Swartz-Designed Whistleblower Tool "SecureDrop" Launched
An anonymous reader writes in with word of a new tool for whistleblowers: "The 'strongest-ever' whistleblowing tool for sources to speak anonymously with journalists, partly developed by the late Reddit co-founder Aaron Swartz, has been launched by the Freedom of The Press Foundation. Before his suicide in January 2013, Swartz had been working on a tool for sources to anonymously submit documents to journalists online, without using traceable email and in a way that could be easily catalogued by news organisations. Called SecureDrop, the tool can be installed on any news organisation's website as a 'Contact Us' form page. But where these pages usually require a name and email address, the encrypted SecureDrop system is completely anonymous, assigning the whistleblower two unique identifiers - one seen by the journalist, and one seen by the whistleblower. These identities stay the same, so a conversation can be had without names being shared or known."
The problems that are plaguing our world is not only the power that be.
The journalists are also part of the problem.
You see, most journalists we have today do not even comprehend the ethic behind journalism.
And worst of all, some of the journalists are willingly cooperating with the power-that-be (you can see the evidences of the so-called "news media" we have nowadays) - and I still remember a case back in the Bush (senior) days where CNN actually turned over the identity of a whistle blower to the Department of Defense.
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
I certainly hope that the news orgs will include a warning that they should be using this only as one part of an attempt at anonymity. With the NSA's beam splitters hard at work in every major ISP backbone, it would be quite trivial for them to trace this back.
There's been a lot of discussion after his death that it might have been a hit. He told close friends that he was under watch. A few days after his death, there was a video posted showing how a hacker could control a toyota prius.