords and monetary transactions) but I can think of more than a few legitimate reasons why a resident of a "free" country would want to do this without even taxing my brain (for what it's worth, I live in the UK and am applying the below to that country). Bear in mind that I too doubt that these are the primary uses of the system but you can't just say that anonymity means you're doing evil, no more than you can say that saying "No comment" means you did it.

      - Whistleblowing on your government, politicians, large organisations etc. - not something that you want them to be able to easily trace back to you. We've had MI5 agents who needed to whistleblow on their own governments, we've had soldiers whistleblow on things like prisoner treatment, weapons failures, etc. These sorts of things are in the news regularly and without a guaranteed anonymous channel, they could not occur and we would not know they were going on.

      - Posting about your employer - I have lovely employers and still I come across situations which I consider to be inappropriate or hazardous. If I want to publicly display these concerns, anonymity is there for me to do so freely without risking my job. I want to be able to tell a funny story of someone's stupidity without getting sacked just because it was traced back to me. I have made comments on Slashdot when logged in as Anonymous Coward. Not all sites are as careful about who sees the poster's information.

      - Posting ABOUT censorship. How would we know that China censored webpages if it wasn't for people IN China or who have visited China being able to tell us without fear of persecution? This is how human rights violations come to the news, not by the perpetrators, but by the victims.

      - Anonymously reporting crimes, such as the mentioned child pornography. Many people are in sensitive careers but feel strongly enough to report sites/incidents/people when they accidentally stumble across them, and they should be able to. Although the police will almost certainly guarantee your anonymity (there are things like the Internet Watch Foundation etc. for just this purpose), so much the better if you can guarantee your own anonymity FIRST.

      - Downloading from "foreign" IP's for test purposes. Many's the time I've had features work on my own servers but only from particular netblocks (either deliberately or accidentally) and the only way to test that is to access it via a remote proxy. Similarly for blocking cookies etc. if you want to "pretend" to be a real visitor without the baggage that your development machines will no doubt have on them.

      - Use of "foreign" IP's to bypass Spam blacklists (which, no matter what you say, cannot be accurate - my ISP has been blocked temporarily before because of a mistake and I fortunately had other email providers to use, if not Tor could have helped), geo-location restrictions etc.

      I imagine that most of the traffic on Tor (by number of bytes) is probably filesharing, spamming, hacking etc. But I should think that the majority of the CONNECTIONS are people who just browse through Tor constantly because then they "feel safe", and don't bother to turn it off when they are browing non-sensitive material.

    4. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by nasch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The theory is (you're talking about child porn right?) that the consumers of it create demand. Going after them reduces demand and helps keep this from happening to kids. I don't know if it works or not, but if it does it's certainly an appropriate strategy IMO.

    5. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Anonymously reporting crimes, such as the mentioned child pornography. Many people are in sensitive careers but feel strongly enough to report sites/incidents/people when they accidentally stumble across them, and they should be able to. Although the police will almost certainly guarantee your anonymity (there are things like the Internet Watch Foundation etc. for just this purpose), so much the better if you can guarantee your own anonymity FIRST.

      I'm in exactly this situation. We're doing forensics, and we're usually locked down by TIGHT NDAs, with a hefty price tag attached should we rat to anyone. Yes, if we hand over a customer who happens to have "illegal" content on his HD to the authorities, we do the right thing, but in return we'd get sued over sums that will effectively force us to shut our service down. Yes, just because you're convicted of a crime doesn't mean you cannot press charges on a different subject.

      In other words, if there are no anonymous services, the choice would be to either let a criminal go unharmed or to kill my job.

      Take a wild guess which road I'd go down. Yes, I'm selfish, I enjoy eating and having a home.

      So far it was never necessary. So far, we didn't find anything incriminating on a computer. But what if?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by Kalzus · · Score: 1

      I imagine that most of the traffic on Tor (by number of bytes) is probably filesharing, spamming, hacking etc.

      One important note: The same characteristic that makes Tor difficult to attack (requirement of coverage of majority of exit nodes in order to bypass the enciphering) makes it very hard to empirically determine the proportions of the different types of traffic.

      --
      "The Devil does not know a lot because He's the Devil, He knows a lot because he's old." -- unknown
    7. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by SimplyI · · Score: 1

      So, it's the old "save the earth; destroy all humans!" argument, eh? Fun stuff...

      Here's one. Consumers of money create demand for it. Going after them reduces demand and helps keep politicians from becoming corrupted by money. I don't know if it works or not, but if it does it's certainly an appropriate strategy IMO.

    8. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The theory is (you're talking about child porn right?) that the consumers of it create demand.


      Isn't that the same sort of logic that is the basis of turning "Interstate Commerce" into an ability to punish people for growing their own pot (as it would effect demand)? Seems to me that using an idealized view of economics (which, btw, rest on the assumption that the actors are *rational*, which I think many people would claim child porn owners aren't) isn't exactly a great justification for distorting the Constitution.
    9. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      Legislating against the symptoms of a problem is like a band aid on a broken arm. Save the money and catch the guys who make it in the first place. Such a move would a) be more effective b) cheaper and c) not involve giving up civil liberties.

      Besides, do you actually swallow that crap about the legislature caring about kids?

      But I can see your precedent. Terrorists are killing us because we have freedoms. So the answer is to take them away! Then they don't have to kill because of our freedoms, because they'll have been taken away! Yipee! Republican logic at its giddy highs.

      --
      I hate printers.
    10. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by nasch · · Score: 1

      Is that supposed to be an acutal counterargument, or are you just messing around? I don't even know how to respond.

    11. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by nasch · · Score: 1
      Legislating against the symptoms of a problem is like a band aid on a broken arm. Save the money and catch the guys who make it in the first place. Such a move would a) be more effective b) cheaper and c) not involve giving up civil liberties.
      I'm all in favor of it, and I think that law enforcement is trying that, too. But I'm also not at all concerned about the liberty to possess child porn. If due process or other civil rights are violated in the attempt to track it down that's a problem, but if we want to pass laws that remove our right to child porn I have no problem with that.

      Besides, do you actually swallow that crap about the legislature caring about kids?
      It doesn't matter what the legislators cared about when they passed the law IMO. What matters is what effect the law has.

      But I can see your precedent. Terrorists are killing us because we have freedoms. So the answer is to take them away! Then they don't have to kill because of our freedoms, because they'll have been taken away! Yipee! Republican logic at its giddy highs.
      You realize the two arguments are not equivalent, and the invalidity of one does not imply the same about the other. Right?
    12. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by MrNaz · · Score: 1
      It doesn't matter what the legislators cared about when they passed the law IMO. What matters is what effect the law has.
      I couldn't disagree more. The intention of an act shows in its language, context and the records of parliamentary (or congessional) discussion. If an act is only worded to make it palletable but is intended to be sinister, this shows through. I point to the DMCA and PATRIOT Act as examples where the true intention is easily discernable from the context the legislation was forged in. Furthermore, if an act has an insidious intention, whatever the language of the act, it will enable whatever hidden agenda is behind it to be carried out. Intention is everything in the law. It is often the case that legislation is repealed or altered due to apparent disconnects between effect and intention. Examples abound in Australian law, read some of the terror legislation, think about its effect, and then read the corresponding entries in the Hansard (records of parliamentary debate). I think what you will find will alarm you greatly.
      You realize the two arguments are not equivalent, and the invalidity of one does not imply the same about the other. Right?
      a) It was a remark made primarily in jest.
      b) While not equivalent, I was making the point that the stated intention of the government action is completely removed from the actual intent of the government action. So there is a parallel.
      --
      I hate printers.
    13. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by daverabbitz · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? In what country is it legal to have an NDA over illegal activities?

      In any country I'm familiar with teh law (New Zealand and to a lesser extent Germany and Australia), if you know about a criminal act, it is illegal to not disclose it to the relevant authorities, the corrollary[sic] of that is that a contract is invalid if it requires you to break the law.

      Hence the NDA is invalid in relation to disclosing illegal activities, and any sane court would throw out any lawsuit against you.

      However with the USA's totally screwed legal system this may not apply...

      --
      What could be better than a jet powered motorcycle? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8l6GTHLSWE
    14. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Basically, the NDA covers disclosure in any way. Yes, we would most likely win, given that the disclosure was over illegal material and to the authorities, but we can still get sued and given the amount of money involved, it's a costy suit that you first of all have to fight. Having a few millions tied down for months or even years, even if it's not 'lost' it is still not available, is nothing we can easily swallow, we ain't MS.

      Besides, the loss of trust involved also doesn't really look good, and might discourage others from choosing us as their partner. Yes, the US ain't the only country where people implicitly distrust their government.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    15. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by nasch · · Score: 1
      I couldn't disagree more. The intention of an act shows in its language, context and the records of parliamentary (or congessional) discussion. (etc)
      That's all true, but IMO still doesn't have any bearing on what the lawmakers actually care about. I agree there's a sinister intention to the DMCA and USA PATRIOT acts, and that's important. What's not important is whether the Congresscritters actually care about intellectual property and keeping the American people safe, or were just pandering to campaign contributors, voters, media, etc. If the clear intention of a child porn law is to protect children, I don't think it matters (legally) whether the lawmakers passed it because they care about children, or because they want to look tough on crime. Now this matter does of course have bearing on whether you want to reelect them, but that's a different issue.
    16. Re:Hark at the privicy freaks. by daverabbitz · · Score: 1

      Well, I guess it depends on what you are covering. If it's software piracy then you'd be an idiot to report it, because even though you're doing the right thing by the law, most customers won't see it that way. On the other hand if they have kiddie-porn or terrorist plots on their computer I would call the cops straight away, especiallly since if you knew about it and did nothing and it later came to the attention of law enforcement that you knew about it and id nothing, you could be in a shit-tornado very soon...

      --
      What could be better than a jet powered motorcycle? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8l6GTHLSWE
  34. reminds me of TPB by god4twenty · · Score: 1

    This story reminds of TPB seizures. The real story is not that they were seized but rather what comes after the seizure. If they can't get any data from them they will only manage to credit TOR.

  35. child? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is this child porn anyway?

    I mean, different countries and cultures define 'child' differently. Is it just what they look like? In which case, there are nations where most people under 30 still look like children; and nations where most people over about 12 look like adults. If it is some representation of emotional maturity, then that also varies enormously around the globe.

    Is there an international definition, I wonder? Where do they draw the line?

    1. Re:child? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In summary, you want to fap to little kids.

    2. Re:child? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "fap"?

  36. Child porn hidden services by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know for a fact that there is child porn within the Tor network itself, running as 'hidden services' on servers there. I have seen it with my own eyes, and was somewhat taken aback as I'd never previously encountered anything like that on the Internet.

    One example in particular is a forum named "Onion-Chan", which claims to be a 'Random' imageboard but consists mainly of nude prepubescent girls, many having sexual intercourse with adult men.

  37. Excuse my ignorance... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    But as far as I remember TOR, it is built exactly to NOT monitor or log the traffic put through it. Or did that change? Or what could this accomplish? Besides spreading FUD?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  38. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 1

    dude... Shredder cereal is awesome. Especially the turtle soup marshmallows.

  39. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by DCGregoryA · · Score: 1

    I should note that there's also Americans like me, who, while appreciating the notion of the US becoming 'noble', realize that singing kumbaya as hard as your lungs will allow at gun-toting sociopathes isn't going to solve the world's problems.

    Neither is throwing money at people who will use it to buy bigger palaces while their military kills their own people. If there's a 'sure way' to end the problems of the developing world, I'm pretty sure no one would actually want to carry it out, given that it won't be 'cute' or 'warm and fuzzy'. I'm open to suggestions, but 'throw more money at it' just comes across as naive to me.

  40. Re:log(0)tyYtKuVz by derekmitch · · Score: 1

    It's being assumed that the person running the Tor node has no malicious intent, isn't it?

    If the administrator wanted to use a Tor node to gain info on surfers could they?
    Is possible for a single Tor node to interecept meaningful data passing through their node/server?

    If the police suspected that infomation was indeed being intercepted passing through a particular node then it would be logical for them to sieze the node, wouldn't it?

  41. Abuse? by Anon-Admin · · Score: 5, Informative

    I ran an anonymous service for 5 years providing anonymous browsing and anonymous e-mail. Looking at this article and calming that it is being abused and should be shut down (As one person has done) is nuts! When I ran my server I maintained a count on the number of transactions. This is the number of anonymous e-mails and the number of anonymous http connections. We averaged 500,000 e-mails a day (15,000,000 per month) and over 25,000,000 http tractions per month. This generated an average of 324 emails to abuse/complaints per month. Less than 10% of the complaints were abuses of the system. I would not considered the posting of KKK material to the alt.white.power group an abuse of the system but it would generate complaints. I may not agree with there views but they have a right to them.

    What you are seeing is one abuse of the system. This abuse is not put into prospective. If it were we would have an idea of the amount of traffic the Tor network handles and compare that to the number of abuses we see. We can not condom the network or servers based on a soul abuse of the system!

    Recently the president condemned Anonymous E-mail and pay as you go Cell phones and announced that we need to pass laws to stop it. This is just wrong! It is like saying that be for you can publish anything, you must ID your self. This is against everything that the founding Fathers stood for! The Federalist papers are a great example of that!

    The Federalist Papers were a series of articles written under
    the pen name of Publius by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison,
    and John Jay. Madison, widely recognized as the Father of
    the Constitution, would later go on to become President of
    the United States. Jay would become the first Chief Justice
    of the US Supreme Court. Hamilton would serve in the Cabinet
    and become a major force in setting economic policy for the US.

    Our founding Fathers hid there identity behind a pen name! So next time you condemn anonymity, remember that it is the way to have unwanted political views heard with out being persecuted for your ideas.

    1. Re:Abuse? by e40 · · Score: 1

      Please pipe your message through sed 's/there/their/g' next time (for this post all should be changed, next time use you're brain... OK, that's a joke people).

    2. Re:Abuse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm surprised you didn't get any spammers using your service. (Apparently most TOR nodes block outgoing connections to port 25 for that reason.)

  42. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by zasos · · Score: 2, Interesting

    submitted this at 1 am

    BoingBoing picked up a report that German police has raided and seized TOR server rooms. TOR is a service that allows one to anonymize his or her internet experience (web, chat, etc). BoingBoing writes: “We need support, lots of people are chanting the same stupid arguments against anonymization over and over again... "You dont need to be afraid if you have nothing to hide" ... "Only criminals have the need for anonymity." [] AskMefi has a great list of responses to that infernal "if you have nothing to hide..." question.

    soultcer.net : "According to an owner of one of the servers, who talked to a public prosecutor, the public prosecutors office knew that the server owners had nothing to do with the child pornography case. Regardless they confiscated some hard disks so that the TOR servers were unusable. As reason they stated that they wanted to scan for traces (e.g. log files). Even though TOR does not keep any logs? I dont really believe them...
    Why have the hard disks really been confiscated??"

    citizen428.net: :Don’t get me wrong, child pornography is one of the worst crimes I can think of, and I wish the German authorities all the best in finding the people they are after. I do however feel that the route taken here wasn’t ideal, as it may well lead to a negative perception of Tor in the general public."

    itnomad: "One operator whose server was seized as well wrote a letter to all the TOR-operators in Germany he was aware of, reaching me as well; he wrote that he is not aware of any charges pressed against him at the moment and that his provider, whose server-room was raided, was not avilable for a real comment on the weekend."

    --

    Just because I don't care, it doesn't mean I don't understand. Homer J. Simpson
  43. Devil's Advocate by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    Note that, due to the way Tor works, seizing the Tor exit nodes won't help track down the actual people responsible in any way. [...] It will, however, help scare people off running Tor nodes quite nicely.

    Devil's Advocate:
    If TOR helps protect child pornographers from the grip of the law, and you think that capturing pedophiles is a greater good than all the other uses of TOR or that TOR's uses are primarily negative, then isn't attempting to scare people off running TOR nodes a legitimate tactic? Thus, wouldn't seizing these machines under any allowable legal pretext be perfectly in line with the goals of law enforcement?

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:Devil's Advocate by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      No. Because by seizing TOR servers, you can, at best, catch the consumers but not the supplyers of CP. As with drugs, you really want to cut the supply (if you're serious about it, at least).

      Because, well, unlike drugs, there is no money to be made by shuffling CP through the net. Unless said CP consumer is dumb enough to use his CC to gain access to it, and then there are BY FAR easier ways to get a hold of him.

      So, in a nutshell, this serves no legitimate reason.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Devil's Advocate by trewornan · · Score: 1

      Isn't attempting to scare people off running TOR nodes a legitimate tactic?

      If people use kitchen knives to stab and kill each other wouldn't making kitchen knives illegal and trying to scare people off owning them be a legitimate tactic.

      Obviously the problem with this is you end up banning all sorts of things and gain nothing since if there's no knife available somebody with murderous intent will merely use an alternative.

      You can ban Tor servers, the internet, even computers and you will not stop these types of people.

      Even if banning something would prevent it's abuse there is the question of whether limiting the advancement of civilisation in order to deal with minor problems is proportionate. This is why the abuse is no argument against the use.

    3. Re:Devil's Advocate by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course.

      And that basic point empowers to do anything they want to anyone.

      I'm sure that child pornography is so terrible, that you really would be okay to shoot them-- and by extension anyone who had anything to do with them.

      And what is so fantastic about this is- you can SEND people these particularly illicit images and then bust them for having it on their computer if you time it right! Given just a few seconds of access to any computer- you can load it up with these illicit images and then bust people. Anyone that browses the web for illicit images has a fair chance of having some of these loaded on their computer without even realizing it.

      ---

      Funny side note... I knew a person who caught her underage child were secretly sending naked pictures of themselves back and forth to their underage lover (who was returning the favor). So this teen hotty was adding a bunch of child porn to the net (and come on- when they break up, if the guy is pissed he is likely to post the pics somewhere adding them to the pool of naked humans that is the internet). And if caught, there is a very real chance that the parent could face huge fines, loss of the computer, or go to jail.

      ---

      And your basic point is correct- a lot of law enforcement is about making the perp do the walk until they get tired or run out of resources. The law guy knows this person is involved with something but they can't prove it. Any TOR user accepts that they are allowing and supporting some bad things (illegal stuff, terrorism, etc.) so that other good things (privacy, oppose oppression?) can happen. For them, those good things are worth the trade off.

      We dance on a fine edge- ready to teeter into totalitarianism and an endless boot on our faces.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    4. Re:Devil's Advocate by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      If the moon were made of cheese, would mice build rocket ships?

      (Hey, it makes about as much sense as your post!)

      In other words, your question is irrelevant because it's postulate is always false in a free society.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    5. Re:Devil's Advocate by BalanceOfJudgement · · Score: 1
      Anyone that browses the web for illicit images has a fair chance of having some of these loaded on their computer without even realizing it.
      I once got a virus that managed to download several hundred CP images to my machine.

      After finishing my scalding hot shower, I promptly wiped the harddrive (in the secure sense) and reinstalled Windows.

      I have since stopped using IE.
      --

      We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
    6. Re:Devil's Advocate by jthill · · Score: 1

      Not much there for people who disagree with you on the value of all those other uses, is there?

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
    7. Re:Devil's Advocate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seizing the knives used to stab isn't the same as banning all knives. I think the police did the right thing by seizing the computers in the logs.

      There's too many complaints that they don't do anything. Everytime they do something, there's always someone whining that they aren't following the special internet rules. There doesn't need to be special laws for online. Stealing, trespassing, fraud, etc. are all the same regardless whether it's online, offline or whereever.

    8. Re:Devil's Advocate by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      I once got a virus that managed to download several hundred CP images to my machine...I have since stopped using IE.

      Aha! A third definition of "Free Software". There's Free as in Speech, Free as in Beer, and Free as in not-rotting-in-prison-because-your-software-did-so mething-illegal.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    9. Re:Devil's Advocate by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      I'll continue to play Devil's Advocate. (I use Tor pretty frequently, actually.)

      If people use kitchen knives to stab and kill each other wouldn't making kitchen knives illegal and trying to scare people off owning them be a legitimate tactic.

      Ah. The dual-use argument. Now, from law enforcement's perspective, what are the legitimate uses for Tor that supercede the need to track down and stop potential child molesters?

      Obviously the problem with this is you end up banning all sorts of things and gain nothing since if there's no knife available somebody with murderous intent will merely use an alternative.

      What alternatives to Tor exist? Oh, sure for darknets, you've got I2P, Freenet, etc., but what alternatives exist that allows Tor's essential out-proxying capability? How are they immune to being taken down in the same fashion as Tor? Either you have centralized out-proxies who are willing to take the heat, or you out-proxy through end users who will be discouraged by the potential of having abusive/illegal behavior one day come from their IP.

      Even if banning something would prevent it's abuse there is the question of whether limiting the advancement of civilisation in order to deal with minor problems is proportionate. This is why the abuse is no argument against the use.

      Dude. I love using Tor (except the awful sluggishness), but "limiting the advancement of civilisation?" Seriously, come on. Non-Devil's Advocate now: How exactly is Tor advancing civilisation?

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    10. Re:Devil's Advocate by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      Of course not, it's a postulate. The question is about whether or not law enforcement would logically be forced to conclude that shutting down Tor nodes is a good idea if they see Tor as a greater threat than a benefit. I argue that they would. I don't necessarily agree with the postulate itself, which is why the thread is tagged "Devil's Advocate."

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    11. Re:Devil's Advocate by jthill · · Score: 1

      "You" was the wrong word there. I'm sorry about that.

      "Not much there for people who disagree on the value of all those other uses". That's why we have laws, to decide what to send armed and paid agents after, and what not. Any law enforcement agent who is "logically forced to conclude" he should blow past legal protections has made himself a self-righteous thug, the kind we send the cops after. I don't have any problem sharing his rage against the creeps he's chasing, but using rage to justify behavior is Devil's Advocacy indeed.

      --
      As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
  44. I don't know German law by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    Under traditional US law, "worth a try" isn't enough reason to break someone's door down and seize their equipment. The standard is "probable cause", an idea the Founders considered so important that it's enshrined in the Constitution where even "guilty beyond a reasonable doubt" isn't explicit ("due process" probably implies it). Some senior US officials, however, don't understand the idea of probable cause

    1. Re:I don't know German law by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Under traditional US law, "worth a try" isn't enough reason

      There are two kinds of reason here; the reason the cops would want to (which is what I was stating) and the "legal" reason they write down when they have to justify it. In this case, they apparently traced a connection to some kiddie porn site to a Tor router(s). That's enough of a legal excuse to grab them.

  45. This is a stereotype by jimmichie · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    They choose alcohol, or drugs, or video games, or some other distraction to take their mind off of life.

    In defending one stereotype you have perpetuated another. Those of us who drink & take drugs aren't all doing it "to escape" - that's an argument used by people who demonise drink & drugs, not a truth. Drinking can focus the mind wonderfully on the problem at hand, or take your mind off it for a few hours so you can come back with a fresh perspective. Many of the world's greatest military and political thinkers and leaders were also the greatest drinkers and drug-takers; Churchill and General Grant, for example, and a whole host of drug-taking philosphers.

    You can drink beer and still care about politics and the environment, and I think most of the world understands that many American people disagree with Bush. Just not of you to get him out of office, unfortunately.

    1. Re:This is a stereotype by jimmichie · · Score: 1

      Here's the "enough" I left off the previous comment.

    2. Re:This is a stereotype by COMON$ · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well we are far enough off topic here I might as well post.

      Being an avid beer drinker myself I have to disagree with your "drinking can focus the mind" as alchohol prohibits brain activity on a biological level. And the other error "to take your mind off it for a few hours" is also equivalent to "escape". It is just as easy to go outside for a bit of fresh air, head out on a weekend trip, read a book, watch a movie, all are escapes. I challenge you to show how the drugs were not crippling our great thinkers. Rather than it being a vice they dealt with. As for history, it will point out several great thinkers who were destroyed by their drug abuse.

      I have always found it interesting the way people strive to justify their addictions, it always seems justified in the eyes of the addict. Give there is a difference between addiction and casual drug use.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    3. Re:This is a stereotype by jimmichie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And the other error "to take your mind off it for a few hours" is also equivalent to "escape"
      Well, it's more equivalent to "step back and then return" in the sentence above; I was just saying they aren't always used that way.

      I challenge you to show how the drugs were not crippling our great thinkers.
      Well that's easy - did the Rolling Stones drug use cripple their music? Or Byron or Hunter S. Thompson? If people are "destroyed" they are destroyed by their own destructive personality, which was responsible not only for their destruction but for whatever their great works were - to separate the two and say the drugs were all bad and the cause of their destruction is to be in denial.

      I have always found it interesting the way people strive to justify their addictions, it always seems justified in the eyes of the addict
      Those who demonise drugs tend to believe they are justified, too.

    4. Re:This is a stereotype by Bob_Villa · · Score: 1

      I have known a variety of people in my short life (28 years) who have used alcohol, drugs and/or video games to escape from life. It is very hard to avoid stereotypes. I grew up on welfare and saw it from that end in numerous bad cities. When everything looks bleak, choose any one or more of those three and abuse it.

      I then managed to break free and went to an ivy league university. I knew plenty of very rich kids who did the same thing. After graduating and going to work, it just keeps showing up wherever I go.

      I have never used drugs or alcohol in my entire life. But I have been hooked on video games and used them for an escape myself. Breaking that habit was very hard.

      You deviate from what I've seen and I salute you. But I haven't met very many people like you yet, no matter where I go or what I do.

    5. Re:This is a stereotype by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Rolling Stones? Thompson?

      Ok I will give you the stones, and alice in wonderland, and many of the beatles 70s music (beatles also put out some crap songs later admid some serious works of art). But I dont think that Gonzo Journalism can really be accredited as a great contribution to society.

      I work in law enforcement, I would like to think that I am around several hundred people who can verify that many drugs (not all) destroy life, civilization, families, and minds. It is an extrordinary case when cocaine, meth, PCP, or a plethora of other drugs make the world a better place without bringing up gene pool clensing.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    6. Re:This is a stereotype by jimmichie · · Score: 1

      many drugs (not all) destroy life, civilization, families, and minds.
      Help! Help! I'm being destroyed! Again, it's the destructive personalities that cause the damage, not the drugs. If you work in law enforcement then the range of situations you see involving drug-taking are self-selecting to be related to illegal use, and in many cases it is the illegality of the drugs that causes the problems rather than the drugs themselves. You continually see drugs in squalid and illegal situations and so assume the drugs are the cause, but all sections of society are taking drugs all the time and most people are fine. There will always be a section of society that "destroys" itself, and they'll do it with junk food or unsanitary living or violence or verbal abuse or lack of exercise, not just drugs.

      It is an extrordinary case when cocaine, meth, PCP, or a plethora of other drugs make the world a better place
      You could say the same thing about lemonade. Nothing in itself is either good or bad, it is the actions of people and the views of people that make the world a better or worse place.

    7. Re:This is a stereotype by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Help! Help! I'm being destroyed! Again, it's the destructive personalities that cause the damage, not the drugs. time for a biology lesson. And I will use wikipedia for my sources since this is a geek site. I am sure you are aware of the effects but I shall post them anyway. I would really recommend reading the toxicology sections.

      Meth - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meth#Side_effects

      PCP - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phencyclidine#Effects

      Cocaine - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cocaine#Effects_and_h ealth_issues

      Marijuana - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marijuana#List_of_eff ects Now I understand there are a lot of Myths about the mental effects of these drugs and this can be debated forever on end as it is just philosophy. But the biological effects are not debatable. Drugs such as caffine and Marijuana may not cause as much physical damage but meth, pcp, and cocaine will kill easily and make you enjoy it. But the cold hard truth of it is, there is a reason these chemicals are controlled. Now we could debate forever on whether or not the world would be a better place if drugs were not restricted, trust me that debate will never end.

      However it breaks down to this difference between us. You are most likely a person who thinks that humans will regulate themselves just fine, our actions will not effect each other, each life is a closed system. I am of the mind that humans will destroy themselves given any chance, and that one person's fault can destroy civilizations.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  46. Text-only? by thelamecamel · · Score: 1

    Would it help if a TOR-equivalent were created that couldn't do images? For most legitimate uses (eg. anti-oppressive government, paranoid citizen), text should be enough. (are there any uses for which other formats are necessary?). Would it be feasible for a TOR-like system to restrict traffic to text only (i.e. stop/limit Base64 or whatever encoding)?

    If this worked, it would certainly free up the networks for legitimate use... Could we make it work?

    1. Re:Text-only? by yalla · · Score: 1

      Even if it would be text-only, you still could use uuencode/uudecode to transmit binary data.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uuencode

      The whole point about TOR is that it's working transparently and is rather easy to use.
      And who am I that i start censoring myself? A deputy?

      Alex.

      --
      You look like a million dollars. All green and wrinkled.
    2. Re:Text-only? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Is hardly possible. Don't forget that e.g. Chinese isn't just using the character range from 0x20 to 0x80. I.e. you'd shut out those who need it most.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Text-only? by pclminion · · Score: 1

      Would it be feasible for a TOR-like system to restrict traffic to text only (i.e. stop/limit Base64 or whatever encoding)?

      Nope. I Can capitalize Each word Of A Sentence according to Whether i Want To send a 1 Bit or A 0 bit. now i Have Encoded Illicit information In a plain text Form.
    4. Re:Text-only? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how old is uuencode exactly? christ.

  47. Re:log(0)tyYtKuVz by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    If you assume "good faith" on the part of both police and Tor operators (I can't, but for the sake of argument...) then the police should have siezed merely a copy of the logs. I don't know German law, but there is no decision that the operators have committed a crime or caused any damage, so stopping their operation seems unjustified. There seems to be enough reason for police to investigate, therefore get log copies, but not to stop anything. Until a judge makes a decision on laws + evidence - if German law is "justice".

    BTW, what's "tyYtKuVz"?

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  48. where's mention of .. by rs232 · · Score: 1

    "Servers .. have been seized .. during a child porn crackdown"

    Where's mention of terrorism and money laundering, the other two jolt words guaranteed to elicid the politically correct response. After all who would object to going after such low life. I'm curious as to why they don't just check the credit card receipts. As if there wasn't money to be made out of this no one would do it.

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  49. Difference between ISPs and TOR by Valdrax · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I suppose the difference is that:
    1) Telcos let you get the CP.
    2) TOR lets you get away with it.

    ISPs don't anonymize your traffic and are complicit in government surveillance of it.

    That said, I do most of my surfing through TOR just because I intrinsically hate the NSA spying on me. I use TOR for the sake of using TOR even though there are sites I can't go to anymore because of bans on TOR IPs thanks to bad actors. I've never liked people looking over my shoulder even when I'm doing absolutely nothing wrong. I'd rather be thought of as hiding something wrong than be known for sure to be doing nothing wrong just for the peace of mind of having my privacy.

    The only things I don't do through TOR are things where I sign-in, like Slashdot, where anonymity is pointless and, in fact, running with an identity through TOR is possibly harmful since it makes it easier to identify each end of the TOR tunnel. It sure is slow-going, though.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:Difference between ISPs and TOR by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      Why didn't the police just get the subpoena for the logs, just like they do with the telcos?

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
  50. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by bendodge · · Score: 0

    While I agree that a lot of President Bush's surveillance polices are wrong, I do not agree about the Muslims. What would you suggest we do about the world's fastest growing religion that has sworn to destroy the freedom of the West? They knocked down the 2 tallest building in the world, right in NYC. Will they suddenly decide to be content with that? Serious steps must be taken against such enemies of freedom.

    --
    The government can't save you.
  51. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was not aware the Presidential election was this year. "Administration" refers to the President and "his men", his Cabinet and other appointees. it does not refer to the House and Senate elections occuring this fall.

  52. Chill. by DancesWithBlowTorch · · Score: 1

    Dude. Critisizing government is one thing. But your rant is bordering on a conspiracy theory.

    Of course helping people in the third world is important. That's why the German government spent 4 billion Euros on developmental aid last year. (Sorry, German link, but we write in arabic numbers, too). How much do you think a hundred cops searching for child pornography cost? Policing is one of the most important tasks of the State, and I am actually rather pleased with the performance of the German police. (And yes, I have actually met quite a few of them. I've even worked with them on a daily basis, although not with the internet crime division.)

    Now, concerning Tor: Anyone who runs a Tor node on his or her machine knows what they are doing (it's way too complicated for non-nerds) and that their machine can be used by malicious users as a safe gateway to illegal content. That's the problem with Tor. Of course it is annoying or embarrassing for the Tor providers if they thence happen to get caught in the web of the police, but, as an earlier poster noted: None of the Tor providers has been sued. Their machines have simply been seized and will most likely be returned to their owners. It's not like they were arrested and treated as enemy combattants or something.

    Finally, regarding the right to critisize government: It's not like the German government was without opposition. Thanks to the heroic actions of the American, Russian and British nations during the second world war, Germany is not a dictatorship any more. If Germans wish to critisize their government, they can write blogs and open letters, publish articles or, goodness me, simply go out into the streets of Berlin and shout out their criticism at any passing politician. All without having to fear _any_ consequences what so ever (as long as their speech isn't racist, attacking the constitution or denying the Holocaust). This is what we call `Free Speech' over here. Fortunately, the term 'UnAmerican' has not been translated into our language, yet.

    1. Re:Chill. by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      (as long as their speech isn't racist, attacking the constitution or denying the Holocaust). This is what we call `Free Speech' over here.

      You have an awfully odd definition of "free." Of course, that's becoming the case here too-you're very free to say whatever you like, so long as you stay within this fenced enclosure a mile away from where anyone will actually see you. That's the free speech zone. Supportive signs only where you'll actually be seen please.

      During Senator McCarthy's time, you could say whatever you want so long as it wasn't pro-Communist. That's not free speech. Free speech -is- the right for the KKK and the neo-Nazis to hold their rallies and say what they've got to say. (Of course, it's also my and your right to say that they're a bunch of morons.)

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    2. Re:Chill. by DancesWithBlowTorch · · Score: 1
      Free speech -is- the right for the KKK and the neo-Nazis to hold their rallies and say what they've got to say. (Of course, it's also my and your right to say that they're a bunch of morons.)
      I expected a response like this when I wrote the line about the limits of free speech, and I am willing to defend it. Germany has had those laws limiting "free" speech since 1948 and we've been rather alone with it for a while. But more recently, countries like Great Britain (with their "hate speech" laws) have joined this point of view.

      At the core of a liberal society stand several fundamental rights of the individual, and free speech is just one of them. The second paragraph of the German constitution reads "Everyone has the right and liberty to do what ever he or she wishes, as long as this does not interfere with the rights of others."

      I think we agree that black and jewish people have just the same rights and dignity as any other person. So the difference between your and my argument for or against unrestricted free speech is that you are convinced that speech cannot physically hurt anyone and therefore cannot interfere with the rights of Blacks, Jews, Muslims or whoever is being attacked. My opinion (in which I feel supported by the parliamentary council, the "Founding Fathers" of federal, republican Germany) is that it can indeed: Ask someone who was hunted down by the KKK or a bunch of brainless Nazis (who would most certainly not come up with shit like that if they weren't incited by their leaders). Listen to a recording of Goebbels speeches and you know what I mean.

      Free speech is the right to use your mind and voice your opinion in a civilized manner (Of course that allows you to talk about Communism all you like). It's not the right to spout verbal atrocities that are designed to directly lead to physical harm for others and then hide cowardly behind your "right to free speech" instead of taking responsibility for your words. Just like freedom of movement is not the freedom to walk over your neighbours flower patch or run over a kid in the street with your car.
    3. Re:Chill. by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Ah, but there's the difference. I am -not-, in any means, for any freedom of the KKK to "hunt down" blacks or for the right to -actually- encourage violent actions. But there's the difference...

      I should have the right to say "I hate all black people!" Or even to say "I wish all Jews were dead!" Now, granted, I might cross the line should I say "Kill those people!" to a group who I know is likely to obey me.

      Think of the speech which you would least like to hear, which would most greatly shock and offend you. Think of the worst possible picture you can think of being painted, the most offensive book you can conceive of being written. THOSE are the types of speech in need of free speech protection, not speech no one would dislike anyway.

      As to Goebbels? If the people there had exercised -their- free speech by shouting down and ridiculing him, we'd never have heard of the guy. To others? Same thing. If someone's saying something you disagree with, don't keep your mouth shut!

      Oh, and as to the words you not so kindly put in my mouth. I -do- freely acknowledge that speech can hurt. If I tell my best friend to fuck off, it's going to hurt. If I tell someone who loves me the feeling is not mutual, it's going to hurt. But we do not ban these things. Rights stop where someone's -life-, -health-, or -property- (in that order) may be endangered, not where someone's feelings might get hurt.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    4. Re:Chill. by DancesWithBlowTorch · · Score: 1
      Oh, and as to the words you not so kindly put in my mouth. I -do- freely acknowledge that speech can hurt. If I tell my best friend to fuck off, it's going to hurt. If I tell someone who loves me the feeling is not mutual, it's going to hurt. But we do not ban these things. Rights stop where someone's -life-, -health-, or -property- (in that order) may be endangered, not where someone's feelings might get hurt.
      That's why I wrote physically harm and not emotionally. I think we quite agree, since you wrote:
      Now, granted, I might cross the line should I say "Kill those people!" to a group who I know is likely to obey me.
      as exactly this is what is forbidden by German law (It's called Volksverhetzung -- 'incitement of the people'). You can say "I hate Blacks" all you like. Most probably you will be very alone afterwards (or in very bad company), but you cannot be arrested for doing so. That's exactly what I meant: Speech designed to lead to violence is what needs to be forbidden, and that's exactly what is forbidden. Those who incite others to be violent have to be made responsible for doing so, and there should be no chance for them to hide behind 'free speech'.

      Regarding your comment on Goebbels audience: Unfortunately, at the time of his famous address in the Sportpalast ('Do you want total war?' etc.) there was no free speech anymore, and basically everyone brave enough to speak their mind had been deported to concentration camps. What remained was a brainwashed brown mass of flesh, one of the kind that you can find to this very day at any party rally anywhere in the world. (Imagine what would happen if Bush asked the Republican Convention 'Do you support the troops?')


      I assume the discussion ends here? It seems we have reached mutual understanding. Thank you very much for your thoughts.
    5. Re:Chill. by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Seems we have, and thanks for yours as well, and the clarifications. I was under the impression that most of the "hate speech" laws, in Germany and the like, forbade -any- mention sympathetic to the Nazis, denying the Holocaust, being racist, etc. (I could still swear I heard of a case not a year ago where a German citizen was prosecuted for "Holocaust denial", but maybe there's more to it then that, and I can't find it offhand.) It would seem I have some more research to do there.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    6. Re:Chill. by DancesWithBlowTorch · · Score: 1

      Ah, okay, now I see what you mean. You're right, denial of the Holocaust is indeed forbidden. But that's due to the special historic situation in Germany. I didn't actually count that into the "free speech" problem, which is why I didn't mention it in the following posts.

      The reality of the Holocaust is a fact. It has been proven in the Nuremberg trials, probably two thirds of all German pupils have had a field trip to a concentration camp, a whole generation of writers, including Reich-Ranicki and Grass (two of the most prominent intellectuals in Germany), have elaborated on it, there is simply not the smallest doubt to it's existence. It is also forbidden in Germany to publicly display the official signs of the Third Reich (flag, seal, swastika, SS-runes, etc.). This is not an issue of free speech, but of dealing with the atrocious sins of our grandfathers.

      The German supreme court found in 1994 that denial of the Holocaust is not protected by the consitutional right to free speech. Since it is a misstatement of a proven fact, it is a form of libel and is punishable under the German 'Volksverhetzung' law (paragraph 130 of the federal penal code). The court argued that the right to free speech (paragraph 5 of the German constitution) was trumped in this special case by an even higher human right, that to human dignity (paragraph 1 of the German constitution) of the victims.

      But actually, Germany is not alone with this ruling. Denial of the Holocaust has been forbidden in Austria (not surprisingly) since 1945 (and punishable by up to 20 years in prison). Switzerland and France made it punishable in 1990, and even the British High Court of Justice, one of the bastions of free speech, in 2000 called David Irwine a 'Liar, Racist and Anti-Semite' for denying the Shoa.

      In short, this is a very special case, I don't think it should be included into a general discussion about free speech.

  53. Don't forget: Courts know jack 'bout TOR by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    A clever persecutor can claim that they have evidence that CP data went to a certain computer. Now, the court doesn't know how TOR works, neither do they know that a TOR server is running there in the first place. So yes, this can lead to a warrant. The TOR exit node requested CP, so it's the immediate "culprit".

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  54. This is why Relakks is useful for exit nodes.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a long term Tor user, I wanted to run an exit node to help out. But, even before these actions in Germany, I knew my ip would be blamed for anything illegal that would be routed through my machine. So I set up a Relakks account, connected through their VPN, and then allowed the exit node to operate, thus increasing the number of Tor servers in Sweden by one.

    This is still a good idea and keeps my American ip address out of the loop.

  55. Why I'll never use Tor by joshdick · · Score: 1

    My feelings exactly. This is why I'll never use Tor. The thought of aiding and abetting purveyors of child pornography is almost enough to make me vomit.

    Anonymous speech is every American's right, but child pornography is clearly not protected by that right.

    1. Re:Why I'll never use Tor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey great, their plan is working then.

    2. Re:Why I'll never use Tor by arevos · · Score: 1

      It's not required to route Tor traffic from other users in order to make use of Tor. In order to serve as a Tor router, you need to download, setup and configure a separate Tor server package. The Tor client package just makes use of the Tor servers already available.

    3. Re:Why I'll never use Tor by xrayspx · · Score: 1

      I'm very glad our forebears don't think this way. RSA wouldn't have done their work, Phil Zimmerman wouldn't have made PGP, there'd be no Hactivismo, no SSL, ssh or anything else that can help anyone, good or bad, hide what they're doing?

      Why does Phil Zimmerman hate America? And why didn't he think of the children? THE CHILDREN!

  56. A perfect means of network destruction by Catbeller · · Score: 1

    Thinking about it, all a government, a cult, or a business has to do now to bring down any network is to slip some kiddie porn into the cloud. Instant shutdown, confiscation and imprisonment of anyone who moved a packet.

    Orwell was too optimistic. No prison was ever this monitored.

  57. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    huh?

    The Muslims have sworn to destroy the freedom of the west? The Muslims took down the WTC? That's like saying the Christians have sworn to rape all Muslim children just because the American soldiers who raped children in Abu Ghraib happened to be Christians. Your logic is fundamentally flawed.

  58. Why is it bad to want to browse anonymously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see your point, but its still along the lines of "if you aren't doing anything bad you have nothing to fear" idea. Nevermind that there shouldn't be anything wrong with it, you're saying since mostly criminals browse anonymously then we should make it illegal do so. Mostly criminals wear hoods so wearing hoods should be illegal. Skateboarders are more likely to be criminals so we should outlaw skateboards too. Mostly men rape and batter women so we should make it illegal to be male. See my point? Correlation != Causation

    Just because it CAN be used illegally doesn't mean that the TOR itself should be illegal.

    -nosebreaker.com

    1. Re:Why is it bad to want to browse anonymously? by EddyPearson · · Score: 1

      I am CERTAINLY not saying that. My point is i find it odd when people start making out that this was NOT the right thing to do (seize the server)

      --
      You feel sleepy. Close your eyes. The opinions stated above are yours. You cannot imagine why you ever felt otherwise.
  59. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Damastus+the+WizLiz · · Score: 1

    How about making our own country self sufficient?

    --
    I often have trouble remembering which way is out of bed in the morning.
  60. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by kdemetter · · Score: 1

    true , it's not all muslims . But the religion is being abused by some power hungry individuals who hate The West , and incite their people to hate them too . And many of them believe it off course .

    I don't think there is an easy solution to the problem though .

    And i must say this is way off topic ( though i understand it considering it's 11/09 )

  61. I think you mean "privocrats". by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 1

    Maybe you should start whining about privocrats, too. I mean, how dare people try to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, right?

    But to really drive your point home, you need to bring in the other "Horsement of the Infocalypse"---terrorists, money launderers and drug dealers. Now, if you tell us all that we're in bed with the terrorists, money launderers and drug dealers, why, then we'll be certain to joyfully welcome the cops to whatever they'd like to seize.

    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
  62. The Solution: by FFFish · · Score: 1

    Someone needs to commercialize a hard drive+interface intended for use as home NAS. It should use Tor to distribute one's data, encrypted, across the Tor network with redundancy, so that if one's personal drive disappears (is ripped off by police), one's data isn't gone with it.

    It'll be like the torrent-capable routers: make 'em so end-user stupid-easy that anyone and everyone will want it. There'll be so many of these devices connected to the net as to render it impossible to shut down.

    --

    --
    Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
  63. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by bendodge · · Score: 0

    Their Koran orders them to kill all infidels who will not convert. That would be the West.

    --
    The government can't save you.
  64. Child Porn was pre 9/11, Terrorism since then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To be fair, TLAs and the police used to throw in the child pornography argument before 9/11. Only since then it has been replaced with the terra-istic claims most of the time.

    For reference see e.g. here: http://archives.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/europe/france/0 3/07/laws.porn/index.html

    I know that it was argued to the European government that the European Cybercrime Convention Act and rigorous Data Retention Laws would be needed because of the need to fight Child Porn. At that time this was such a weighty argument that no politician could have denied it as it would have meant his or her political suicide, no matter how ridiculously exaggerated the resources claimed to be necessary were. Denying or even questioning the resources asked by the police and TLAs would have been put on a level with indignation to support the war on Child Porn.

    This is the main reason why such draconian and civil liberty disregarding laws like the European Cybercrime Convention Act or the European Data Retention Laws exist today.

    It's probably the very same with terrorism these days and I guess it still holds true for kiddie porn, only the terrorism argument gained drastic popularity.

  65. Are you a common carrier, or not? by Sloppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are two views about "bad" information:

    1. Some information can be "bad" and the government has the right to do something to prevent its trafficking.
    2. Information in itself is never "bad" and the government has no right to take action against the spread of any sort of information whatsoever.

    AFAIK, every government in the world, presumably in accordance with the will of the people, has laws that suggest their policy is based on the first view.

    They differ in how they stress the details. Some might be more concerned with kiddie porn, some more concerned with copyright infringement, maybe some(?) are concerned about nuclear bomb plans or other classified information. Whatever. I haven't heard of any government that completely and absolutely protects all free speech (though counter-examples are welcome).

    So let's think about what policies should exist, if we postulate that the first view (some kinds of information is "bad") represents "our" opinion. (If you disagree with this view, then you're going to hate the policy below.) Law Enforcement, civil lawyers, etc, are going to want some way to hold someone responsible when "bad" information gets spread.

    The simplest approach is for The Man to get on the net and search for "bad" information and find someone to serve it to Him, and then go after whoever served it. Then either they get held responsible, or else they show how they're just a middleman and they point to who sent it to them. If they can't pass the buck, then the buck stops with them.

    In the case of these pseudo-anonymous virtual networks, that means that if your TOR node passes packets containing kiddie porn (or copyrighted materials, or nuclear bomb plans, or an opinion piece about how the Nazi party should return to power in Germany) to an investigator and they come after you, then you are responsible for what your computer, acting as your agent, did. You're not a common carrier, unless you can show you were just a router and you can identify who sent you the packet so the investigator can continue to trace it back to the source.

    So that's why TOR either needs to log, or else TOR operators need to deal with the fact that sometimes The Man is going to attack them. Are you going to pass the buck, or are you going to take responsibility?

    What if you hold the second view, that information can't be bad and therefore no one ever has the right to try to prevent its spread? Well, you're in trouble. You live inside a legal environment that, frankly, does not agree with you. You can try to change that, but you're going to have an uphill battle against reality. So I recommend you lobby hard. If you're going to operate a TOR node prior to the lobbying completing its goal, be ready for when they take your computer and possibly press charges against you. Running a TOR node is dangerous and pisses off people who are more powerful than you, and it appears that the majority of people support the idea of this power being used against you. You understand what you're up against, right?

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    1. Re:Are you a common carrier, or not? by Jeff+Molby · · Score: 1
      You're not a common carrier, unless you can show you were just a router and you can identify who sent you the packet so the investigator can continue to trace it back to the source.
      Most of your logic is sound, but I disagree with this statement. I have no idea what the actual law is, but that's irrelevant since we're not talking about a specific jurisdiction anyways. Feel free to offer counter-examples in case I'm forgetting something, but it is my personal opinion is that no law is just if it doesn't require atleast some sort of intent or negligence. If I conduct a large number of transactions in a given timeframe and a small percentage of them happen to relate to an illegal activity of which I have no knowledge, why should I bear the burden of inspecting or tracking everything? Should I track the source and serial number of every piece of currency that I receive on the off chance that it turns out to be counterfeit?
    2. Re:Are you a common carrier, or not? by steelneck · · Score: 1

      Well, the good ol snail-mail postal service is a "common carrier". Do you think it is within reason if they start to demand your fingerprint when you post a snail-mail? And how does that correspond to basic human rights, where we all should have the right to recive and impart information in private?

    3. Re:Are you a common carrier, or not? by BubbaJonBoy · · Score: 1

      Actually there is a good blurb on EFF about how some TOR servers have been identified for carrying torrents of DCMA protected material. The rights of the ISP and individual computers are covered and if I read correctly, not liable for packets being routed through. After all - think of the dozens of hops a packet must make - how could they all be liable for carrying the material?
      http://tor.eff.org/eff/tor-legal-faq.html
      http://tor.eff.org/eff/tor-dmca-response.html

      regards,
      Jon

  66. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by pclminion · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Tibet, anyone?

    Yes, but is China overthrowing governments RIGHT NOW? Tibet was what, almost 50 years ago? Now I'm not saying China is perfect by any means, but would you draw the same comparison with the Japanese? Their behavior during WWII (similar amount of time ago) was completely atrocious, yet you didn't pick on them. Why? I wonder if it has to do with your personal biases about the particular styles of government these countries now use.

    In contrast, the US invasion of Iraq is a current event, which is still ongoing. Your comparison is bogus.

  67. the only cure for TOR is more TOR by teh_chrizzle · · Score: 1

    everyone *should* protect their privacy because everyone is doing something that someone could consider "wrong".

    if more people took steps to protect themselves then protecting yourself wouldn't carry the stigma that it currently carries.

    no matter who you are or what you do, there is *someone* out there who will think you are doing something wrong. the less everyone knows about you, the easier it will be to get through the day.

    examples:

    1) if your boss/co-workers are not religious and you are, then your "inspiration of the day" and WWJD surfing could be considered wrong even though it's harmless in the legal sense. the same could be said for secular people in a religious setting.

    2) if you are in to [instert ethinicity here] power, your parents/spouse/employer/local govt. may not approve and you would naturally want to protect yourself. in the united states, you could be mistaken for a terrorist.

    the question isn't whether or not you are doing something wrong, because we are all doing something wrong according someone else's moral compass.

    the questions is why aren't you doing more to protect yourself?

    --
    sarcasm:
    -noun
    1. harsh or bitter derision or irony.
    1. Re:the only cure for TOR is more TOR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2) if you are in to [instert ethinicity here] power,

      Black, Brown, Yellow, ok.
      White, not ok.

      Are there any White Male or Female Club's at your local University? or anywhere?
      Black|Hispanic|Asian Male or Female Clubs are ok though.

    2. Re:the only cure for TOR is more TOR by teh_chrizzle · · Score: 1

      dude, there white men's clubs on every corner of every street of every city, they're called "banks".

      there's one in every corporation, it's called the "board of directors" or in some cases the "IT department".

      american cities have white rallies all the time. in the north they are called "hockey games" and in the south it's called "NASCAR"

      if you want more information on the "white power" program in your community, just pick up the phone, dial 911, and ask to be transferred to the "police department".

      --
      sarcasm:
      -noun
      1. harsh or bitter derision or irony.
  68. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Bob_Villa · · Score: 1

    I never said to sing kumbaya or to throw money at their governments. We need a new strategy we've never done before to help these other countries so they can be self sustainable. That would show the US has good will again and is a beneficial superpower, rather than a hostile one.

    I spend a lot of time thinking about this, but can't come up with a good solution. I know there must be a way, though.

    If you have any ideas that would work, I know I'd like to hear about them.

  69. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Christian bible says to kill gay people, it doesn't mean the Christians are going to launch a gay genocide. There are millions of Muslims who live in "the West" and who are "Westerners". You sound suspiciously like a racist.

  70. SSH tunneling by KermodeBear · · Score: 1

    I use this all the time at work. I'm a web developer and the rules here are pretty lax, so people are allowed to browse the web, use IRC, etc., as long as their work gets done.

    But: I still put everything through an SSH tunnel to my Linux server. I'm still not doing anything wrong, but I don't see any reason for me to let the network admins sniff everything I do on the network.

    By the way; I use the Privoxy HTTP proxy on my linux server, so I get the added benefit of that as well. Privoxy rocks. (o:

    --
    Love sees no species.
  71. Re:What about the children? hypocrites! by Datamonstar · · Score: 1

    It's kinda ironic that you were able to post all that tripe anonymously.

    --
    The eternal struggle of good vs. evil begins within one's self.
  72. Re:And those in charge... by symbolic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We have people in key positions that don't even know, understand, or care about what is probably the most important document produced in our nation's history. For those interested:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6qX_BjzUJmg

    Watch in earnest as General Michael Hayden revises the 4th Amendment.

  73. Can't deny the connection? by codehead78 · · Score: 1

    Not sure exactly how TOR works but it seems to me like a node could choose to deny connections to certain sites. It this not possible? Or does everyone running a node not care who they are helping?

    1. Re:Can't deny the connection? by Kalzus · · Score: 1

      Connection denial is possible on basis of outbound IP address/range and/or a TCP port address/range. This is assuming you're running an exit router to begin with.

      --
      "The Devil does not know a lot because He's the Devil, He knows a lot because he's old." -- unknown
  74. Re: by drac0n1z · · Score: 1

    I started to use TOR when I realised my 500 user large ISP's admin was using tail -f access.log on the transparent proxy, running sarg with all output switches and tcpdump. Don't answer me that I should sue him, it is not that easy here to sue someone or worth the settlement. I used TOR to keep my gmail and even slashdot comments private. Futher, do you close your curtains when it gets dark? Even when you are doing nothing 'interesting'? Am sure you want some measure of privacy.

    --
    This is my sig.
  75. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you couldn't just switch providers?

  76. legal basis-Word association. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So start associating the two and eventually people will be happy to make other people give up their rights."

    Slashdot:==Kiddie Porn. Slashdot:==Kiddie Porn. *looks around* Looks like it doesn't work, chief.

  77. Analogy basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " 1. Routers are compters.
          2. Internet backbone routers are configured to allow other people to route data through them.
          3. All Internet backbone routers must be seized to stop child porn.
          4. We must have no sympathy for the TELCOS or the loss of the Internet. "It's for the children"®
    "

    Hmmm. Obviously slashdot ran out of bad car analogies.

  78. Patriot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMG the Patriot Act! Bush! The....Oh wait this is in Germany...How can we turn this into a hate america story again?

  79. The Tor Project responds: by shava · · Score: 1

    Last week, a few Tor exit-node servers were seized by the German police in a massive sting against child pornography. From our friends on the ground in Germany, we hear that dozens and dozens of machines may have been seized.

    So far as we know only six of those were Tor servers. We have heard from the server operators. None of them has been charged.

    This is not a "crackdown" on Tor, as has been widely reported. We expect and hope that the volunteer Tor server operators in Germany will get their equipment back after this has blown over, and there will be no action against Tor.

    Please contact me for more information at my work --

    Shava Nerad
    executive director
    The Tor Project
    shava -at- freehaven -dot- net

  80. all internet users are criminals by AlgorithMan · · Score: 1

    kiddie porn, terrorism and copyright aside:

    as far as I understand TOR - this whole network exists for users to remain absolutely anonymous. because of many many many proxies there should nowhere be evidence for who did what (correct me if I'm wrong)

    SO if there is no evidence at all for any special activity, then this must mean that the police seized the servers just because they suspected the owners of doing illegal activities, based on nothing but the fact that they used anonymization software...
    BUT in germany it is illegal for the police to raid a house without a strong suspicion (and I don't think "using anonymization software" is a strong reason - yepp, asked my lawyer, using anonymization software wouldn't even hold as indication

    SO I'd say this whole raid was illegal...
    and it's just another reason for me to vote the german pirate-party next time http://piratenpartei.de/

    --
    The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
  81. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How did you find out your ISP was doing that?

  82. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by hondamankev · · Score: 0

    Consider this date, 09/11.

    Reread your post.

    Recognize that you are completley out of line, and living in some sort of fantasy world.

  83. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You sound suspiciously like a racist.

    Except it's a religion, not a race.

  84. hold it right there by AlgorithMan · · Score: 1

    alright, this looks like it was heading for flaming...

    stop it, let's concentrate on the main point:
    if someone uses tor, this doesn't automatically mean he is breaking any rules!
    otherwise I'd have to raid your house for chatlogs, because you must have connections to al-quaeda, because why else wouldn't you do your cybersex with your girlfriend on public IRC chatrooms?

    --
    The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
  85. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by skarphace · · Score: 1
    But the religion is being abused by some power hungry individuals who hate The West , and incite their people to hate them too.
    Don't you see the parallels to the US here?

    Only this time, "power hungry individuals" = GWB + his gang and "The West" = The Middle-East.
    --
    Bullish Machine Tzar
  86. Dont forget #3 by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    And while they are checking, be sure to run across any pirated music or software or 'banned information' ( which varies from country to country ) that might just happen to be on their drive. Chalk it up to collateral damage.

    And dont tell me that the average TOR user is 100% innocent.. Sounds like its mostly an excuse for a fishing expedition.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  87. Faith in Technology basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah yes, what were revolutions like before technological solutions like Tor became widely available?* Once again geek demonstrate that their faith in technology is unshakeable. In the mean time all the old means (much like civil responsabilities) sit neglected.

    *BTW what do you do when the revolution comes and the plug has been pulled on the Internet? Tor does you diddly-squat then.

  88. Everything for free basis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So start associating the two and eventually people will be happy to make other people give up their rights."

    Much like slashdot yelling, RIAA! MPAA! Profit! in an attempt to get artists to give up their rights to their works.*

    *Even better if you can abolish the entire system, and leave the artist to the whims of the greedy.

  89. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by kdemetter · · Score: 1

    The only parallel is that GWB is doing the same thing . The difference is that you don't blindly believe what he says . And I'm glad for that . Otherwise it would be much worse .

  90. "Leaping into faith" crime... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "When I read words like these, I have to wonder if there is a purpose to such self-righteous posturing, or whether the poster expect everyone to share that leap of faith and assume it's relevant to the article or subject."

    No bigger a "leap of faith" than what you're selling.

  91. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by kdemetter · · Score: 1

    I guess it comes down to the same thing . Religion is a means to control the people . And that's a global thing . Bush also ends his speeches with 'God bless America'. Wich means like : God says it's ok to do it . I guess the difference is that we don't buy it . Religion is still a very important part of life in most Middle East countries . So they have more power over their people . If Bush would say the same thing about muslims as some of muslim leaders say about America , Bush wouldn't last another day .

  92. For crying out loud, it happened in Germany by BeeBeard · · Score: 1

    That's a great question. I can't really help you, because I'm a lawyer in America and not in Germany. Plus, it looks like everyone who has replied to your question has tried to forge some kind of bizarre, hackneyed connection between a property seizure in Germany, from Germans, by Germans, to what little they know about American jurisprudence (as if the U.S. Constitution has anything to do with this whatsoever). It's shameful that American xenophobia after 9/11 has grown to the extent that most can't even fathom that other countries might be governed by different laws. But hey, they're getting modded way up for it, so I guess now it's acceptable to post things that are way, way off-topic? The only thing I can think of is that David Hasselhoff is somehow involved. I have it on good authority that Germans love him, and as an American of German anscestry, he might very well provide the necessary causal link.

    So anyways, you're really on your own here. What you need is input from someone in Germany who has more than a passing familiarity with German law. What won't help you are rants by Scalia or Breyer groupies, respectively, who have used your innocent question as pretext to drag out the same old tired arguments over how to interpret U.S. law.

  93. Still trusting TOR? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I liked TOR a lot, after it became more easier to use for nerds like me.
    However, this confiscation of TOR-Servers does not make me feel comfortable
    if I entrust TOR with my personal informations :-(

    Another good choice to enhance ones privacy is http://anonymouse.org/
    I know this is a little bit like comparing apples and oranges, because Anonymouse
    is a web-proxy. However, it is still a good alternative. In oppsite to TOR it is
    even more easier to use, it is faster and does not need anything to setup.

    Bye,
    Ash

  94. Parent poster lies about freedom by mrraven · · Score: 1

    Parent sed: "Don't get me wrong. In principle I do believe in freedom of speech and freedom to surf."

    No you don't not with an attitude like that you believe some people should be allowed to see some images and words. Now that may be all well and good but don't LIE and proclaim your great love of freedom like some modern day Benjamin Franklin when in fact you value safety over freedom. Lack of freedom and the chilling of free speech ALSO tears peoples lives apart If you don't believe me just read a biography of the beat writers like William Burroughs who were persecuted for their sexually explicit writings in the 50s. Ditto for James Joyce in the 20s.

    http://pers-www.wlv.ac.uk/~bu1895/EN3016_text.htm

    Real life often offers hard choices with no clear cut guidelines to make those choices. In those cases I believe we are best served by erring on the side of freedom even at the risk that some people may be hurt on occasion. Are we really so cowardly that we have gone from being a nation willing to die for freedom to one willing to destroy freedom because of the mere hypothetical risk something bad may happen? And yes this article may be abut Germany but I suspect a majority of the responders are Americans so this action is relevant to us to as these sorts of actions set bad precedents.

    Also keep in mind eliminating TOR is NOT going to end child pornography or terrorism. If TOR is gone these people will just switch to steganography, or coded phone calls, or secret drop spots. The bottom line is that if people want to do bad things they will most likely do them and the best we can do is clean up the mess afterwards. The alternative is quite literally 1984.

    --
    Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  95. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The lack of understanding of world events you display is disturbing.

    1. Bush is not doing the same thing as terrorist leaders; I haven't heard of any American teenagers being strapped in explosive vests by the Bush administration yet.

    2. Just as Americans do not blindly believe everything Bush says, nor do Muslims blindly believe everything Osama bin Laden says. In both cases, a minority blindly believes, while another minority vehemently condemns, and the vast majority don't particularly pay any attention one way or the other.

    Really, the claims that the world is imperilled by American capitalism or Islamic terrorism are all equally overblown and false. Capitalist excesses must be restrained, and the war on Islamic terrorism must continue (though hopefully through less violent means). But neither is likely to bring about the end of civilization in the forseeable future. Let's keep things in proportion, folks.

  96. Is All Child / Adult Sexual Contact Abuse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Finding and stopping people who are actually sexually abusing children"

    Is all child / adult sexual contact always abuse?

  97. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Their Koran orders them to kill all infidels who will not convert.

    The Koran is by no means so clear-cut. In places, it almost seems to encourage tolerance of other religions:

    "There shall be no compulsion in religion." (2:256)
    "Unbelievers, I shall never worship what you worship, you shall never worship what I worship. You have your own religion and I have mine." (109:6)

    You are probably referring to the verse "Slay the idolaters wherever you find them" (9:4). But (a) "idolaters" here cannot refer to Christians and Jews (it might be taken to be inciting a holy war against India, but certainly not America), and (b) the verse goes on to say "except those of the idolaters with which you have made an agreement", i.e. even if you take the verse as a literal command to slaughter those who worship idols, it still permits Muslims to make peace treaties instead. Indeed, the Koran actually explicitly states that religious violence should only be used in self-defence, and that peace treaties should be made if at all possible: "Fight with them until there is no persecution, but if they desist, then there should be no hostility except against the oppressors." (2:193)

    But, hey, I guess it's easier for you to go round spouting Islamophobic propoganda and inciting people to religious hatred than it is for you to take a moment to actually learn about other people's faith, and to discover that the doctrines of the terrorists are as hateful to most Muslims as most Christians find the doctrine of those Christian terrorists who bomb abortion clinics.

  98. Abuse is Alway Irreparable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is nothing more worse than touching a child's genitals. In all cases the harm is irreparable.

    1. Re:Abuse is Alway Irreparable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There is nothing more worse than touching a child's genitals. In all cases the harm is irreparable.


      Absolute. This is exactly why my baby's genitals are covered in feces. And the doctor who was trying to perform that circumcision was sent to jail for touching a child's genitals. Too bad being unable to clean a male child's genitals is one of those often cited reasons to circumcise a male. You'll have to excuse me, though. My wife and her friends are about to beat the crap out of me; "all violence against women is wrong".

      Care to not make such stupid platitudes?
  99. Google in deutch by RaNdOm+OuTpUt · · Score: 0

    While using tor, I've been getting google in Deutch. This morning (around 10:30), I went to google (using tor) and... it was still in Deutch. Can't be that big of a bust.

    --
    13. Any legal action is absolutly excluded. (Pi World Ranking List rules)
  100. Re:The misconception about freedom by fpylin · · Score: 1
    No you don't not with an attitude like that you believe some people should be allowed to see some images and words. ... Real life often offers hard choices with no clear cut guidelines to make those choices. In those cases I believe we are best served by erring on the side of freedom even at the risk that some people may be hurt on occasion.

    I have to disagree with you completely here. True freedom should *never* hinder other people's freedom. If you use your freedom to take away other people's freedom, you cannot claim you have true freedom. There is a very clear distinction.

    Those sickies who posted kiddie porn on the net, they took away freedom of those girls -- the freedom to live a life of their choice without shadows of childhood sexual abuse. The offenders exercised their so-called freedom to do what they want in this case. However, is this a real freedom?

    Similarly, for those terrorists took up the liberty to kill innocent people, they destroyed their victims and families. Yes, the terrorists owned their freedom -- but is it a freedom from your point of view? Think about it.

    What I was refering to is this paragraph here: "Think about it: do kiddie porn and terrorism really affect more people in the world than say, domestic violence, or alcohol abuse, or even theft? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than lack of food, lack of sanitary water, low wages, or disease? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than hurricanes and tsunamis? Do kiddie porn and terrorism affect more people than war, cluster bombs, or unexploded mines?" . -- It is presumptuous in quantifying the influence of crime/mishap/misfortune against another as they are all perceived differently by individuals.

    Also keep in mind eliminating TOR is NOT going to end child pornography or terrorism. If TOR is gone these people will just switch to steganography, or coded phone calls, or secret drop spots. The bottom line is that if people want to do bad things they will most likely do them and the best we can do is clean up the mess afterwards. The alternative is quite literally 1984.

    Yes. Eliminating TOR will not solve the crimes. What was shown in the news -- is the complete lack of understanding of TOR technology by the German authorities.

  101. Re:The misconception about freedom by mrraven · · Score: 1

    Dumbass. I wasn't defending the terrorists or child porn people I was defending all the other innocent users of TOR who have their freedoms taken away because the govt. uses the excuse it is used by those bad people to shut it down in Germany. This action is totally hypocritical on the govts part because terrorists and child porn sickos also use telephones and roads yet you don't see the govt. shutting those things down, do you? TOR is shut down because geeks who believe in freedom of speech are weak, and the technologies they use are hard for ordinary people to understand. How nice of you back the crushing of weak freedom fighters by the govt.

    --
    Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  102. It's Freenet, lawl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called Freenet. And it's sloooooooooow.

  103. Use of Tor by iendedi · · Score: 2, Informative

    I use Tor quite regularly and for a variety of reasons, none of them at all having to do with anonymity. The primary reason for running Tor is to avoid ISP man-in-the middle password phishing attacks while traveling in South East Asia (I started using Tor after having passwords stolen in this way while using my own laptop in a hotel in Manila). Tor encrypts traffic and bounces it around in Tor land until it bounces out, generally in Europe or the USA - and that brings me to the second reason for using it. Having my traffic coming from Europe or the USA while in South East Asia is beneficial.

    --

    It is your personal duty to fight for what is right on a daily basis. Ignoring injustice is identical to approving
  104. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by kdemetter · · Score: 1

    I agree with 1 ( actually this was point ) However , that 'minority' of Muslims is quite big . I have seen like 10 thousand people shouting 'death to America' It may not be a danger that will 'destroy civilization' . but it will harm a lot of people . I do believe violence is not the way to solve this . I'm hoping for better ways ( perhaps through education about the dangers of religion ? )

  105. WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your demand to avoid the petty rules of your school about IRC is merely a matter of degree away from a child pornographers demand to view kiddie porn unmolested.

    You have fucking lost all sense of perspective.

  106. Re:log(0)tyYtKuVz by derekmitch · · Score: 1

    Okay, I follow your arguments about whether or not the machine should have been siezed.

    Can anyone answer what the possibilites are of info leakage when an administrator of a Tor node doesn't have good faith? For example, if the police were to set up a Tor node for themselves could they comprise the system for snooping?

    [p.s. Doc Ruby: tyYtKuVz is meaningless]

  107. Some German Tor servers still up by crush · · Score: 1
    As of right now there are machines that seem to be German Tor servers running:
    Real-Time Tor Detection Service has found 81.169.178.235 is a Tor Network exit node
    nickname morphium, running Tor 0.1.1.23 on Linux i686
    at Host Name morphium.info
    so you appear to be in DE-Germany (verified) (Berlin)
    through Internet Service Provider (ISP) Strato Rechenzentrum (or possibly Strato Rechenzentrum Berlin)
    And the network appears to be running fine. I just started using Tor and was please with how easy it was to set up and how fast the network appears to be.
  108. Anonymity and the real world by iendedi · · Score: 1
    Freedom of speech doesn't mean the right to yell fire in a public building or ...snip... bla bla...
    There are many arguments for anonymity on the Internet. The most important of those is to protect those who wish to challenge powerful organizations (or governments), blow the whistle on criminal activities without fear of reprisals, present ideas (or even inventions such as alternate energy) without fear of intimidation or persecution, etc.., etc... The list is long and in almost all cases, anonymity is protecting those people who are trying to communicate for righteous purposes.

    There are very few arguments against anonymity on the Internet. In fact, the only argument that I can even invoke is that anonymity interferes with the ability of powerful organizations to track down individuals who have moved data around in a manner that they do not like. Those "move data around" activities could include hacking, distribution of illicit or illegal data, pirated or copyrighted material, etc...

    While it is true that online anonymity does interfere with the ability of powerful organizations to track down individuals, the crucial question that needs to be examined is "Does the greater good get better served by maintaining a mechanism for free-speach with no possible reprisal" at the expense of tracking down hackers and peddlers of illegal and copyrighted content?

    If we destroy anonymity on the Internet, are we not simply sacrificing another of our freedoms for a perceived security? Certainly people will still hack, distribute illegal and copyrighted content and all of the other things. The bad guys will just steal someone else's identity to do their trash. But meanwhile, law abiding citizens are stripped of the ability to complain about the evils of the world without shouting, "Hey! This is John Smith and I saw a mafia hit last night! I want to report it to the police! Again, my name is John Smith!!!! EVERYONE!!!!".
    --

    It is your personal duty to fight for what is right on a daily basis. Ignoring injustice is identical to approving
    1. Re:Anonymity and the real world by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      "There are very few arguments against anonymity on the Internet. In fact, the only argument that I can even invoke is that anonymity interferes with the ability of powerful organizations to track down individuals who have moved data around in a manner that they do not like. Those "move data around" activities could include hacking, distribution of illicit or illegal data, pirated or copyrighted material, etc..."
      You mean like spammers, phishers, child molesters, people dealing in kiddie porn, identify thieves, and other scam artists?
      In other words criminals.
      So the "few arguments" against anonymity on the Internet are the same few arguments that we have for laws and the police. To protect property and lives.
      And let's all be honest. Right now a large percentage of people using freenet and possibly TOR are doing it to access porn and warez. Very little of the traffic is being used for political speech. I have no real problem with warz and adult porn. I don't view porn myself and I do not think it is healthy but then I don't coke because it is not good for your health, that doesn't mean that it should be illegal.
      Heck I love the idea of free speech on the net but the abuses on the net might bring anonymity on the net to an end. I will not run a freenet node because right now I feel the harm that it is being used for out ways the good. Unlike freenet TOR just provides a route to the information.

      Just in my local a paper, several people where busted for Internet child pornography and trying to have sex with children they met on the net. Unlike sex and violence in video games, it is hard to argue that a video of a two year old being raped or a 45 year old guy trying to have sex with a 12 year old girl isn't harmful. Yes child abuse happened before the Internet but the Internet seems to make everything easier. Including things that are evil.
      It is indefensible that there is an IRC chat room called #Babysex. That is from another news story just in case anyone wants to know how I know about it.
      Stop hiding behined the facade of free speech and stand up and say these things are immoral and I will not stand by and let it happen. Why the hell are not more of these servers and web sites hacked and the data passed anonymously to the police?

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  109. Arguments for and against. by iendedi · · Score: 1
    So the "few arguments" against anonymity on the Internet are the same few arguments that we have for laws and the police. To protect property and lives.
    I was attempting to present the fact that there was essentially only one argument against anonymous internet usage, not that there is only one bad thing that can be done behind the cloak of anonymity. I also agree that many vile things can be done behind such a screen. I am not an advocate of protecting criminals.

    I do, however, believe that eliminating anonymizing networks like Tor will not stop such criminal behavior. However, it will stop dead the ability of legitimate citizens to securely publish information that has the potential to save lives or advance civilization in profound and unmeasurable ways.

    Perhaps the focus should shift in discussions like this one to "How can we encode exit policies in the Tor network to minimize or altogether limit criminal behavior without sacrificing it's noble principle of maximizing free speech?"

    It is irresponsible and foolish to demonize a valuable tool because that tool may be used for evil. A Knife can take human life (and does so rather regularly), but we do not blame the knife and criminalize ownership of them. The same can be said about guns, but it is understood (at least in America) that the right to bear arms is more important than the threat of their misuse.

    At any rate, back to "What can be done to correct this issue with Tor?". I can envision an OSS type of project that, through a mixture of automatic classification and an online database could enhance exit-policies on Tor nodes to massively curb the types of offenses listed in this article. Hell, I would rather see Tor go to a white-list scheme (can only access approved sites) than dissappear completely.

    Whether we like it or not, the technology behind Tor is already in the public domain. The cat is out of the proverbial bag. Big business and government may try to scare those that run Tor nodes into turning off their nodes, but there will always be a people who will not be intimidated. And, lest I forget to mention, Tor was originally conceived of by the U.S. Navy. Clearly, the US military seems to believe that such technologies are important.
    --

    It is your personal duty to fight for what is right on a daily basis. Ignoring injustice is identical to approving
    1. Re:Arguments for and against. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      That is a problem with TOR trying to fix the problem.
      If they start filtering the content they could be then responsible for the content. I.E. They wouldn't have any protection as a common carrier, if they even have that now. Yes banning TOR wouldn't prevent all acts of child molestation. I can not say that it would stop one but I can not say it wouldn't stop any. I am not for the banning of TOR but more giving a warning. Those that hold Child pornography as free speech endanger free speech. Frankly those that hold up pornography and piracy as free speech endanger it a great deal.
      Child prongraphy isn't just a threat to childern but a threat to free speech. The lack of interest in preventing by the online community will be the end of anonymity on the Internet.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:Arguments for and against. by iendedi · · Score: 1
      That is a problem with TOR trying to fix the problem. If they start filtering the content they could be then responsible for the content. I.E. They wouldn't have any protection as a common carrier, if they even have that now.
      I am not convinced that this is true in this case. Exit policies already exist and are at the discretion of Tor exit node operators. I was suggesting that the OSS community perhaps examines how to increase the effectiveness of these exit policies as a way to combat abuses (again, strictly at the discretion of the exit node operator). It is not censorship because nobody is actively filtering content - it is simply a decision system sitting at the exit node that either allows the external connection or not. Most node operators would (I am sure) prefer not to have known illegal traffic flowing through their network, and in fact the use of such policies themselves could be shown as good faith on the part of the node operator (indicating that such and such an operator's intentions are clearly to not add to the problem).

      This is a good question, however. IANAL - I wonder what the EFF's position on exit policies is. Such policies do exist and Tor is sponsored by the EFF so one would assume that they have already considered this question.
      --

      It is your personal duty to fight for what is right on a daily basis. Ignoring injustice is identical to approving
  110. Your argument is backwards. by Burz · · Score: 1

    How it got modded +5, I couldn't say but I suppose there are plenty of Slahdotters who are ignorant about Tor.

    1. The very code on those servers prove they are acting in a common-carrier role.

    2. Code notwithstanding, the police could only prove that the Tor node accessed (but not supplied) the CP anyway. This is where you got it backwards.

    3. From what I recall, it is possession and specific trafficking of CP that's illegal, which doesn't apply to services like Tor (see above). Otherwise, anyone who builds anything that conveys objects or information anonymously is a criminal. Sidewalks don't require ID logging, and have been used to convey CP anonymously, so concrete-pourers and townships are liable for CP? I don't think so.

    4. No way are Tor operators going to make a habbit out of logging IPs. They won't do it for the Communist Party in China, nor will they do it for the oh-so-legitimate thugs of capitalism.

    I deplore CP, but the advice you're offering is doing no one a favor except perhaps for the grandstanding. twisted public officials who like to prove they are ""doing something"" to protect the community.

  111. Re:USians did wtc... lol ! by skarphace · · Score: 1
    1. Bush is not doing the same thing as terrorist leaders; I haven't heard of any American teenagers being strapped in explosive vests by the Bush administration yet.
    Oh, but he is. I see many teenagers suiting up in cammo and an automatic rifle and being sent out to fight. The only difference is that the "terrorist's" teens are guaranteed death and with the US's teens, there's only a chance. Either way, they're being sent to die.

    --
    Bullish Machine Tzar
  112. Re: by drac0n1z · · Score: 1

    Since this is South-Africa we have limited options when it comes to wireless ISPs. In our town, there is only, one. Landlines are very expensive, $100 for a 3G hard cap. Telkom, the monopoly phone operator, charges R50, around $10 per gig an ISP sells to their clients. After markups ect there are no real alternatives. The wireless option was a good deal, though because of their business practices I'm back to a land line.

    --
    This is my sig.
  113. Re: by drac0n1z · · Score: 1

    The technition who installed our wireless hardware, AP, told me the admin is a Linux wizard, bragged that he has 3 screens, 3 keyboards ofcourse, he went on to explain the whole setup to me. He then explained how they manage to identify clients using excessive P2P and clients subletting their connection to other users by using tcpdump. The business contract did not allow more than 5 PCs on the network. We had 3 PCs, all had 2 network cards, plugged in to the LAN, a day passed and the admin told us to get rid of the extra PC, he looked at the MACs. We were told not to run P2P because it made the wireless network slow and used too much bandwidth. When we called him and discussed our problem with him 'breaking' the contract we signed (there was not clause concerning usage) and that we did not want him running tcpdump on our connection. He admited to it and said he was not violating our privacy. Over the course of 2 months we exchanged emails about our 'excessive' use, like downloading 12 Linux ISOs when Ubuntu Dapper came out, since I tested RCs, from the discussions it was clear he knew exactly what we accessed as we browsed, he also sent us sarg reports. Am not witht he ISP anymore.

    --
    This is my sig.