Former FBI Agent Calls for a Second Internet
An anonymous reader writes "Former FBI Agent Patrick J. Dempsey warns that the Internet has become a sanctuary for cyber criminals and the only way to rectify this is to create a second, more secure Internet. Dempsey explains that, in order to successfully fight cyber crime, law enforcement officials need to move much faster than average investigators and cooperate with international law enforcement officials. The problem is various legal systems are unprepared for the fight, which is why he claims we must change the structure of the Internet."
There are already two.
That said, I agree with your conclusion.
[Fuck Beta]
o0t!
Why is there an astrophe in wants? :P
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
Funny thing is, we already HAVE a secure internet. It's called SIPRNET (Secret Internet Protocol Router Network). It's a massive secure global intranet totally separate from the internet that the government and military use for Secret-level and below information. Then there's JWICS (Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System) for Top Secret and below, which is even bigger and more secure. They both have plenty of problems, but spammers, hackers, etc are not among them. I have one of each of them on my desk right now at work, plus a few others. If the FBI really wanted a new secure network, they could start with the SIPRNET boxes they already have and improve it.
Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
If the identifier for a block of data is a hash of the data, you can verify its integrity without knowing a hill of beans about who or where it came from.
If the link pointing to a secured, anonymous site is a hash of the site's public key, you can verify that the site you're talking to can use the corresponding private key, which is the same thing SSL buys you. The high-priced "secure site certificates" just certify that the owner of $DNS_NAME also owns $PUBLIC_KEY; if you got a self-authenticating link from another web site you trust, the level of assurance is comparable.
If the algorithms that underpin this stuff are broken then the whole digital security house of cards is toast, including "High Assurance SSL Certificates" (Now with green pixel paint for your clients' address bars! Sorry, cross-site scripting protection not included.)
...when you're writing a game...tweak the difficulty of "Easy" to something [your mother] can cope with. -- onion2k
Although it isn't what this guy is looking for, we do have SIPRNet.