UK ISP TalkTalk Caught Monitoring Its Customers
An anonymous reader writes "The UK ISP TalkTalk has been caught using a form of Deep Packet Inspection technology to monitor and record the websites that its customers visit, without getting their explicit consent. The system, which is not yet fully in place, ultimately aims to help block malware websites by comparing the URL that a person visits against a list of good and bad sites. Bad sites will then be restricted. TalkTalk claims that its method is totally anonymous and that the only people with visibility of the URL database itself are Chinese firm Huawei, which will no doubt help everybody to feel a lot better (apply sarc mark here) about potentially having their privacy invaded."
Doesn't really sound any different to what the search companies store. Sans encryption, nothing you do on the Internet is private. Caveat Browsor. Or, erm, something.
It's a Unix system - I know this.
Ironic this, seeing as how TalkTalk have been pushing back against almost the same things in the Digital Economy Act. Shame really the did look like they might be good guys.
It's the only way to be sure. I know of at least one German university which also filters all external web traffic through a proxy which blocks URLs, also supposedly to reduce malware infections. The road to hell is paved with good intentions. The same technology which is installed to fight malware is also ideally suited to work as censorship infrastructure. Once it's in place, the operators will undoubtedly be confronted with the question why they only filter malware and not other "illegal" content. Once they've succumbed to that, the list of URLs to block will grow to include "unruly" opinions, videos of police, etc.
End-to-end encryption. Now.
My ISP is often a matter of little choice, if I want to access the internet, I MUST go through an ISP.
I never ever have to go to google or any other domain. It is trivial to avoid any domain I wish, just put it in hosts file with local ip.
Especially since Google doesn't know my personal details. My ISP does.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
Isn't passing personal information out for Europe without expressed permission a breach of the Data Protection Act? Though lets face it, peoples biggest privacy concerns here are their porn viewing habits. Perhaps some porn sites should set up shop that show up in the URL history as stocks and shares or Technology News.
Anna.Techsupport032a2.jpg, Anna.Techsupport032a3.jpg
.. Huawei are usually the ones *buying* the stolen corporate data.
Just another reason for normal people to use encryption on everything and look suspicious for not wanting to be spied on.
The current UK government, despite borrowing £900bn ($1.4Trillion) and climbing, is not cutting the £10bn+ black-ops DPI upgrade of the UK telephone network, which is in conjunction with BT (who just announced increased charges to their customers and all ISP's to cover the cost). Why do you think there is such an interest in phones having IP addresses in stead of an ADC?
Take Nobody's Word For It.
Such A Shame, Talk Talk. It's My Life, you Dum Dum Girl !
(You may want to sit down before reading on, or at least steady yourself against something)
(Ready?)
Maybe they should change their name to Watch Watch instead.
Summation 2
The thing is, if you ignore the sensationalist headline and look at what there doing, it's just a list of websites that are accessed over their network, which they're using to create an opt in filtering system.
Oh no, an ISP actually doing something useful for it's customers, whatever will we do!
Stories like this are what annoy me about the press (slashdot included).
The company has been mentioned previously here on /. for its questionable relationship with the Chinese government.
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/10/05/28/1228224/Chinese-Networking-Vendor-Huaweis-Murky-Ownership
There's nobody I'd rather have looking at my internet history than a Chinese company.
Except maybe the North Korean government.
Don't you forget!
Really, this story is Such A Shame.
I use Macs for work, Linux for education, and Windows for cardplaying.
More drama over deep packet inspection... All major ISP are using some form of deep packet inspection for many different reasons and they have been doing it for a while now. This isn't new.
Presumably they need to capture at least the page that the user is visiting, as checking for malware on just the root of a site is a waste of time. As most sites these days are dynamic they'll also have to capture the parameters in a GET (and possibly POST), so there is every chance they *will* be capturing personally identifiable data.
I opted in to a similar tracking that OpenDNS has (even part of its free service) that informs me when my network has been accessing known malware sites. I do wish they could do it without having to activate tracking/logging though -- "look at each one at a time, evaluate, discard" should be the norm.
Really? Then why not post your details on 4chan or somewhere and offer a small reward for time spent to the first person to gain control of your network/box?
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
..because everybody knows that our good friends and allies in the far east always have our best interests at heart and would never, never, ever do anything bad.
Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
Welcome to America!
Life's what you make it.
bun-fhuinneog agam!
The gist of the story is that an ISP has been "caught" doing something. The reality is that all they have been caught doing is something that is normal day to day activity of a large ISP.
Deep packet inspection is used by an ISP to see how their customers are using their services. What sites are people visiting, are they uploading, downloading content. What kind of content? audio/video/text? How can we improve our services to meet these needs. How can we market ourselves better to our customers.WHO DO WE NEED TO PEER WITH to satisfy our customers needs?
When you've got millions of dollars invested in a business you need to be able to collect more data that simply having a bandwidth graph. and the data is reasonably anonymous. If you are that worried about the security of your data then use a VPN for sensitive material. Checking your Facebook page is not a classified national security issue get over yourself. Of coarse there is a dark side, for example when Comcast uses DPI to interfere with BT traffic. But guns don't kill people, people kill people right?